NAVIGATION BAR AND BULLETED LISTS
A proper navigation is the backbone of your Web site's success on the Net. If you want the visitors to be able to access all the information you want them to be able to access, you got to provide them with a consistent modus operandi for doing it. And that modus operandi has to be present throughout the web site.
A navigation bar can be on the top, at the bottom, on the left, on the right, or in the middle, in whichever way it suits the look of your entire design.
The ideal is, either on the top, or on the left hand side.
What we generally do is, after inserting the logo etc. at the top, we define a table of two columns.
< d>
< d>
< r>
< able>
The above portion should be saved as a template file, so that you make the desired changes in the template, keep the common code intact, and save the modified file as your own file.
Make ample use of the comment tag so that you know where you are putting what, especially if you are working with multiple table and column definitions.
"leftnav.inc" can be the included file that has the following HTML code:
Home Page
My Profile
Contact Me
You can have as many links as the number of pages you want to be seen
You don't need to use the Server Side Includes if your Web site consists of merely 6-7 pages because then you can just keep on copying and pasting the navigation bar code at:
< d>
in this way:
Home Page
My Profile
Contact Me
< d>
For a live example, check out http://www.hearthealthanalyzer.com, where I have used such a navigation system using tables and the SSIs.
Bulleted Lists: If you have gone to http://www.hearthealthanalyzer.com, you must have noticed there, a list of benefits of the heart health analyzer. There is a special tag used to achieve such a mesmeric feat. In fact, there are two tags, namely,
and
. is for a bulleted list, and
is for a numbered list.
You do this in the following manner:
We provide the following services:
The type attribute of tag decides what sort of bullet is going to be visible. Generally, there is this disk, a circle, and a square. You can define the
tag in your Cascading Style Sheet so that whenever you display the bulleted list, it appears in the same manner.
About the Author
Amrit Hallan is a freelance web designer. For all web site
development and web promotion needs, you can get in touch with
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