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Powell addresses topics like navigation theory and user profiling, backing up high-level discussion with excellent, practical technique. He goes beyond your garden-variety explanation of what particular features are and how to code them by specifying the problems you might face and offering solutions. You get insight you can use: how to handle those pesky frames by understanding UI consequences, keep frames from opening within themselves, and offer your users the ability to print framed pages reliably.
All the bases are covered, including adding GUI interactivity, solid page layout and formatting techniques, and a look at the various Web technologies and their effect on site design. The entire work exudes the confidence of a well-seasoned writer, and the discussions leave you feeling well informed. This book bridges the gap between knowing how to build Web sites and having a holistic knowledge of all of the intricacies and pitfalls of coding for the Web. --Stephen W. Plain
Topics covered:
Web-design methodologies Usability Types of Web sites Navigation theory and practice Linking text/buttons/icons/graphics Search facilities Text handling Colors and images Building interactivity Web technologies (XML, CSS, JavaScript) Cookies Server-side scripting Multimedia Site delivery and management The future of Web design Site evaluation proceduresPaperback
First published May 12, 2000
Another big book (900 pages). Some good stuff, but a lot of it will already be known to anyone who has already done a lot of work in web development.