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Posted by Richard Rundle on 07/29/06 18:25
"Luigi Donatello Asero" <jaggillarfotboll@telia.com> wrote in message
news:4VMyg.10912$E02.3754@newsb.telia.net...
>
> "Richard Rundle" <Richard.Rundle@btinternet.com> skrev i meddelandet
> news:mb-dnT7K2raVBFbZRVnysA@bt.com...
> > "Luigi Donatello Asero" <jaggillarfotboll@telia.com> wrote in message
> > news:U1Lyg.10901$E02.3814@newsb.telia.net...
> > >
> > >
> > >
> > > There is only 1 section on each page.
> > > On the page https://www.scaiecat-spa-gigi.com/it/svezia.html
> > > I have several subsections, for example a subsection for the menu on
> the
> > > left side
> > > which includes links to other pages of the same website, a subsection
> for
> > > the summary,
> > > another for the main content and so on.
> > > The main content is divided in several subsubsections.
> > > The page is very long and styling the different subsubsections might
> help
> > > the reader to see
> > > where one begins and where it ends.
> > >
> >
> > If the page is that long that the reader needs help to see where
> > sub-sections begin and end, to me there is one easy answer. Make the
page
> > shorter.
>
>
> There are reasons why I think it is better to have it longer.
> If you have a modem, you can read the page offline after loading it. You
do
> not need connect again after some minutes except for the external links.
>
Have your users expressed such an opinion though? As a web user, this may be
something like number 999 on my list of priorities when looking at a site.
If they're subsections, and they're that long, IMO separate pages are a much
better and more user-friendly idea.
--
Richard
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