What would you recommend in this topic. I know basics of CSS but I need to expand my knowledge of CSS. It's always good to use good source.
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Have a look at ZenGarden and they have made a book too.
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CSS Play has some great examples in action. |
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Check out Dynamic Drive... with loads of download able code |
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The W3 Schools website is always a good reference. As for books, I find that Eric Meyer is an authoritative author on the subject. Check out the O'Reilly CSS book. |
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There's a large section on CSS resources on the Web Developer's Handbook. |
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i recommended simplebits.com |
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MaxDesign also contains good tutorials. For example: |
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Here's a list of a lot of sites I visit for help/inspiration: CSS Specific: General web design site's that may help:
And I'm going to stop there but I could go on. Try also following the blogs of some of the industry leaders out there like Dave Shea (created the Zen Garden site mentioned earlier). |
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CSS Mastery (link to companion site) by Andy Budd |
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I tend to use www.htmlhelp.com. It may not be the best site, but the name is easy to remember and I usually find what I'm looking for there. (I know it's called "HTML Help", not "CSS Help", but it has a lot of links to information about CSS as well.) |
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Site wise, I like css zen garden. IF you have some knowledge of css, it really shows you how it is used in real life. And since you see the good/bad examples right away, you learn thing to do or not to do:) |
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The book that I used to learn both HTML and CSS was O'Reilly's Head First HTML with CSS & XHTML. It provides a fun, but technically sound way to learn the basics of CSS. It's written in a conversational style to make the material easier to assimilate. When I was done with the book I could do basic styling including layout and colors. |
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A List Apart is very good. It has a strong engineering tone it to for a site that covers design. |
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You could try Transcending CSS by Andy Clarke. |
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CSS Zen Garden One of the first and one fo the best... It's a site and a book. |
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Designing with Web Standards by Zeldman |
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This site has a ton of good links: http://veerle.duoh.com/blog/links |
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Try to write CSS parser or CSS renderer. Trust me - after that you will be able to write books about CSS by yourself. At least this will motivate you to read the spec. That if your ultimate goal to be a guru on the subject. |
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CSS Mastery is an easy read and was immensely helpful. I can't recommend it enough. |
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No votes for Bulletproof Web Design by Dan Cederholm? Remedied. As well as an excellent cross-browser css resource, it's one of the better-looking books you can buy, certainly better designed itself than CSS mastery (although the content of the latter is great, too). |
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If I wasn't out of votes I'd uprate all of the above, but that said, I'm seconding A List Apart. |
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http://css-tricks.com/ is a great resource with multiple screencasts. |
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