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Adobe Dreamweaver CS3 How-Tos: 100 Essential Techniques
This entry was posted in CSS Howto Book and tagged Adobe, Dreamweaver, Essential, HowTos, Techniques. Bookmark the permalink.
Clear, concise, excellent How-To guide to Dreamweaver CS3,
Adobe Dreamweaver CS3 How-Tos: 100 Essential Techniques is exactly the book I needed to help me move from Adobe GoLive, which is being phased out, to the similar — but different enough to be confusing — Dreamweaver CS3. This book showed what could be accomplished through a clear and detailed hands-on approach to this feature-rich but daunting program.
The book is well structured into 100 brief, informative sections. They are useful individually — meaning you can look up precisely what you need for a task and get a complete, but not overwhelmingly exhaustive, explanation with step by step instructions. (If it’s essential that you know some underlying technique, the author tells you where in the book to find it — but mostly, what you need is right there.)
The sections are also tied together into a dozen chapters on related techniques, that progress logically from the basics of creating a site to the full range of bells and whistles, from styling to forms to embedding media (Flash, QuickTime, Windows Media) to DW CS3′s cool new Spry animation effects. There is an extraordinary amount of useful information presented in just 250 pages, yet the book never feels crammed. However, it could have used a few more illustrations, including ones for completed projects — although the author purposely leaves it up to the reader to implement the techniques that he explains. I like this approach.
The book is much more illuminating than DW CS3′s built-in Help fragments, that constantly send you to yet more — and more — references, many times without really telling you how to do something. Here the author has the space to provide both brief context and practical instructions. This book is also a lot more useful than the overpriced Adobe Classroom in a Book (CiB) that focuses on about a dozen large-scale “representative” projects — if you’re lucky, somewhere in the countless steps is the small piece of info you need to get a specific job done. By contrast, this book is the best of both worlds: more detailed and practical than the built-in Help and much more accessible than CiB. Goldilocks would love this book, since it’s not too small, and not too big — it’s just right. I also appreciate that, for all of its conciseness, the writing has a friendly ‘can do’ quality.
The main content is clearly separated from the subsidiary information presented in sidebars. This ‘bonus information’ often explains why it’s best to do something a certain way (often to increase the accessibility of Web pages for people who are visually impaired, or who simply turn off images for faster browsing). The only major topic missing is how to connect a DW site to a database, which with all the flavors (ASP, Cold Fusion, many more) would require a separate guide of this length.
The book wisely devotes many sections to the features that are brand new in DW CS3, including a strong focus on CSS-based layouts. The Internet has adopted ‘best practices’ standards — meaning CSS-based pages — so the author focuses both on how to use Adobe’s nice built-in templates (both basic and styled versions), and on how to create your own from scratch. The clunky table-based, or frames-based (UGH!), layouts many of us have been using are going, going, soon to be gone. That’s why the focus here is on CSS layouts, which offer much greater design flexibility and control, and faster loading times (they take far less code than their table-based ancestors, e.g., instead of specifying a bunch of different fonts, over and over, with CSS you do it just once in a master Style Sheet). In stumbling through DW CS3, before getting this book, the single most confusing thing was “div tags” (that basically structure everything in the page layout) — if only I’d had the brilliantly lucid explanation found here in Section 33 – Defining Div Tags! Now, it all makes sense — thank you!
Although I think this is a five star book, there are a couple of frequently used items that I wish the author had included in full detail: (1) instructions — in Section 55 – Formatting Image and Page Styles — on how to create a ‘floated’ image with a caption (a border around it would be nice too), and (2) how to “bulletproof” a site, making sure that pages can expand properly if someone increases the font size (as opposed to breaking apart into an incoherent mess). In addition to this book, which for me is a clear top recommendation (I’ve pored over several of the other ‘first out of the gate’ DW CS3 guides in a local bookstore), I recommend Dan Cederholm’s Bulletproof Web Design: Improving Flexibility and Protecting Against Worst-Case Scenarios With XHTML and CSS. I don’t believe that Cederholm’s recommendations are proprietary, since they are common sense (once he explains them) and very simple; but they would have made this How-Tos book even more valuable.
I’m still having fun experimenting with techniques –…
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|Very hard to read,
I highly appreciate the feedback feature in [...] and have relied on it heavily to make purchasing decision over the years. I have been reading customer reviews for many years but have never felt compelled enough to write one myself until now.
I must say that I’m highly disappointed with this book. I bought it based on the few good reviews the book garnered at the time. I find it hard to believe that I’m the only one who’s had difficulty following the lessons.
The main problem is that the instructions are very text-heavy and difficult to read. Let me give you an example.
taken verbatim from the book:
“You can also draw an AP Div interactively using the Draw AP Div Tool in the Layout tab of the Insert bar.”
There is no graphical illustration that goes with that. Yes, it’s possible to find that tool based on the written instruction. However, it’s very effortful. It took me a bit of time to find where that Draw AP Div Tool is located at. This problem is throughout the book, making it laborous to go through the lessons.
The other problem is that the book does not actually go through any examples with you. In a typical lesson, it talks about a method, its concept, and the “buttons to push”, and then it moves on without actually going through an example with you.
Oh, and one more (minor) thing: the illustrations are screen-captured using a MAC version of the software. It is very similar to the PC version, but not totally identical. I found it somewhat distracting because I’m using the PC version; however the difference might not bother everyone.
I’m on lesson 30 and have decided I can’t go on anymore. I’m buying another dreamweaver book. I apologize for leaving a negative feedback on somebody’s work but feel I need to warn those who are considering buying this book. I’m not saying that everyone will find this book bad, but this is my experience.
BTW, although I don’t have previous dreamweaver experience, I’m a professional computer technician, and thus am very proficient and comfortable using the computer.
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|An EXCELENT Guide,
“Adobe Dreamweaver CS4 How-Tos”, by David Karlins, is an excellent resource for web-designers, graphic designers and anyone who may be using Adobe Dreamweaver CS4. Whether you are an expert or a novice the reader will find a concise and easy to read breakdown of creating an effective web-site with several tips on how to do it more efficiently along the way.
With the importance of web sites for business use in today’s culture, everyone from the average person working for any business to more tech savvy professionals like graphic designers are finding themselves in the position of needing to have a website. For many, the option exists of assigning or hiring someone else to build such a site. But for many others, that option doesn’t as easily exist. So today people are learning how to build and maintain websites like never before. Adobe’s Dreamweaver CS4 is a web authoring tool designed to help web designers and developers create websites with a lot of handy features. Users can build sites in either a coding mode for those comfortable with writing straight HTML or CSS, or they can build with a Design mode for those more comfortable using a layout style interface. There is even a hybrid where you can code and view a preview at once.
But for many who are completely new to web design, using even Dreamweaver’s most basic features can be something of a daunting task. In his book, David Karlins sets out to break down 100 of the most common tasks users need to know how to accomplish with Dreamweaver, and explains them in a simple fashion. The book works well as a textbook to be read alone, as a guide to walk step-by step through each topic while working in Dreamweaver or even as a quick reference for designers and developers who simply need a desktop reference.
However, this is not just a book for current Dreamweaver users. This book is also suited well for somebody who has no prior experience with building websites but may desire to learn from scratch. Karlin’s writing style is very easy to read which is a treat since the nature of web design can get pretty confusing at times. This book is not heavy reading, so if you are considering getting into web design I would encourage you to pick up a copy.
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