|
Posted by Els on 11/01/07 21:59
Daniel wrote:
> On Nov 1, 5:00 pm, "Jonathan N. Little" <lws4...@centralva.net> wrote:
>> Daniel wrote:
>>> I am now creating more complexe pages, and wish to compartmentalize
>>> certain aspects. For example, the nav bar get generated by a separate
>>> program which generate and html file, css, js.... I then call it
>>> within my main doc. However, by doing so I end up with duplication of
>>> head section, body.... and I assume this is not proper. The other
>>> alternative is to copy and paste the various element of the nav bar
>>> (styles, scripts, html) and the paste them in their respective zones.
>>> this however, is very conterproductive as when a change need to be
>>> made I must manually update each webpage (long and prone to errors).
>> http://www.google.com/search?hl=en&q=how+to+include+one+html+document...
>> how to include one html document into another - Google Search
> I understand the basics of including the file. My issue is that the
> file in question is a html file on it's own (styles, header info,
> script and html) if I include it at the appropriate place in the main
> page I double up on these sections. So I end up with a 2nd header
> within the body of my main page, etc.
You're saying the 'file in question', navbar.html, is generated. Can't
you generate separate files? Or, instead of splitting it up and
pasting it their respective zones, just split it up once, into
different files. Those files you can then include through SSI or php
includes. A change then only has to be made once to this set of files
(formerly one navbar.html file).
> If it were merely html coding (tables, text....) then no problem a
> simple include work great but in this case i was wondering if I was
> missing an obvious tip/trick that professional use.
If you give more info on the generation of this navbar.html file,
maybe someone will see a better way to get the result you're after.
--
Els http://locusmeus.com/
Navigation:
[Reply to this message]
|