Jump to content

djhg

New Members
  • Posts

    1
  • Joined

  • Last visited

djhg's Achievements

Newbie

Newbie (1/14)

0

Reputation

  1. I'm a confident beginner already quite experienced using software for graphic design, illustration, CAD for Architecture, and cinema. It's time to create a website but before I dive in I would appreciate some help to choose a suitable path. A string of tutorials I've watched as an intro to Dreamweaver identify editing HTML as the essential language / interface for web design. I wonder if there is an alternative which is to HTML as Desktop Publishing programmes are to Word Processors. HTML-based layout of Web Design elements reminds me of attempting graphic design layout in Microsoft word, in that - from what I can tell - the user communicates with the programme in terms of stringing elements in order, constrained (or at least related) to a series of lines on the page, or according to their place in tables/grids - all of which might change position as the overall page is re-sized, but maintain a prescribed order. These constraints, in Word, enable typists to do graphic design. This creates pages designed to respond intelligently to changes in margins/page size while maintaining the order of objects in lines. (That's what I mean by "1D") But web-pages don't have to shift their margins/page size often any more, do they? Don't they now load into a window which one must scroll around in or enlarge to see the entire thing in a fixed layout? I'd prefer to layout a page the way a graphic designer uses a desktop publishing programme, which have a purely visual interface which enables quick drag-and-place of any elements to a fixed and precise position within a fixed page size (in pixels, i suppose) without any constraining pattern other than any I setup with guides - and text windows only wihtin which are the elements organized in a line/paragraph pattern. Code happens in the background; and unlike Word, an element isn't defined in terms of a consistent place in a line/paragraph pattern, but in terms of its absolute position on the XY axis of the page plane. (That's what I mean by '2D.') i've been expecting that - after inserting and creating and arranging objects in this familair and free way - to then be able to select them and assign them behaviour as links or buttons or other web attributes. The string of tutorials I've been watching for the latest (CS5.5) Dreamweaver involve positioning elements by entering pixel dimensions into strings of code to space elements. I'm used to selecting something and nudging it into place by eye with a mouse drag or the arrow keys - an immediate visual-kinesthetic act with a quick feedback loop. Am I missing an advantage to the word-processing/HTML method? Do most Web design programmes - like the aparrent standard, Dreamweaver - enable the way of working I'm expecting? Comments appreciated.
×
×
  • Create New...