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#2
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My question is: If you create a template in Photoshop, slice it in ImageReady, using the CSS output option(under the "slices" menu in "output--options"), and then use the CSS output for a template(which will all be absolute-postioned DIVs)--would there be any foreseeable drawbacks to this? Put another (simpler) way: are there drawbacks to positioning everything on the page with absolute references alone? |
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My motivation for this is I am finding it tricky to make heavier, corporate, image-templated sites in CSS alone. (without relying on the use of some tables) |
#3
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My question is: If you create a template in Photoshop, slice it in ImageReady, using the CSS output option(under the "slices" menu in "output--options"), and then use the CSS output for a template(which will all be absolute-postioned DIVs)--would there be any foreseeable drawbacks to this? |
#4
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My question is: If you create a template in Photoshop, slice it in ImageReady, using the CSS output option(under the "slices" menu in "output--options"), and then use the CSS output for a template(which will all be absolute-postioned DIVs)--would there be any foreseeable drawbacks to this? Put another (simpler) way: are there drawbacks to positioning everything on the page with absolute references alone? My motivation for this is I am finding it tricky to make heavier, corporate, image-templated sites in CSS alone. (without relying on the use of some tables) |
#5
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omziff (AT) yahoo (DOT) com (xtort) wrote: My question is: If you create a template in Photoshop, slice it in ImageReady, using the CSS output option(under the "slices" menu in "output--options"), and then use the CSS output for a template(which will all be absolute-postioned DIVs)--would there be any foreseeable drawbacks to this? Put another (simpler) way: are there drawbacks to positioning everything on the page with absolute references alone? My motivation for this is I am finding it tricky to make heavier, corporate, image-templated sites in CSS alone. (without relying on the use of some tables) Besides what has already been said, there's the problem of maintaining the pages. You either go back to the designer and re-export the design all over again each time modifications are necessary, or some poor web developer has to painstakingly push the pieces around in a code editor and hope they still all fit together. |
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