I think where I get lost is not necessarily in the understanding of how to do it, but more on the side of what people like to see. For instance I can't for the life of me come up with good color palate matching or create that initial page focal point (i.e. where the users eyes go on the page first).
It takes a different mind to go from JDBC to page layout and do both well, and I think the majority of us programmers either can't do it or would rather not do it. We are more concerned about how fast it runs or the amount of features we fit onto one page, etc. Aaron Bartell -----Original Message----- From: Leonardo Quijano Vincenzi [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: Friday, February 17, 2006 12:43 PM To: Tapestry users Subject: Re: Gavin King's comment about presentation code and CSS in Javaposse podcast Well then the problem is the java programmer, not the CSS! I always wonder how one guy who is disciplined enough to do proper JDBC and transaction demarcation, or to build complex architectures, can't use HTML as it was designed to. I think people underestimate the work of a good web coder. This is problem of culture, not that it is impossible to make CSS work properly. -- Ing. Leonardo Quijano Vincenzi DTQ Software Ron Piterman wrote: > the nice point about it: how imressive csszengarden is, try letting a > java programmer write *the html* (of cssgarden) from scratch- that > would never work... > > Cheers, > Ron > > --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] --------------------------------------------------------------------- To unsubscribe, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] For additional commands, e-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
