http://www.saberfusion.com/slicing.php I thought in order to slice a PSD. You basically cut it up into the images then you hand code it. I diddnt realise photoshop does the coding for you?! Or does it?
I think this is new to CS3 - because I only noticed that feature when I upgraded. I was excited! Still.. it's handy to know a bit of html - because they don't always get it right.
Cool, i can now make myself a website! Im still going to learn HTML+CSS just its nice to know i can make a site now.
Forget about this s*** The resulting code isn´t either valid or cross browser compatible, I guess. So do your coding old school style
hehe - my sentiments exactly! The results are really good - and if there are some problems it's just a little bit of tweaking - saving a stack of time. To create the pages, you just go to save for web & devices - and then click on the drop down box in the save page - to save as images and html. It will slice and create the html page for you - and save the images into an image folder. It's all VERY cool
It used to code it in older versions didn't it? Or did you have to import it into DW? I've honestly never done it, got told it produced crap code, and I enjoy coding things for myself anyway...so never had the need to.
You think thats good you should see what they got in Photoshop CS4 You just go to file > command and then type in the box something like. Make really cool web 2.0 style website using light blue and orange, please. And thats it it just does it all for you. You have to say please though Damn these programs are gunna put me out of work
Well, it doesn't do the whole job for you. Adding content or implementing your new template with a CMS requires more work. It does ease the process, though.
I think you will find there is no connection beyond the similarity of names between w3schools.com and the World Wide Web Consortium, w3.org. Additionally, their tutorials are pretty much dated, as is their markup. cheers, gary
Thanks for that, my mistake I just presumed based on the name. I never actually used that site to learn, but did seem like a viable source for someone else. I still think it offers a good description of a lot of things though. My new recomendation for learning is: www.google.com <- they didn't invent it but the way things are going they will write an alternative that will rule the world. GHTML for the win.
The next direction is The Semantic Web -- a web of data rather than the present web of documents -- RDF/XML, XHTML+RDFa, FOAF Syntax and Constructs James