| Welcome to vBulletin FAQ |
vBulletin FAQ Navigation
Getting Started
Customizing your vBulletin
Search Engines & SEO
Making Money with a Forum
Promoting your Community
|
| Get your own vBulletin Today |
|
| Webmaster Help |
|

|
|
Transcending CSS: The Fine Art of Web Design (Voices That Matter)
vBulletin Book Store > vBulletin books beginning with T
|
Transcending CSS: The Fine Art of Web Design (Voices That Matter) |
Author: Andy Clarke
Published: 2006-11-25 |
List price: $49.99
Our price: $29.99
|
Usually ships in 24 hours
As of: September 06th, 2008 02:13:03 PM
|
|
|
Customer comments on this selection.
Web Design Primer, Not a How-To Manual I wanted to like this book. If you are new to design, it contains useful sections on page prototyping, grid-based design, color, and design practices. These are things designers should learn about, especially if they arrive in web design from other fields. I give the book three stars for these positive features and for its high production values.
Physically, the book is about two inches wider than a standard programming book. The paper is heavy and coated with full color all over the place. This is nice, but the author goes too far. Some pages include pictures of websites, but many other pages are filled with seemingly random photographs and montage works. In fact, pages 239-242 are fully dedicated to a scrapbook sample. Page 243 includes some text, but 244 is another wasted page. The images are sedate, and these picture pages seem to take up a quarter of the book. White space abounds. Consequently, as others have noted, the book is light on useful information.
I understand the attraction of grids. CSS divs and table cells both lend themselves to grid layouts. I know it is in vogue to emulate the multi-column layouts found in a newspaper page. I've read plenty about usability and how people actually surf. Unfortunately, the author's fixation with these conventions leads to dull page design. The most interesting, useful technique in the whole book involves the intelligent use of relative and absolute positioning to displace background images so that they break up the outlines of the blocks.
On the down side, the author advocates the use of browser-specific style sheets and the use of CSS3 style rules. Current browsers still have problems with some CSS 2.1 rules. The CSS3 rules will be great when browsers support them, but they won't help you write pages that work on multiple browsers and platforms. And that's the real issue with this book. It contains information that is useful to beginners, but it's not really a beginner book. This book won't have you writing CSS and XHTML in a few hours. The strange mixture of beginning and advanced materials mixture may confuse beginners while offering little that is new or useful to more experienced designers. Add in the sheer volume of wasted space and I have only one recommendation: Borrow the book from the library.
Inspires better design, markup, and syling This book is a real gem! I read it often just for inspiration. The author is passionate about design, markup, and styling and it rubs off on me. Transcending CSS fills a niche somewhere between the technical manuals and design books. It has had a clear impact on my work.
Good advice for the intermediate/advanced designer Transcending CSS is a book that, as it explains in its opening, isn't intended as a basic overview of CSS. It assumes a solid base of knowledge, and if you have that, the book can be extremely beneficial.
That's not to say that the book wouldn't be useful to a novice designer, but they might want to pick it up again after they have more experience with the CSS selectors and attributes Clarke uses.
The book has a lot of material regarding separating layout and style and making semantically correct HTML, which is important for both designers and developers to understand as web pages become more and more feature-rich and stylized. Clarke presents it in an easy-to-understand format, and helps the reader see semantic markup everywhere.
The sections regarding layout and inspiration were very well done, however I felt that more could have been done here. I suppose that it's forgivable since it is a book about CSS and web design rather than design theory, but I found those sections to be the most interesting.
I highly recommend this book to any designer or developer looking to get a better grasp of where web design is going and what constitutes good web design.
The Last CSS Book You Will Read This book is amazing in it's holistic approach to web design using CSS. It's from a designer's perspective and helps a lot in the thought process and workflow departments, then shows you a wonderful way to build up a design from the ground up based on a content-out approach. In some ways I wish that I had read it before any other CSS book, but I don't think I would have been able to appreciate it as much that way - it's an advanced book that has great pacing and brings a large number of design concepts all together. It gave me the feeling that I was tying up a lot of loose ends in my personal knowledge base and making it all complete. Great book! *I wouldn't sell my for anything*
Looking for a hands-on instructional book on CSS? Look somewhere else. First, there are way too many full-page pictures and quotes in this book, which could have been used to provide meaningful content. Second, the author gives a lot of his opinions, and comes off as pretentious. The book's back cover says that you'll be able to "implement highly original designs through visual demonstrations of the creative possibilities using markup and CSS." I disagree, because much of the book is a discourse on Web page-related subjects such perspective, grid-based design, and using a scrapbook for inspiration. A scrapbook! It's doesn't contain a lot of instructions on how to implement CSS, and for the amount that does, it's accounts for about 30% of the book. This book is $49.99. It's a lot of money for a lot of fluff. If you're looking for a hands-on instructional book on CSS, look somewhere else.
|
Similar Listings
|
|
Our vBulletin book picks:
|
|
Find more vBulletin related products of interest.
|