Getting the Lay of the Land
We can look at Cascading Style Sheets (CSS) from a number of
contextual perspectives. I prefer to view them as a
correction to a fundamental mistake that was made at the
beginning of Web Time, back in the old days of the mid-1990's
when Tim Berners-Lee and a subsequent phalanx of Web builders
first envisioned the beginnings of the Web.
What was that mistake?
CSS in Context
Almost as soon as the Web became popular, graphic designers
began noticing what they saw as a fundamental flaw: the
method by which a Web browser displayed information in HTML
files was not within the designers' control. No, it was the
users who were in primary charge of how the Web pages they
visited would appear on their systems.
Keep Adding Content
You can see that as you keep adding content to this page, it
adds nicely boxed and centered material down the center of
the page.
Why CSS is Better
Style sheets allow you to separate content from its
presentation, which leads to pages that are more easily
reproduced as templates for other pages and to vastly easier
maintenance. Smaller file sizes, fewer place-holder graphics,
and faster load times are some of the other benefits of
CSS.
If you have other ideas on this subject,
drop me an email and
let's talk about it!