using dreamweaver
Dreamweaver users will have to define the style attributes in the external
style sheet using a text editor. Once you've saved the style sheet, you can then
open the page in Dreamweaver and see the newly defined styles in the styles menu
(Window>CSS Styles from the top toolbar). Each time you need to change/add a new
style in the text editor, you will have to re-open the page in Dreamweaver to
see new styles as Dreamweaver does not automatically refresh the list if the
page is currently open.
n.b.: This is only applicable for elements with borders,
Dreamweaver copes well with other style sheet definitions. Edit your style sheet
by clicking on the "Edit Style Sheet" icon at the bottom right of the styles
window.
creating the css attributes
Open your text editor and either edit the css attributes for an existing
element, or create a new definition or class.
More information about classes.
adding a border to an html element
TABLE {
border: solid 1px #000000;
}
This will put a solid black border of 1 (one) pixel around all your
tables. (Make sure that border is not set to "0" in the html.) This doesn't put
a border round all the table cells inside the table though. To do this, you'll
need to use the following:
TABLE {
border-top: solid 1px #000000;
border-right: solid 1px #000000;
}
TD {
border-left: solid 1px #000000;
border-bottom: solid 1px #000000;
}
Use the following html for a two column, two row table (or add a 2x2 table
with no border in Dreamweaver):
<table cellpadding="5" cellspacing="0">
<tr>
<td>Table cell content</td>
<td>Table cell content</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>Table cell content</td>
<td>Table cell content</td>
</tr>
</table>
This should look like this:
|
Table cell content |
Table cell content |
|
Table cell content |
Table cell content |
You can experiment with the style of border. Instead of solid, try any of
the following: dotted, dashed, double, groove, ridge, inset, outset and none.
You can also change the
hex color value and thickness of the border.
With the double border style, the width of the lines is supposed to
determine how far apart the two lines are, but this is still a bit buggy in some
browsers.
H1 {
border-bottom: double 2px #CC0000;
}
This should produce a 2 pixel wide red double border with 2 pixels between
each line underneath all your Heading 1 elements.
borders and layers
Adding a border to a layer can be achieved by using the following in your
css style sheet:
#layername {
position: absolute;
left: 200px;
top: 100px;
width: 300px;
z-index: 90;
border: 1px solid #CC0000;
background-color: #FFFFFF;
layer-background-color: #FFFFFF; [n.b. this is not valid css,
but required if the background color is to show properly in Netscape 4.x]
visibility: visible;
}
Use the following html (in Dreamweaver make sure the layer is a DIV, not
LAYER or ILAYER):
<div id="layername">Content of layer</div>
borders and classes
You can add a border style to any part of your html, using
classes to span smaller sections of block elements.
This is also applicable when applying border styles to inline elements, such as
<b> (bold text).
Create a class in your style sheet as follows:
.styleborder {
border-left: double 10px #CC0000;
}
And add the following html to the text you wish to have the border applied
to (in Dreamweaver simply highlight the text and apply the style):
<p>A normal paragraph with some <span class="styleborder">border
style</span> applied to only part of the text.</p>
This should apply a red double border with 10 pixels of space between the
lines to the left of the spanned text like this:
A normal paragraph with some border style
applied to only part of the text.
You can also create a class for a table cell that's different from the
other cells in that table to create interesting border effects:
TABLE.main {
font-family: verdana, arial, helvetica, sans-serif;
background-color: #E2FAFA;
border-left: 1px solid #330033;
border-right: 1px solid #330033;
border-bottom: 1px solid #330033;
width: 760px;
}
TD.different {
background-color: #E2FAFA;
border-left: dashed 1px #669999;
border-right: dashed 1px #669999;
}
This will create a different border for the table cells with the class
"different" if you use the following html (in Dreamweaver, create the table and
apply the class "main" to it, then select the middle cell and apply the class
"different" to it):
<table class="main" cellpadding="5" cellspacing="0">
<tr>
<td>Normal table cell</td>
<td class="different">"Different" styletable cell</td>
<td>Normal table cell</td>
</tr>
</table>
This should apply a dark purple border round the whole table and teal
dashed borders on the left and right of the "different" table cell like this:
|
Normal table cell
Normal table cell |
"Different" styletable cell
"Different" styletable cell |
Normal table cell
Normal table cell |
As you can see, borders can be very useful and have many variations. It
would be impossible to show all the numerous combinations here, so happy
experimenting!
n.b.: Be careful about applying just a border-bottom to
any text, as this could look like a link and confuse your visitors.
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