Editing CSS Styles With Dreamweaver

Because of its ability to separate design from content, Cascading Style Sheets (CSS) has become an extremely important technology in web development. A single CSS document can contain information regarding the position of elements on all the pages in a web site as well as style information such as font, sizes and colours. In terms of building websites, CSS definitely represents the future.

Adobe Dreamweaver is a very widely used platform for developing web sites and web content and, although used by experienced developers, is also widely used by non-specialists for whom Dreamweaver’s user-friendly visual interface takes the pain out of web site creation. The way in which Dreamweaver implements CSS is very important for the casual user, since it will influence the kind of sites they end up producing.

Previous versions of Dreamweaver assumed that most users would be using tables to control the layout of their web pages. Dreamweaver CS3 is the first version of the program which encourages users to create CSS-based web page layouts. When the users create a new web page, they are offered a series of CSS layouts, on which they can base the new page, consisting of single, double and three column designs.

CSS page layout is based in the DIV element, an HTML container which can be used to hold an arbitrary amount of web content. The CSS rules control the appearance and positioning of DIVs on the page. Dreamweaver CS3’s preset CSS layouts create a series of DIVs containing placeholder text and basic formatting. The placeholder text, as well as the code underlying the page, both contain useful explanations of how the page has been constructed and a few tips on how to personalise them.

The CSS generated by Dreamweaver when creating these preset layouts is embedded within the page itself. Updating a site where every page has embedded CSS code would be extremely inefficient. A far better arrangement is to keep all of the CSS in a single file. Luckily, Dreamweaver has a nifty feature for moving CSS definitions from an HTML page to an external CSS file. You just highlight all of the CSS you wish to export, right click the selection and choose « Move CSS Rules » from the « CSS Styles » context menu.

Moving CSS code into an external file is not something a beginner would be expected to think of doing and is not something that Dreamweaver recommends to new users. So, in spite of the improvements, some familiarity with CSS is still required to get Dreamweaver to handle CSS efficiently.

Another area where Dreamweaver still handles CSS inefficiently is the way in which it generates CSS class styles with names like « style1 », « style2 », etc. whenever the user applies attributes like font, size or colour to highlighted text. This must be really confusing for beginners and can easily be solved by simply removing these « raw » attributes and replacing them with CSS-friendly options.

The writer of this article is a developer and trainer with TrainingCompany.Com, a UK IT training company offering Adobe Dreamweaver Classes at their central London training centre.

Related CSS Articles