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Complete CSS guide By John Allsopp and Maxine Sherrin. Welcome to the Complete CSS Guide, a reference to every aspect of cascading style sheets. In this worls, there are common, good, and excellent guides. This is an excellent CSS guide. Start by reading the introduction to this guide to really understand what cascading style sheets are and how they work ( the Big Picture ). Cascading Style Sheets ( CSS ) is a recommendation of the World Wide Web Consortium ( the W3C ). You can think of these W3C recommendations as a kind of standard. There are W3C recommendations covering diverse aspects of the web, from wireless content development to HTML 4.0 and XML. CSS offers web developers a powerful tool that helps simplify the complex task of maintaining web sites, and provides sophisticated layout and design features for web pages without the need for plugins, long download times and expensive tools. In a nutshell, CSS provides a means for web authors to separate the appearance of web pages from the content of web pages. As a developer this means that the information in your web site should go into your HTML files, but HTML files should not contain information about how that information is displayed. And you've probably guessed by now that information about how the pages should appear goes into CSS files. With cascading style sheets, whole organizations can share a small number of style sheets, ensuring consistency across the site with no need for constant updating and editing to accommodate changes. But style sheets can be a little tricky to understand at first. Cascading style sheets work quite differently from the style sheets you might be familiar with, like those in word processors and page layout applications such as Quark Express and PageMaker. It is just to address this hurdle that we have developed this Guide
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