View Full Version : Tags under graphical lay-Out
eXceed69
02-08-2007, 01:58 AM
Hello, my porte is not on web designing and I wanted to start with it for better plan in the future. I know basic html tags, css tags and photoshop, I've surf through the net for possible anwer to my queastion with this. It seems that I'am dealing with slicing images when I make the whole site Lay-Out. The only concern is how could I embed css functionality, php/asp(if ever I make one), scripting under the PS Lay-Out that I had made. Is their any samples for it?to discuss it further more. :)
Please respond :(
Photoshop is an image editor. If you use it to create web pages, the result is likely to be poor -- even poorer than is usual from WYSIWYG editors.
eXceed69
02-09-2007, 01:36 AM
Photoshop is great when mixed up with some functionality, tag languages like html are expresses more by the graphical interface, right? I didn't know WYSIWYG editor so I'm not familiar with that.
mburt
02-09-2007, 01:49 AM
A WYSIWYG editor isn't a specific program, it's rather a rich text editor sort of deal.
eXceed69
02-09-2007, 01:59 AM
So it just near example of notepad++ and sort of text editor.
jscheuer1
02-09-2007, 05:47 AM
Those slice and dice layouts look pretty cool if viewed at the same resolution that they were made in but, they are a pain to edit and are really only for control freaks. Use text and images like most designers do and your page can have flexibility to display at various resolutions and for updates.
tag languages like html are expresses more by the graphical interface, right?No. HTML is designed to express the structure of the page, not its presentation.
eXceed69
02-12-2007, 03:34 AM
I see their will be problem on resolution but if I had a Lay-Out from photoshop that will be fixed?right?on its resolution.
"Fixed" as in rigid, inflexible, at breaking at other resolutions, yes. "Fixed" as in the problem's gone away, no.
jscheuer1
02-12-2007, 03:21 PM
"Fixed" as in rigid, inflexible, at breaking at other resolutions, yes. "Fixed" as in the problem's gone away, no.
LOL, I thought they meant 'fixed' as in the sense that the word is used (at least here in the states) to apply to a pet dog or cat.
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