Difference between revisions of "CSS:Layouts102"

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   </BODY>
 
   </BODY>
 
</HTML></nowiki>
 
</HTML></nowiki>
 
Your screen should look like this (or similar):
 
 
[[Image:layout21screen.png|Screenshot of Layout 2]]
 
  
 
===Stage 3: Match the divisions to the drawing===
 
===Stage 3: Match the divisions to the drawing===

Revision as of 14:59, 5 September 2007

Layout 2: 3 columns

The first stage to approach layouts is to draw a simple diagram of how you would like a web page to be presented:

A simple layout drawing

Stage 2: The Divisions

In order to achieve this layout we need three "divisions" - let's create them in HTML

HTML Document - no CSS yet

<!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01//EN" "http://www.w3.org/TR/html4/strict.dtd">
<HTML>
  <HEAD>
     <TITLE>CSS 6</TITLE>
     <LINK rel="stylesheet" href="style6.css" type="text/css">
  </HEAD>
  <BODY>
    <DIV id="menu">
      This is the menu
      <UL>
        <LI>Item 1</LI>
        <LI>Item 2</LI>
        <LI>Item 3</LI>
        <LI>Item 4</LI>
        <LI>Item 5</LI>
      </UL>
    </DIV>
    <DIV id="content">
     <H1>This is the Content of the page</H1>
     <P>Very interesting content - wouldn't you agree?</P>
    </DIV>
    <DIV id="right">
      Some interesting information in the right-hand column
    </DIV>
  </BODY>
</HTML>

Stage 3: Match the divisions to the drawing

Create the following CSS file (and save as style6.css)

#menu {float:left}

Now reload the page - what do you see?

Layout2screen.png

We're making progress - at least the divisions are in the right place.

Stage 4: Tidy up the presentation

Let's put some more content in the CSS to improve the appearance.

Modify the CSS to the following:

#menu
{
  float:left;
  border: 2px solid #0000ff;
  margin: 10px;
  padding: 10px;
}

The page should now look something more like this:

Layoutscreen3.png

Now we'll do the same for the content division

#content
{
  border: 2px solid #ff0000;
  margin: 10px;
  padding: 10px;
}

The page should now look something more like this:

Layoutscreen4.png

This isn't what we want, but it emphasises the concept of "floating" - because the menu division is floating above the content division, the menu division passes BELOW the content division, and the content division is overlapping.

There are a number of ways in CSS to fix this, but the easiest (in this example) is to also "float" the content division, since floating divisions appear side-by-side (as long as there is space) - change the content division CSS to also include a float statement:

#content
{
  float: left;
  border: 2px solid #ff0000;
  margin: 10px;
  padding: 10px;
}

The page should now look something more like this - this is pretty close to what we want:

Layoutscreen5.png

Ready to move on?

When you're happy with the concepts introduced in this chapter, take a look at CSS:Layouts102 for some more layout ideas, and how to implement them.