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Jul 15 2008, 10:24 PM EDT
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Change: The selector is denoted by an asterisk, and if you place the following line of code at the start of your CSS, you will remove
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Jul 15 2008, 10:21 PM EDT
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Change: ) is an easy way to fool them. Because either of these are examples of an invalid selector in CSS1, CSS1-only parsers should ignore them.
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Jul 15 2008, 9:11 PM EDT
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Change: . You can also see the pixel "gab" when designing fluid layouts - at 95% it is a staggering 688px in width and 512px in height.Sizes to design for % Fixed Layout Fluid Layout Fluid Gab 75% 1000x576 872x504 - 1256x808 384/304 80% 984x568 864x464 - 1264x848 400/384 85%
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Jul 15 2008, 9:08 PM EDT
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Change: With the report your layout width need to be less than 776px, if you want to reach 95% of your visitors - and that is your design constraint. You cannot make your text larger than 19px, because the text box needs to be larger than the available screen space. http://www.humanfactors.com/downloads/feb03.asp
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Jul 15 2008, 9:07 PM EDT
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Change: optimal width of a block of text is between 65-80 characters (with a line-height of about 1.15). This is the optimal size of text, and it has been proven to be: Easier to move from one line to the next It is much faster to read in general The
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Jul 15 2008, 9:01 PM EDT
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Change: layout that stretches to the current user’s browser window size (that is, avoid frozen layouts that are always the same size). My modified version of Jakob Nielsen’s Alertbox “Screen resolution and page layout“, July 31, 2006. My modifications: browser window size instead of screen size. http://www.baekdal.com/articles/Usability/actual-browser-size-preliminaryhttp://www.baekdal.com/articles/Usability/browser-size-design/ http://www.humanfactors.com/downloads/feb03.asp
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Jul 15 2008, 9:00 PM EDT
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Change: layout that stretches to the current user’s browser window size (that is, avoid frozen layouts that are always the same size). My modified version of Jakob Nielsen’s Alertbox “Screen resolution and page layout“, July 31, 2006. My modifications: browser window size instead of screen size. http://www.baekdal.com/articles/Usability/actual-browser-size-preliminary http://www.baekdal.com/articles/Usability/browser-size-design/
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Jul 15 2008, 8:58 PM EDT
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Change: liquid layout that stretches to the current user’s browser window size (that is, avoid frozen layouts that are always the same size). My modified version of Jakob Nielsen’s Alertbox “Screen resolution and page layout“, July 31, 2006. My modifications: browser window size instead of screen size. http://www.baekdal.com/articles/Usability/actual-browser-size-preliminary
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Jul 15 2008, 8:56 PM EDT
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Change: Screen real-estate available for browser, based on findings byJakob Nielsen with added data by Justaddwater. Optimize for 1004×598, which is currently the most widely used browser window size. Of course, the general guideline is to optimize for
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Jul 15 2008, 8:55 PM EDT
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Change: . Of course, the general guideline is to optimize for your target audience’s most common resolution, so the size will change in the future. It might even be a different size now, if, say, you’re designing an intranet for a company that gives all employees big monitors. Do not
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Jul 15 2008, 8:40 PM EDT
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Change: The graphic safe area dimensions for printing layouts and for page layouts designed to use the maximum width of 800 x 600 screens are shown below:Graphic "safe area" dimensions for layouts designed to print well:Maximum width = 560 pixelsMaximum height = 410 pixels (visible without scrolling)Graphic
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Jul 15 2008, 8:40 PM EDT
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Change: Created by Jul 15 2008, 8:40 PM EDT for: no reason given
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