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HTML/Website Help
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I am just learning how to use HTML to make a website, an this is what I have so far: http://www.team3167.webs.com
I have one problem, every time the home link is clicked, a new red bar with the FIRST logo appears. Does anyone have any ideas on why this is happening? I'll attach the code as soon as I save it to notepad. Thanks in advance for your help! |
Re: HTML/Website Help
Welcome to the world of HTML. I can't replicate the problem, but it is probably because you are using frames. Frames are an older technology in the web world and really shouldn't be used anymore. The new HTML5 standard doesn't even support them.
If you use DIVs and style them with stylesheets you should be able to get the same effect. Let us know if you have any questions. |
Re: HTML/Website Help
I can't reproduce it either.
What browser (and version) are you using? |
Re: HTML/Website Help
I couldn't reproduce the error with Firefox but this code might explain the red.
Code:
<frame noresize="noresize" style="background-color:red" Try taking the "background-color:red" out and see if that solves the problem. |
Re: HTML/Website Help
I had since originally posting edited the code, which fixed the error to the new bar would come up only after going to a different page, then clicking home. I just changed the code back to exactly how it was before, so you may be able to reproduce the problem now. I've used IE 6, IE 7, IE 8, Firefox 3.5.9, and Firefox 3.6.
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Re: HTML/Website Help
You might want to play around with this:
http://www.w3schools.com/tags/att_a_target.asp Also, this is how I see the site from Google Chrome (it's fine for other browsers): http://team964.com/misc/imgs/team3167.png |
Re: HTML/Website Help
Those nav links open in the same frame, so the "Home" link is opening index.htm within that frame. But index.htm contains multiple frames, so you're opening a page with frames inside a frame.
I'd either look at the target attribute as synth3tk suggested, or just change the home link to "home.htm" instead of "index.htm". I'd also avoid using anything but another HTML page for the frame content (namely, in the top frame). Also, remember that using frames means users can't bookmark individual frames on the site. At the same time, you can't prevent people from going directly to one of the pages (e.g. http://www.team3167.webs.com/About_3167.htm) in which case they won't see the top frame at all. |
Re: HTML/Website Help
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Sorry if it sounds harsh, but using frames to build modern websites is like designing a car to run off of a steam engine. Yes, it'll work, but there's a very good reason why the production of steam-powered cars was abandoned (it's very inefficient). Frames will technically work to make websites, but they have so many problems and require so many awful "hacks" just to make them work somewhat decently, that the practice of using them to make websites has been officially abandoned. * Small amounts of iframes (they're different from frames) are acceptable when used sparingly. I've used small iframes to do Gmail-style AJAX file upload before. |
Re: HTML/Website Help
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Thanks everyone for your suggestions! |
Re: HTML/Website Help
If you really want to get advanced, you could do this with PHP (assuming you're using PHP instead of straight HTML).
Create a file named "header.php", then use a php include to pull that "header.php" in every page (you've got to put the code on each page). The benefit is obvious: make changes to header.php, and it changes on every page that calls it, across the site. Another benefit is that you won't run into pesky frame issues. But I don't know what you're using to edit/publish this site, so the above may not work for you. |
Re: HTML/Website Help
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Re: HTML/Website Help
4 Attachment(s)
I'm back with a new problem and figured that it would be best to just continue this thread, rather than start a new one.
I made the website and have the basic layout set up as far as a header, body, and footer. The website looks exactly how I want it to look in Mozilla Firefox, but in Internet Explorer 6,7, and 8, it looks terrible. If you use IE, take a look at what I mean http://www.team3167.webs.com If you could, can anyone look at the HTML and give a possible explanation as to why it appear as it does? (For people using browsers other than IE or Mozilla Firefox, it would be greatly appreciated if you could tell me what the website appears like by possibly including a picture.) Thank you in advance for your help! |
Re: HTML/Website Help
It looks like that in Firefox too, at least on Ubuntu.
This seems to be the culprit: Code:
<img src="http://www.iolani.honolulu.hi.us/robotics/newweb/allimg/home/first_logo_1.jpg" height="90%" width="90%" align="center"> |
Re: HTML/Website Help
I recommend getting your HTML valid before going on. Firefox can be pretty forgiving when it comes to misplacing tags and not closing elements, but IE requires you to be really careful with your coding.
http://validator.w3.org/ Personally, I think the problem is being caused by the following code: Code:
</head> |
Re: HTML/Website Help
I'd start by proofreading the HTML. The head and body elements are a little scrambled up, and there are two opening body tags. Put the style and link tags into the head section.
Also check the rest of the structure--make sure tags are nested properly, the document is organized into a tree, etc. No problems with the CSS jump out at me, but it'll be hard to tell until the HTML is fixed and reorganized. |
Re: HTML/Website Help
Code:
<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01 Transitional//EN"> |
Re: HTML/Website Help
According to the W3C validator, you've got 7 errors and 1 warning. The warning (which is the UTF-8 bit) is ok to ignore for now, but you should focus on the errors.
I hope you used this to validate: http://validator.w3.org/ |
Re: HTML/Website Help
The w3 validator validated the HTML, but the page still looks awful in IE. Is there anything else I can do?
Edit It validates only when I directly put the code into the validator, but if I type "http://www.team3167.webs.com/index.htm" into the "validate by URL tab" I get a fatal error about line 80 containing something that is not utf-8. |
Re: HTML/Website Help
I don't know much about coding but I think you should close the <head>? I only saw a starting tag but not an ending one.
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Re: HTML/Website Help
There's a </head> I just checked.
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Re: HTML/Website Help
It's the copyright symbol near the bottom. Try using the entity "©" instead of the symbol.
(If you have a text editor that shows line numbers (I use Notepad++), that sometimes helps interpret the validator feedback. For this page, the validator said the bad character was on line 80, but I think that was a couple lines off.) Edit: Also, I think the IE problems are related to the use of positioning in the stylesheet. One way to debug this is to go back to a blank stylesheet (both mystyle.css and the CSS in the head section) and add items back to the stylesheet one at a time, in order to see the individual effects of each change. |
Re: HTML/Website Help
The strange thing is that when the images are not aligned right, they stay above the nav bar, once align right is put in, it throw the images to the middle of the bar.
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