Pro CSS Techniques is the ultimate CSS book for the modern web developer. If youve already got web design and development basics under your belt, but want to take your knowledge to the next level and unleash the full power of CSS in your web sites, then this is the book for you. It is a collection of proven CSS techniques that you can use daily to get the most out of the time you spend on your projects, from start to finish.
Every topic is presented in an informative tutorial style, with each point backed up by several real-world examples and case studies. The authors cover all the essential areas of CSS development, like browser support (including IE7), hacks and filters, code management, advanced layouts and styling, typography, and much more. CSS levels 1, 2, and 3 are given a full treatment. The book also includes several reference sections that allow you to look up details quickly and easily.
The book aims to help you in four areas: maintainability, compatibility, reusability, and practicality. Youll be able to keep your code organized and easy to maintain, avoiding browser issues before they crop up (or hacking around them when absolutely necessary). Youll learn to get the most out of your styles with inheritance, and by using techniques you can build on. And youll learn to use what works in the real world, without getting too caught up in ideals, because you can always optimize later.
Customer Reviews
Average Rating:
Rating: - Be gone tables! Hello CSS!
I come to web development as so many of us, through the back door. There are a hundred web projects for every web developer. And so, anybody with the desire can start building sites. This is how I started and how I continue. I learn just what I need to know to get this current project out the door. Now several years later I find myself deep in PHP programming with out any real knowledge of CSS. Free CSS templates have gotten me far and I have learned to hack them into something useful. But the fundamentals ... Read More
Rating: - Definately not 4 Beginners
Although pro css tecniques as the title of this book clearly incinuates it is for the more advanced designer, I still believe it is all in all beyond pro and to no bit of aid to the beginner or perhaps even the intermediate to advanced. Clearly the Authors of this book are master webdesigners and now what they are talking about, however Their lessons are overlooked when it comes to having the reader learn the techniques and not them illustrating and proving their intellect. Although my review may oppose likeness ... Read More
Rating: - Nice Follow up to "Beginning CSS Web Development"
A nice addition to Apress' bookshelf covering CSS Web Development. The book is well-written, easing you through specific topics and techniques that will take your developement skills to the next level. Simon Collison, Dan Rubin, Ian Lloyd and Jeff Croft are revolutionizing standards-compliant, accessible, responsible web design.
Well done again fella's. Looking forward to more advanced books from you and Apress!
Cheers,
Elias
Rating: - Real-World CSS Techniques
Having read through Pro CSS Techniques, I can recommend it to web site creators who occasionally (or often) find themselves scratching their heads wondering why that browser isn't rendering the page the way they intended. The book's subtitle reads: Real-world CSS Techniques for real-world CSS professionals. As a practical manual for developing today's websites, Pro CSS Techniques covers all the real-world bases.
What I especially like about the writing is that it isn't preachy and it offers options. ... Read More
Rating: - Great CSS book for developers
There are many CSS books on the market now, so distinguishing yourself from the many is getting harder and harder to do. Since there are less intermediate to advanced books compared to beginner CSS books this is a start. Another thing this book focuses on that is different than the majority of other CSS book is that is stresses creating semantic markup throughout the design and development process. Semantic markup means understanding the meaning of the XHTML that you write. What this means is that the code is ... Read More