It look really nice, but isn't to much of the space spend with the menus? Maybe as alternative idea something like http://www.scripture.nl/
Greetz, Simon -----Oorspronkelijk bericht----- Van: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Namens Troy A. Griffitts Verzonden: maandag 3 maart 2003 23:46 Aan: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Onderwerp: Re: [sword-devel] Web Interface: Mock-up page 1 Don, As always, your web interface looks awesome! It did look and resize well on Linux/Netscape 7.02. I'm excited to hear others comments on it. -Troy. Don A. Elbourne Jr. wrote: > I have one page of the Sword Web interface proposal up. I was hoping > to have several mock pages together by now, but I don't have them > together yet. I figured I might as well share this one, because if > everyone hates it, I can change gears before getting too far along. :) > > What you see here http://elbourne.org/swordweb/passagestudy.html is my > idea of what the "passage study" results page would look like. > Everything is marked up in semantically structured XHTML without any > visual markup in the page itself. Everything is done through CSS so > that the entire site look and feel can be changed at will. This should > also make the generation of the HTML simpler on the programmer. For > example no FONT tags, the headings are simple <h1><h2> headings, the > lists are marked up <ul> as lists, etc.. If you have a browser that > utilizes alternative style sheets, I have a blank one associated with > it in addition to the blue theme to show the structure of the > document. Perhaps we could have several alternate style sheets and > allow the user to switch according to his/her tastes/needs. But enough > of that.... > > The heading and navigation items across the top are simply place > holders. We will have to think about what all will be best to place > there, depending on what features we end up implementing. > > The search box to the top left would appear on the homepage as well so > that users can jump straight into the two most commonly used features > of an online Bible. Either a quick search for word/phrase, or a > passage look-up. Then of course there is a link to a more powerful > search where the user can limit the search to a particular portion of > scripture, search other translations, books, etc. > > The page I have up now would be the result of typing "Romans 8:26-39" > and clicking "go." Down the left column is a list of all the Bible > translations available. The links would already be set to the desired > passage. The same thing for commentaries would be in the right hand > column. The center column would contain the text. The passage > reference would be displayed as a heading and the book name > underneath. The sub navigation bar allows the user to progress forward > a chapter, backward a chapter, or view the entire chapter. Of course > the links in the side columns should follow the focus of the main > content in the center. > > I have a lot of translations there listed. Perhaps it would be best to > limit the list to a default group, for example only English > translations. The user could then change what translations are > included with their preferences. I also have several commentaries > listed in the mock-up. I'm assuming that it would be trivial to limit > this listing to only those books that have entries for the current > passage under investigation. > >>From the homepage the user is only two clicks away from any content >>related > to their desired passage. > > Two features can be built into this view page that I do not have shown > yet. > > 1. Using the KJV2003 text, each word could contain a link into a "Word > Study" page where the definitions from any available lexicons/ > dictionaries would be displayed, along with a concordance listing of > every occurrence of that word. > > 2. Cross references could be included between each verse from the > Treasury of Scripture Knowledge. Perhaps this feature could be toggled > off an on in the user preferences. > > > Back to the layout... the template is very simple. Basically: > > <body> > <div id="header"> > <h1>Insert Header Here</h1> > </div> > > <div id="content-wrap"> > > <div id="content-sub-1"> > <!-- Insert Search Box --> > <!-- Insert Translation List --> > > <div id="content-sub-2"> > <!-- Insert Commentary List --> > </div> > > <div id="content-main"> > <!-- Insert Main content --> > </div> > > </div> > > <div id="footer"> > <!-- Insert Footer Info --> > </div> > > </body> > > CSS takes care of the layout. I still will probably need to tweak it > some, but this is the main idea. I've not tested it on all browsers > yet, so give me some feed back on how it looks. It should fill your > browser window no matter what size or screen resolution you have set. > The center column is fluid and the two side columns are fixed. Go > ahead and resize your browser window and see. :) I swiped the basic > CSS from a template site and then made a few changes as needed, so it > should be ok. It is supposed to even degrade and work for NS4. The > page validates as XHTML 1.0 Transitional. > > > > by grace alone, > > Don A. Elbourne Jr. > http://elbourne.org > > _______________________________________________ > sword-devel mailing list > [EMAIL PROTECTED] > http://www.crosswire.org/mailman/listinfo/sword-devel _______________________________________________ sword-devel mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://www.crosswire.org/mailman/listinfo/sword-devel _______________________________________________ sword-devel mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://www.crosswire.org/mailman/listinfo/sword-devel