Let Your Little Website Shine, Part 2Get Web Design Tips and Tricks on mps-web-design.com. Let Your Little Website Shine, Part 2 topic will increase your understanding on Web Design Tips and Tricks. We at mps-web-design.com only provide news, articles, information in Web Design Tips and Tricks. Web Design Tips and Tricks at mps-web-design.com provides the most up to date news and articles. If you have questions please do not hesitate to contact us.
2. Looks great: Please remember that this subject has so many opinions among so many people that it really is up to you in the end. What you think looks great, may look stupid or overdone to someone else. If you get criticism in feedback from your visitors, keep it in mind if it is constructive. We'll just discuss a few things to help you decide for yourself. The first and best thing to do is to find out what the big guys are doing. You know the sites that get huge hits. Study these sites. What about them is pleasing to your eyes? Is it a certain way the navigation links are presented? Is it the location of certain elements on the page? What elements make up these websites that make them easy to look at? Do they have really cool graphics? Do they present the content in an easy-to-look-at way? Notice that they don't usually overcrowd the page. A lot of junk crammed into one page turns people off. Their lettering and graphics are clean-looking. No raggedy edges (aliasing). Keep their formats in mind when you design yours. What colors do they stick to? How do they present their menus/links? Time them. How fast do they load? What elements on each webpage catch your eye first. Look at these websites with a different eye than just somebody visiting there. These websites were designed by professionals doing this for a living. What types of presentation do they know brings people back. Look at it from an artistic and marketing eye. What about these sites provides a lot of marketing material? Don't copy them, of course, but keep in mind where their navigation links go, where the logo usually goes, how much content is on the main page, how the navigation links they have are pretty standard. You'll notice that almost every really good page has some of the following links: Contact Us About Us Help Feedback to Webmaster General Feedback Links to other sites related Home (on all pages except home, of course) Back Buttons, Next Buttons, Paging for pages that go together Search this site for.... These are just a few of the common links that you'll see on really successful pages. Step back and look at your page from a marketing and artistic viewpoint. Would you stay long? If you need help with the 'Looks Great' part of your website and you insist on doing the design yourself, here are some pretty good sites to give you help: http://www.webmonkey.com http://www.flashkit.com http://www.macromedia.comSo 3. It's links actually work: I've mentioned this in another article, but it is worth mentioning again. Test and test and test your site for broken links. Put it through some very exhaustive checks to make sure all the links people click actually go somewhere and to make sure the places they go when they click are where they were supposed to end up in the first place. Have friends or coworkers test the links for you to get a second, fresh eye to look. It helps to put an email link at the bottom of each page that says something like: Problems with our site? Email the Webmaster. This will correct more mistakes than you'll ever correct on your own. People love to gripe about how your website doesn't work as advertised. It's good criticism for you. When responding to them, respond politely and thank them for pointing out this problem. When I return in Part 3, I’ll talk about quick response to requests by your prospective customers. Thanks for joining me!
Firing a function from your browserThe concept is as simple as firing a function from your browser, and it leans on PHP's call_user_func_array. I'm going to outline the concept as I have implemented it. This exact implementation may not work in your case, but perhaps you can adapt it to do so.
if(isset($_GET['f']) && function_exists($_GET['f'])) {
$func = $_GET['f']; // Get function name.
unset($_GET['f']); // Drop function from from get.
// Fire and print function, passing
// remaining GETs as function parameters.
print_r(call_user_func_array($func, $_GET));
exit;
}
In our CMS/Framework, we set up a controller with the code from above to respond at a given URL, for example So, This allows for a quick and dirty test of a given function, and can be done remotely on a live site, if necessary, without touching any files or whatnot. We hide this behind an authorization wall and also clean our parameters before they get to this level, so if you try this, keep these points in mind. Article Index: | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 | 12 | 13 | 14 | 15 | 16 | 17 | 18 | 19 | 20 | 21 | 22 | 23 | 24 | 25 | 26 | 27 | 28 | 29 | 30 | 31 | 32 | 33 | 34 | 35 | 36 | 37 | 38 | 39 | 40 | 41 | 42 | 43 | 44 | 45 | 46 | 47 | 48 | 49 | 50 | 51 | 52 | 53 | 54 | 55 | 56 | 57 | 58 | 59 | 60 | 61 | 62 | 63 | 64 | 65 | 66 | 67 | 68 | 69 | 70 | 71 | 72 | 73 | 74 | 75 | 76 | 77 | 78 | 79 |
More Articles:1. How To Create A Homepage That Works By Michael Cheney Want to know what the worst thing to say on a homepage is?"Welcome to our homepage."And yet, time after time, we all come across such homepages on the Internet. The reason that this is such a poor opening gambit is the fact that the visitor already knows he / she is looking at your homepage, what's the point in teaching them to suck eggs?Your website's homepage needs to contain much more important messages than a simple welcome statement or brief history to your company. Why has someone landed… 2. Web Site Navigation By Halstatt Pires Once a visitor gets to your web site, you want to make sure they can find what they are looking for quickly and easily, or they will just go elsewhere. If a web site is easy to use and understand, visitors will come back time and time again.Using intuitive navigation techniques will greatly improve the usability of your web site, and therefore user satisfaction and return rates. By intuitive navigation, I mean some sort of menu, map or list that is instantly understandable to most visitors to … 3. Creating Personal Web Sites By Ashish Jain This is a two-part article about creating a web site on the web and the tools that you need to do that.During the last decade we have truly entered the information age. More and more people are becoming a part of the ever growing and wondrous community called the Internet. It was just over a decade ago that ‘Internet’ was just another new concept that a lot of people were skeptical about. Today however, it would be difficult to imagine living in the world without this amazing phenomenon. It re… 4. Ten Basic Steps For Building A Web Site That Works By Lee Traupel 1. Assemble a web site development plan that is integrated with your overall marketing processes; the content should be consistent with offline materials, the graphics/images don't have to be identical with traditional media, but should be consistent with your overall branding, style guide, usage of colors etc.2. Hire a web site design firm that understands your market position and one that won't get "geek crazy" - meaning they are so in love with their own design capabilities, your site gets … |
||||