On Fri, 2004-07-23 at 04:57, Justin French wrote: > On 23/07/2004, at 6:48 AM, EE wrote: > > > 1. Printer Friendly Version Capability > > This can be achieved with media specific style sheets stylesheets -- no > need for separate templates. > Do you recommend any tutorial?
> > > 2. Search-ability > > For the most part, this can be achieved with MySQL's fulltext search > capabilities. You just need to wrap it all in a search GUI and results > page. > > > > 3. Search Engine Friendly > > This relates back to #1. If you restrict your use of HTML to only > semantic page elements (DIVs, H1-6s, Ps, etc), rather that filling it > with presentational mark-up (FONT, TABLE, etc) your pages will be > lighter, which will allow better indexing by search engines. This is a > really quick overview of course, but standards-based web pages with all > presentational stuff moved to a CSS file will help SE's index your > content accurately, and it will be a pleasure to maintain. > How can I restrict my html to semantic elements? My tutorial has tables. I don't mean styling table. I mean engineering data tables? www.eeetc.bjaili.com/tutorial.php?num=7&act=dig how can I move presentational stuff to css file? > This seems to be a common stylesheet set-up: > <link rel='stylesheet' media='all' href='css/basic.css' /> > <link rel='stylesheet' media='print' href='css/print.css' /> > <style type='text/css' media='screen'>@import > url("css/advanced.css")</style> > > But we're getting WAY off topic here. > > > > 1. What is the best way to store the tutorials. Should they be in a > > database or each in a separate HTML file. > > Either is fine, but searching will be easier in a database -- > especially with MySQL's fulltext search built in. > > > Search Google for specific help on any of the above, and you'll be set > :) > > > --- > Justin French > http://indent.com.au > > > -- PHP General Mailing List (http://www.php.net/) To unsubscribe, visit: http://www.php.net/unsub.php