So if I seem to endorse Bootstrap here, it's because I use & understand it. Bootstrap is a lot more straightforward to work with than a custom coded or hybrid project that's all over the place.
#Dreamweaver cs6 fluid grid tutorial code#
It may be bloated (in the wrong hands it can be), but the code is logical with a set structure that anybody with some coding skills can follow. On the other hand, anybody who understands Bootstrap can pick up where another developer left off. But please don't ask me to work with code 'cuz I won't. they satisfy a niche for the beginner/novice user. Suffice it say, I don't feel the least bit threatened by the likes of Muse, Wix.com, Sitebuilder, etc. There's nothing wrong with that until you reach the plateau and need something more than Muse or a Muse Widget can deliver. For most people, it's more than adequate, though. It's good for what it is but you can't build enterprise level stuff with it. While many products claiming to do that have come and gone (I beta tested a few of them), the resulting code was nothing to be proud of and you were very limited in what you could do.
#Dreamweaver cs6 fluid grid tutorial software#
When I built my first site back in the '90s my husband said the time would one day come when all of this coding could be done better and cheaper with software that does it for you. I would accept my cakes are probably not going to look or taste quite as good as theirs. I'm sure someone who actually bakes cakes correctly would disagree. I find baking cakes quite satisfying but then again I just open a packet of dried ingredients, toss it all in a pan and microwave them. Myself I don't find that workflow as being that satisfying. That's not hugley creative or thinking outside of the box, its just accepting without thought and compromising because of limitations down to the framework. Those that use a framework will mostly use what is provided within that framework and not look beyond it. I'm more interested in those that show an interest long-term and making a career out of web-development, unfortuantely you won't find that many around these parts that fit that category but I can't say I think something is great when I don't believe it is. Bootstrap fits nicely, in and around your other job, whatever that is, and with your vision of how a website should be created for clients who don't require a great deal or have a budget much beyond a few hundred pounds. That's ok then, my comments are NOT aimed at you. I have no time or the money, or "no desire to progress" as you put it - to learn code. I'm not a programmer or a coder, and I already have a job.