Professional CSS: Cascading Style Sheets for Web Design (Wrox Professional Guides)

Professional CSS: Cascading Style Sheets for Web Design (Wrox Professional Guides) by Christopher Schmitt

Professional CSS: Cascading Style Sheets for Web Design (Wrox Professional Guides)

Binding:
Paperback
Number of Pages:
301
ISBN:
047017708X
Product Group:
book
Publisher:
John Wiley & Sons
Publication Date:
May 9, 2008
BooksForGeeks.com ID:
555

Updated and revised to reflect changes to cascading style sheets (CSS) development procedures since the first edition was published, Professional CSS: Cascading Style Sheets for Web Design, 2nd Edition offers a hands-on look at designing standards-based, large-scale, professional-level CSS web sites.

Reviews for Professional CSS: Cascading Style Sheets for Web Design (Wrox Professional Guides)

  1. Lamentable and annoying

    Rated 1 out of 5 stars, November 12th, 2009

    This is a book which becomes increasingly annoying with each reading. The editorial team were either asleep or, more incredibly, actually share the five authors' facile sense of humour which strangles the text and patronises the reader.

    The case studies introduce too much extraneous information and, for me, are unsuccessful; the points they address could have been made more succinctly without them. Building chapters around case studies makes it difficult to find the specific information subsequently - this is exacerbated by completely unhelpful entries in the table of contents (e.g. "A glimpse into a Classless Future (Not a Socialist Manifesto)" [drum roll, cymbal crash], or "Love your body Even More Tomorrow" [ho, ho]).

    Instead of going into a second edition, Wrox press should have pulped any stockpiled copies and fired this team of jokers.

    I would recommend prospective purchasers to avoid this book like the plague; there are better books which cover CSS more professionally and thoroughly.

    It is not possible to give a rating of zero stars, so please do not take my 1* rating as any kind of commendation.



  2. Very average, too many (poor) jokes, not enough insight

    Rated 2 out of 5 stars, July 12th, 2009

    I bought this book to have a deep understanding of the CSS paradigms and how best they match problems faced by Web designers who cannot assume a speficic screen size or format (i.e phones and desktop screens).
    How disappointed I am! The book tries to joke with the reader all the time in a very condescendant way (page 12, "This should-oh, you get the point. Happy yet?". Rather than explaining in an generic fashion what the problem is and what the solution is, the reader is inundated with numerous examples of the same symptomatique issue page after page. Once again, do the authors think that we cannot grasp very basic abstract concepts? Is it a tentative to fill up the requested minimum number of pages set by the editor?
    This book is at best a cookbook, at worse a waste of time. It does certainly not provide any insight into CSS and won't help you design your website both for desktop screens and smartphone screens.

  3. These CSS books are getting better and better

    Rated 5 out of 5 stars, August 12th, 2005

    There have been quite a few CSS-related books released of late, a trend that is following the larger number of sites build with web standards.

    Whereas a book such as 'Web Standards Solutions: The Markup and Style Handbook' by Dan Cederholm is great, this book excels because of its examination of standards built sites such as blogger.com and the us pga tour golf site.

    There are a large number of examples, and the book is generally well written.

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