CSS:
CSS (Cascading Style Sheets) is a new way of developing web sites for the future. CSS has set standards by the W3 in which all web browsers (Internet Explorer still has some catching up to do) are being asked to structure their applications after to create a universal system which reads the information the same. CSS also helps bridge the gap between the different medias such as mobile phones and ipods that can be used to view web pages on different resolutions.
In the past web designers/developers used table structures to create the layout of a page, in which they then laid out the content within it. However, different browsers read the table structures differently, so that each web page was then displayed differently depending on which browser you were using. Web Designers/developers then began using “band aids” to correct some of the problems, but these types of web sites have truly become an obsolete way of design, since the inception of mobile phones, ipods and other small resolution electronic devices.
CSS allows the designer/developer to meet the needs of all of these devices and their resolutions. Web pages now hold your content and the structure language, while the style sheet holds the presentation (the where and the how) on your page all from one style sheet. This means that designers/developers can create a single style sheet (for each medium) and when changes come around in standards on web structure, then a designer/developer will only have to change one page, instead of an entire site, which could potentially have cost your business thousands of dollars in redevelopment costs.
Penguins Ink integrates style sheets in all of our web sites, and will continually update them for our clients as standards change, so that your information reaches your clients in a visually appealing and structurally sounds presentation.
In the past web designers/developers used table structures to create the layout of a page, in which they then laid out the content within it. However, different browsers read the table structures differently, so that each web page was then displayed differently depending on which browser you were using. Web Designers/developers then began using “band aids” to correct some of the problems, but these types of web sites have truly become an obsolete way of design, since the inception of mobile phones, ipods and other small resolution electronic devices.
CSS allows the designer/developer to meet the needs of all of these devices and their resolutions. Web pages now hold your content and the structure language, while the style sheet holds the presentation (the where and the how) on your page all from one style sheet. This means that designers/developers can create a single style sheet (for each medium) and when changes come around in standards on web structure, then a designer/developer will only have to change one page, instead of an entire site, which could potentially have cost your business thousands of dollars in redevelopment costs.
Penguins Ink integrates style sheets in all of our web sites, and will continually update them for our clients as standards change, so that your information reaches your clients in a visually appealing and structurally sounds presentation.






