In article
In article
http://courseweb.yc.edu/csa144/mglasser/index.html
That is one ugly website... :(
Well, I wasn't gonna go there... still won't because of the
subjectivity. That said, I'm not gonna walk on eggs shells for Snit
or anyone else using DW so I'll ask you your opinion of something
Do you think it's possible that a person using DW, who doesn't code
well manually, is more likely to encounter this kind of issue and
not be able to fix it (or, in Snit's case, believe it isn't
fixable)?
My two cents: I've seen this stuff on a number of occasions.
If you mean the vertical scrollbar thing, then I think it's a moot
point. There are few sites where a horizontal shift is that important
to suppress.
I've done it on a few sites and if it is needed, a few seconds of
googling will give you the solution (CSS overflow) and adding that to
the site is irrelevant to whether you're coding it yourself or using
a beginners tool such as DreamWeaver.
I see your point... but I've seen more people using DW not even be
aware that there are fixes for stuff like this when needed. In fact,
the very thread we're posting to got created due to a DW user not
being aware there even was a fix.
Snit keeps claiming he did know now that ZnU told him all about it and you
showed him the list of sites that use the solution.
I have nothing against DW the tool,
I actually took a look at it and almost bought it. My main observation
is the type of developer it seems to foster the creation of. I
dunno... maybe I've just been exposed to an abnormally large amount of
these kinds of developers.
DW is a beginners tool and it keep beginners ignorant. Do not use it.
--
You Ain't the Biggest Fish in the Crotch