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Tuesday, April 24, 2007

Form Elements Guide and Forms Development Cycle, 04/24/07

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This handy little state drop-down element and this country drop-down element will save you a great deal of typing. (Warning: These links open in new browser windows.)

State and Country drop-down menus in a form.
After opening a linked file, just copy the markup to the clipboard, and in code view paste it in your document at the desired place. Or if you prefer, save the file to your assign3 folder, then open, and take it from there.

You are free to use these form elements in Dreamweaver, whenever you need to, especially in your final assignment, due NLT 4:30, Thursday, May 3, delivered to Gail Wessell, Smith 121.

Thinking about how to create a form is half the battle in designing an interactive survey for the Web. Click here to review the Form Development Cycle tutorial, which opens in a new browser window.The Form Development Cycle tutorial (opens in a new window) will help you to understand the 8-part form development cycle that will make Assignment Three much easier for you as you go about designing your on-line survey. I highly recommend that you step through the tutorial before too much longer.

Note that you can save yourself much time and misery if you plan carefully. This assignment is a perfect example of how to use paper and pen (low fidelity prototyping) literally to sketch your plan and its phased implementation. This approach to form design is iterative. You design, implement, test, redesign, reimplement, and retest. Work slowly, carefully, and in small increments, just as we are working in class on understanding the various form elements.

If you have questions, just e-mail me at wbuchholz@bentley.edu. Feel free to comment on this announcement, or if you want to e-mail it, click on the little mail icon directly below.

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Sunday, April 15, 2007

Interactive Form Construction, 04/19/07

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The forms tab, insert bar, presents icons for 14 form elements supported by Dreamweaver. Click to enlarge.Next class we will begin work on the interactive form elements of the Assignment Three specifications in class. Our first challenge will be to understand and create correctly labelled interactive form elements. Over the years, students have found this technology to be inviting and actually quite a bit of fun. The forms drop-down, fly-out menur approach to the 14 form elements supported by Dreamweaver. Click to enlarge.I hope you will have the same experience. The screenshot of the forms tab insert bar (above) shows one easy way to access the 14 form elements available to you in Dreamweaver. The screenshot to your right shows the drop-down/fly-out menu system that also allows access to the form elements. I use them both, depending on where I am working in the form being built.

In class, we will very carefully construct a prototype form that will include all the elements needed for assignment 3.

To make a form work on our servers, you will need some special markup that calls up a Perl file (genmail2.pl) in the cgi-bin (Common Gateway Interface-binary) folder on the server. This HTML markup is simple text in a Notepad file (cgimailto.txt) containing hidden elements that allow the form to function. These elements must be inserted into the head of the form tag. Therefore, in class on, you will need this markup, often referred to as the cgi snippet, to test the functionality of your form.

If you have any questions about the specifications for Assignment Three, or the work we will begin next class in form building, please feel free to e-mail me at wbuchholz@bentley.edu.

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Wednesday, April 11, 2007

Floating Callouts and Graphics, 04/11/07

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Our focus in class will be on creating a number of CSS rules that allow you to float callouts and graphics left and right. The float, as many of you have learned already, is an essential design concept in CSS. Shaking hands.Two women communicating in the office.Using your exercise seven cleanly scrubbed, XHTML-ized, Semantic Web-proofed, well-formed and valid text, Open Communication Climate, you will plant two callouts and two graphics, both left and right, making necessary adjustments to the graphics and text to improve design for readability and overall aesthetics. You will want to pay special attention to the relationship of the graphics, callouts, paragraph size, and headings: a full-bore design experience is about to be yours.

The graphics left and right are the ones you will use for this exercise. I will provide written instructions and will work through the design and rule-writing with you in class. I think you will find working with the float to be a lot of fun.

At the bottom of your newly designed page, you will add this source note after the Buchholz source note:

Microsoft Office Clip Art Photographs: j0406569.jpg (Shaking hands) and j0289517.jpg (2 women in office). (n.d.). Microsoft Office 2003. Redmond, WA: Microsoft Corporation.
Remember: when you hand in Assignment Two, due at classtime, turn in the annotated Assignment One, so that I can make sure you had no trouble making your corrections. Be sure also to take advantage of shift-F7 in Dreamweaver; spell-check is your best friend in Web design.)

If you have questions, just e-mail me at wbuchholz@bentley.edu. Feel free to comment on this announcement, or if you want to e-mail it, click on the little mail icon directly below.

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Friday, April 06, 2007

Assignment Two Due Thursday, April 12, 04/06/07

Assignment 2, due Thursday, April 12.
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Assignment two is due NLT 8:30 a.m., Thursday, April 12. Be sure to review and comply with all the assignment requirements.

Another important date follows on Friday, April 13: the last day to withdraw from a course without penalty. Be sure to ask me if you think I would advise that you withdraw from this course.

If you have questions, just e-mail me at wbuchholz@bentley.edu. Feel free to comment on this announcement, or if you want to e-mail it, click on the little mail icon directly below.

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Tuesday, April 03, 2007

Text Optimization in XHTML, 04/03/07

Check this out! Check this out: Open Communication Climate.

Next class, we will begin our assignment two design project using this Word doc about open communication in the workplace. In class, I will provide specific directions on how to handle this document, which will become exercise 7. The basic idea is to show you how to import a Word doc. file and then to scrub up the XHTML in preparation for named fragments and style rules application (readied for the Semantic Web). This will be practice for assignment two, due Thursday, April 12.

If you have questions, just e-mail me at wbuchholz@bentley.edu. Feel free to comment on this announcement, or if you want to e-mail it, click on the little mail icon directly below.

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Sunday, April 01, 2007

Banner and CSS Buttons, 04/03/07

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Banner and CSS buttons for exercise 6.Next class we will finish up the look and feel of your Web site template by creating the CSS "buttons." I think you will be amazed at how attractive your site will be when the banner and buttons are activated on all your pages. If you enlarge the screenshot to the left, you will be able to see some of the detail in the template page for exercise 6. With any luck, we will be able to complete the lion's share of this exercise next class.

If you have questions, just e-mail me at wbuchholz@bentley.edu. Feel free to comment on this announcement, or if you want to e-mail it, click on the little mail icon directly below.

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