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Posted by TaliesinSoft on 02/16/07 17:35
On Fri, 16 Feb 2007 10:00:49 -0600, Andy Dingley wrote
(in article <1171641646.852864.100640@t69g2000cwt.googlegroups.com>):
[commenting in regards to the Ansel Adams website, the site to which I posted
a link]
> The last comment could be paraphrased as "Freeway looks like it over- uses
> <table> markup when inappropriate, please show an example of better coding
> style". So what do you do, you take an example that's a perfect situation for
> legitimately using a <table>, then you do it with absolutely positioned
> <div>s. Total perversity in appropriate markup.
In the Ansel Adams site the 63 images included take a total of 596 KB, and
the code in the index.html page takes 40 KB. So why should I be concerned as
to just what construct the code uses given that the download time for the
code is a minimal component of the total download time for the page,
especially given that the generated code works as intended on every browser
on which it was checked?
As an aside, an advantage of Freeway is that if a new release makes an
improvement in the generated code it is a trivial matter to re-upload the
site to benefit from that improvement.
--
James Leo Ryan ..... Austin, Texas ..... taliesinsoft@mac.com
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