dom wrote:Tatianasaphira wrote:Well, I could just scrap all I got and buy dreamweaver and let it do the job. However I have over 50 html pages (5 books with their coding, and I am NOT looking forward to finishing the coding for LoaD3, 2 was enough) so it would take me a tremendous amount of work.
I got about 1/3 of them done, with my first fanfic finished its coding, as well as my brushes, and my guides page.
You shouldn't have 50 pages. You're coding it the wrong way. And dreamweaver doesn't do the job for you, it lets you not remember all the coding functions and attributes, and be able to click a button for a table, instead of typing <table>. Also, judging by the coding work you showed, you might want to pick it up. You don't have the fundamentals down, you're taking the wrong routes in coding, it's leading to a lot of weird stuff: eg background is the site, and iframes.
Try wc3schools, they have a lot of resources. Coding standards change every couple months, due to new browsers, windows versions, etc. You really need to always keep up with the new standards.
Sure I do - Chapter one, Chapter two, Chapter three...etc...that would be why I have so many pages.
And as said, the current coding was a gift from a friend. My original code was part html, and part css, that was a nightmare to figure out. He did it all as one streamlined code, so that I could edit it better.
As for the standards, most of that stuff is blocked at work, and when I get home, I try to stay off the computer as much as I can (Yeah, who am I kidding, I'm playing SilkRoad/Ragnarok)
Eventually, I do want to make it a career, and actually go to school for it, cause listening to people scream about why their printer isn't printing, is enough to drive anyone bonkers.




