@mdmcginn: I do think that having a proven flexible div setup that
allows for so many different options, is precisely what you need on
the original layout. What Zengarden does, is prove the flexibility of
CSS but that flexibility is nothing if your div structure is not
correctly thought out and matured.

On the minus side, however, and this is my personal opinion, I think
that most Zengarden designs, are mostly oriented towards blogging,
news/magazine, or marketing presentations, and not so much about
enterprise applications. (This might be that I have missed the correct
layouts). However, I have the same opinion about the other layout
plugin.

Cheers,
Benigno.
On Mar 24, 10:23 am, mdmcginn <michael.d.mcgin...@gmail.com> wrote:
> CSS is great, much better than table-based web design, and
> csszengarden deserves a lot of credit for demonstrating that. But it
> is just a proof of concept. As you noted, their basic HTML is full of
> empty divs into which designers can insert fancy images, so it's not a
> good base for templates.
>
> On Mar 22, 9:14 am, Wes James <compte...@gmail.com> wrote:
>
> > On Sat, Mar 20, 2010 at 7:27 PM, mdipierro <mdipie...@cs.depaul.edu> wrote:
> > > Just for fun:
>
> > >  http://web2py.com/zengarden
>
> > > then click on the [zengarden] link under the menu, under the "index"
> > > link. You can change the skin per user, per session.
> > > This is a bare bone welcome app with the layout
>
> > It says to click on link at top right - on firefox/mac os x.6.2 it
> > shows up on top-left.
>
> > -wes

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