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Code Project
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  3. New look for CodeProject [modified]

New look for CodeProject [modified]

Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved The Lounge
csharpc++htmlcsscom
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  • J J Dunlap

    Since the other tabs are raised, the selected tab should probably look "pressed" - that would give better visual clues as to what's going on.

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    David Wulff
    wrote on last edited by
    #38

    I agree, and it wouldn't hurt to have '(selected)' in the button tooltip.


    Ðavid Wulff Die Freiheit spielt auf allen Geigen (video)
      "trying to throw in unrelated issues to prove a point you don't have." - Jeremy Falcon.

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    • C Chris Maunder

      We're at the point where the bulk of new code is outweighing the old code and so all back-end caching, pre-calculating and general maintainance is now all .NET. Plus, we've finally made it to the 20th century and stopped assuming 800x600 is the minimum standard. The site will work with sub 1024 x 768 but we just got sick of being so cramped. In doing so I took the opportunity to complete a redesign started about 4 years ago in order to have a consistent look and feel across the site. HTML purists will be happy to see more of the internals are now XHTML, and much of the formatting moved to CSS. Did I mention the 20th century. Yeah, I know... Comments always welcome, most especially when they involve bugs. Edit: Credit where credit's due: I should have mentioned that all praise (and the odd complaint) should go to William Kim, our AdOps manager for the design specifics. cheers, Chris Maunder

      CodeProject.com : C++ MVP

      -- modified at 17:55 Sunday 9th July, 2006

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      hairy_hats
      wrote on last edited by
      #39

      Chris Maunder wrote:

      The site will work with sub 1024 x 768 but we just got sick of being so cramped.

      Generally like the new look, but using FF at 1280 wide, the right-hand column falls off the RHS of the screen!

      Asynes yw brassa ages kwilkynyow.

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      • C Chris Maunder

        We're at the point where the bulk of new code is outweighing the old code and so all back-end caching, pre-calculating and general maintainance is now all .NET. Plus, we've finally made it to the 20th century and stopped assuming 800x600 is the minimum standard. The site will work with sub 1024 x 768 but we just got sick of being so cramped. In doing so I took the opportunity to complete a redesign started about 4 years ago in order to have a consistent look and feel across the site. HTML purists will be happy to see more of the internals are now XHTML, and much of the formatting moved to CSS. Did I mention the 20th century. Yeah, I know... Comments always welcome, most especially when they involve bugs. Edit: Credit where credit's due: I should have mentioned that all praise (and the odd complaint) should go to William Kim, our AdOps manager for the design specifics. cheers, Chris Maunder

        CodeProject.com : C++ MVP

        -- modified at 17:55 Sunday 9th July, 2006

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        Lost User
        wrote on last edited by
        #40

        Chris Maunder wrote:

        Edit: Credit where credit's due: I should have mentioned that all praise (and the odd complaint) should go to William Kim, our AdOps manager for the design specifics.

        Is he colour blind? Michael Martin Australia "I controlled my laughter and simple said "No,I am very busy,so I can't write any code for you". The moment they heard this all the smiling face turned into a sad looking face and one of them farted. So I had to leave the place as soon as possible." - Mr.Prakash 24/04/2004

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        • C Chris Maunder

          We're at the point where the bulk of new code is outweighing the old code and so all back-end caching, pre-calculating and general maintainance is now all .NET. Plus, we've finally made it to the 20th century and stopped assuming 800x600 is the minimum standard. The site will work with sub 1024 x 768 but we just got sick of being so cramped. In doing so I took the opportunity to complete a redesign started about 4 years ago in order to have a consistent look and feel across the site. HTML purists will be happy to see more of the internals are now XHTML, and much of the formatting moved to CSS. Did I mention the 20th century. Yeah, I know... Comments always welcome, most especially when they involve bugs. Edit: Credit where credit's due: I should have mentioned that all praise (and the odd complaint) should go to William Kim, our AdOps manager for the design specifics. cheers, Chris Maunder

          CodeProject.com : C++ MVP

          -- modified at 17:55 Sunday 9th July, 2006

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          Ashley van Gerven
          wrote on last edited by
          #41

          Overall, I like the new colours & layout. I think the green menu bar is great - really stands out as the primary navigation interface. I think the logo looks a bit amateurish - i.e. the white drop shadow and the squashed font. The top bar doesn't really need to take up so much vertical space. In the lounge the left bar is too wide - since the topics menu is not there. But luckily with Firefox extension I can just right click > remove. Nice job though - overall a worthwhile facelift!

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          • C Chris Maunder

            We're at the point where the bulk of new code is outweighing the old code and so all back-end caching, pre-calculating and general maintainance is now all .NET. Plus, we've finally made it to the 20th century and stopped assuming 800x600 is the minimum standard. The site will work with sub 1024 x 768 but we just got sick of being so cramped. In doing so I took the opportunity to complete a redesign started about 4 years ago in order to have a consistent look and feel across the site. HTML purists will be happy to see more of the internals are now XHTML, and much of the formatting moved to CSS. Did I mention the 20th century. Yeah, I know... Comments always welcome, most especially when they involve bugs. Edit: Credit where credit's due: I should have mentioned that all praise (and the odd complaint) should go to William Kim, our AdOps manager for the design specifics. cheers, Chris Maunder

            CodeProject.com : C++ MVP

            -- modified at 17:55 Sunday 9th July, 2006

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            edge9421
            wrote on last edited by
            #42

            Chris Maunder wrote:

            Plus, we've finally made it to the 20th century and stopped assuming 800x600 is the minimum standard. The site will work with sub 1024 x 768 but we just got sick of being so cramped.

            What about those of us who read the web in portrait mode on a tablet PC? In portrait mode my screen is 768x1024. Reading an article is difficult when you have to scroll left/right for every line. An option to hide the left bar while reading an article would be useful, as well as allowing that header to shrink down some more. Maybe my next tablet will have higher res in portrait mode :/ --Keith

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            • C Chris Maunder

              We're at the point where the bulk of new code is outweighing the old code and so all back-end caching, pre-calculating and general maintainance is now all .NET. Plus, we've finally made it to the 20th century and stopped assuming 800x600 is the minimum standard. The site will work with sub 1024 x 768 but we just got sick of being so cramped. In doing so I took the opportunity to complete a redesign started about 4 years ago in order to have a consistent look and feel across the site. HTML purists will be happy to see more of the internals are now XHTML, and much of the formatting moved to CSS. Did I mention the 20th century. Yeah, I know... Comments always welcome, most especially when they involve bugs. Edit: Credit where credit's due: I should have mentioned that all praise (and the odd complaint) should go to William Kim, our AdOps manager for the design specifics. cheers, Chris Maunder

              CodeProject.com : C++ MVP

              -- modified at 17:55 Sunday 9th July, 2006

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              Sameers Javed
              wrote on last edited by
              #43

              Looks good. I just had an eye bird review of new home page and it was really good. Just one small thing. I can see the bottom scroll bar which should really not visible on 1024x768 resolution. BTW, I noticed that on home page only. Sameers Need custom software? Contact DevelopersINN[^] Need to add reminders for your Outlook emails? Try Outlook Personal Assistant[^]

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              • C Chris Maunder

                We're at the point where the bulk of new code is outweighing the old code and so all back-end caching, pre-calculating and general maintainance is now all .NET. Plus, we've finally made it to the 20th century and stopped assuming 800x600 is the minimum standard. The site will work with sub 1024 x 768 but we just got sick of being so cramped. In doing so I took the opportunity to complete a redesign started about 4 years ago in order to have a consistent look and feel across the site. HTML purists will be happy to see more of the internals are now XHTML, and much of the formatting moved to CSS. Did I mention the 20th century. Yeah, I know... Comments always welcome, most especially when they involve bugs. Edit: Credit where credit's due: I should have mentioned that all praise (and the odd complaint) should go to William Kim, our AdOps manager for the design specifics. cheers, Chris Maunder

                CodeProject.com : C++ MVP

                -- modified at 17:55 Sunday 9th July, 2006

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                X Cyclop
                wrote on last edited by
                #44

                Very nice! :omg::wtf:

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                • C Chris Maunder

                  We're at the point where the bulk of new code is outweighing the old code and so all back-end caching, pre-calculating and general maintainance is now all .NET. Plus, we've finally made it to the 20th century and stopped assuming 800x600 is the minimum standard. The site will work with sub 1024 x 768 but we just got sick of being so cramped. In doing so I took the opportunity to complete a redesign started about 4 years ago in order to have a consistent look and feel across the site. HTML purists will be happy to see more of the internals are now XHTML, and much of the formatting moved to CSS. Did I mention the 20th century. Yeah, I know... Comments always welcome, most especially when they involve bugs. Edit: Credit where credit's due: I should have mentioned that all praise (and the odd complaint) should go to William Kim, our AdOps manager for the design specifics. cheers, Chris Maunder

                  CodeProject.com : C++ MVP

                  -- modified at 17:55 Sunday 9th July, 2006

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                  G Offline
                  Graham Reeds
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #45

                  Chris Maunder wrote:

                  HTML purists will be happy to see more of the internals are now XHTML, and much of the formatting moved to CSS.

                  To be XHTML you need a doctype of XHTML. Your doctype is still HTML 4.01 Transistional. Also as part of XHTML you need to specify the xhtml namespace. See http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/normative.html for more details. G.

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                  • C Chris Maunder

                    We're at the point where the bulk of new code is outweighing the old code and so all back-end caching, pre-calculating and general maintainance is now all .NET. Plus, we've finally made it to the 20th century and stopped assuming 800x600 is the minimum standard. The site will work with sub 1024 x 768 but we just got sick of being so cramped. In doing so I took the opportunity to complete a redesign started about 4 years ago in order to have a consistent look and feel across the site. HTML purists will be happy to see more of the internals are now XHTML, and much of the formatting moved to CSS. Did I mention the 20th century. Yeah, I know... Comments always welcome, most especially when they involve bugs. Edit: Credit where credit's due: I should have mentioned that all praise (and the odd complaint) should go to William Kim, our AdOps manager for the design specifics. cheers, Chris Maunder

                    CodeProject.com : C++ MVP

                    -- modified at 17:55 Sunday 9th July, 2006

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                    A Portable Hole Full of Despair
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #46

                    Yeah, html purists will be happy right now my tidy says there's 15 errors / 658 warnings / 1698 access warnings

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                    • C Chris Maunder

                      This is tomorrow's task: clean up and expand the categories. You'll notice there's no ASP.NET and VB.NET at all. We'll fix this and make the single-sized-menu-fits-all a little more comfortable. cheers, Chris Maunder

                      CodeProject.com : C++ MVP

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                      kb4muj
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #47

                      :laugh:I was abit worried there was not going to be any vb .net on the site anymore. dave

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                      • A A Portable Hole Full of Despair

                        Yeah, html purists will be happy right now my tidy says there's 15 errors / 658 warnings / 1698 access warnings

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                        C Offline
                        Chris Maunder
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #48

                        In reply to this and the above post: The internals are XHTML (ie the bits generated by the new systems). The rest of it is good ol' ugly, poorly formatted circa 1999 HTML. It'll all get fixed. cheers, Chris Maunder

                        CodeProject.com : C++ MVP

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                        • C Chris Maunder

                          We're at the point where the bulk of new code is outweighing the old code and so all back-end caching, pre-calculating and general maintainance is now all .NET. Plus, we've finally made it to the 20th century and stopped assuming 800x600 is the minimum standard. The site will work with sub 1024 x 768 but we just got sick of being so cramped. In doing so I took the opportunity to complete a redesign started about 4 years ago in order to have a consistent look and feel across the site. HTML purists will be happy to see more of the internals are now XHTML, and much of the formatting moved to CSS. Did I mention the 20th century. Yeah, I know... Comments always welcome, most especially when they involve bugs. Edit: Credit where credit's due: I should have mentioned that all praise (and the odd complaint) should go to William Kim, our AdOps manager for the design specifics. cheers, Chris Maunder

                          CodeProject.com : C++ MVP

                          -- modified at 17:55 Sunday 9th July, 2006

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                          urbane tiger
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #49

                          Chris Appreciate having more info per square cm, but I still hate the predominance of Orange, Purple and Green - if I want psychodelia then I'll take something for it thanks, don't want it coming out of my tube. Why not start a competion for creating the ability to let the viewer change the color scheme of a web site. On a more serious note, there is a feature I definitely don't like, I'm assuming its a feature and not a fault. I use FF and like most other folks who use FF I have Adblock installed. If I block the ads on the message compose page (ie the one I'm using now) then I can't enter the text. You may see this as a service to your sponsors. If I were a sponsor I wouldn't, the last thing I would want on a site which I sponsored is something that annoys the consumer, especially if it involves my ads. I'd much prefer that you change CodeProject's garish corporate colour scheme. Of course if its a bug then I guess you'll fix it - I've checked other sites and the problem is not manifested, so I don't think it an FF or Adblock issue. Rgds PhilD

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