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8 methods to bring your front end coding to rockstar levels

There are a lot of good front end developers out their right now. If you fancy yourself as a front end editor then you really should be looking at how you can differentiate yourself from the rest. Yes there are lots of “good” front end developers, but there are not a whole lot of excellent front end developers.

1. Improve Your Semantic Names

If you work in a team or ever revisit your code and need to update it then you should think about the quality of your class and ID names. It is not uncommon for developers to use class names like “box”, “wrapper”, or “container.” While you may think that these naming conventions or “semanitc enough” none of them describe the content that is inside them. Instead consider using HTML5 spec’s such as “content-sub”, “section”, “content-aside” or “content-sup.”

You and your team will have a much easier time sorting through code that describes the content than trying to remember the details of “box.”

Read more about semantic naming from Andy Clarke and A List Apart.

2. Improve the Organization of Your Files

I think it is reasonable safe to assume that most developers have at least started to organize their files by type (ie: a folder for images, css, javascript, etc…). You can go a step further and improve the organization even more, particularly any folder that is going to have a lot of files (such as Images in particular and CSS as a secondary.)

I find it best to create sub folders with in images and separate images based on design structure, buttons, headlines, photos, etc…

There are plenty of other folders you may want to create to keep the updating and growth of a site easy and efficient, including:

  • Documents
  • Client files
  • Copy
  • Proofs
  • Staged/Development area (folder for a “clone of the site” where you can make changes and get sign off)
  • Downloads

The Elements CSS Framework does a great job of organizing files based on the normal client/provider workflow.

3. Use Commenting in Your XHTML

Any time you end up developing complex layouts you are bound to use a lot of <div>s in your markup. This can be particularly confusing to go back and edit as it becomes hard to figure out which div is being closed where. You may see three </div>s all in a row.

To combat this simply add some coments at each </div> (or any other closing element if you find that it will be helpful) to let you know what element was just closed.


     <div id="header" class="section">
          <div id="header-logo">
               <h1>HTMLiZER</h1>
          </div><!--/#header-logo-->
     </div><!--/#header-->

If you find it useful you can take it one step further and comment the primary area you would be editing (such as the main content area, sidebar, etc…)

4. Segment Your CSS

For small 4 – 5 page brochure sites your CSS will be pretty manageable even if you don’t spend the time and effort you should into organizing and commenting. Once you start developing web applications or large sites with a vast array of design “modules” you should make sure that you organize your CSS in way that is easy to manage.

I recommend splitting your css into logical different files for better organization, such as:

  • reset.css
  • main.css
  • structure.css
  • typography.css
  • print.css
  • helpers.css

This way you don’t have to sort through all of the typography styling to find the area where you defined the size of the header. Likewise if you want to adjust the headings it is pretty simple to find it through a small typography.css file rather than a huge file that has everything.

5. Create a TOC With Comments in Your CSS

Every CSS file you plan on editing and extending over time should have a table of contents at the begining and a headline seperator at every section. This will allow you to easily jump to a section using “find” rather than scrolling for that one area that had the CSS you are hoping to modify.

EX

/***********

TOC:

=1: Header
=2: Content
=3: Footer
=4: Navigation
=5: Portfolio

****************/

/* *********  =1: HEADER *********** */

#header { … }

6. Compress and Combine Your CSS files

Even though it is easier to work on a site when you segment and organize your css into several different file names, it actually causes your site to load slower. The more calls the browser has to make to the server for additional files the slower it will load.

Before deploying your css files you should combine and compress them. Compressing them removes any uncessary whitespace, comments, etc… that is unnecissary when the site is live.

There are several handy tools to do this including this online version.

7. Create your own framework (or improve on another one)

As you get more experience under your belt you will find that you use the same methods and naming conventions over and over. This is helpful for several reasons and it should be encouraged. It has lots of benefits including:

  • More consistant rendering due to reusing ideal CSS techniques
  • Easier editing and maintenance as you can better recall what names mean
  • The start of code that can be saved and reused every time

Chances are that you end up rewriting the same type of code over and over again, simply because you don’t have it stored somewhere. Some examples may be:

  • A class that floats an image left / right and gives it some margin
  • The structure for an unordered list navigation
  • The structure for a form
  • external link, pdf and download icons
  • clearfix
  • png fix
  • Typeography baselines and hierarchies
  • etc…

Rather than reusing these bits of codes write modules into your own CSS framework (or you could imrpove on another one). This way you can streamline the development process so it takes less time and improve the consistancy of your work.

8. Develop your CSS to be modular or “object oriented”

You could assign every bit of code an unique ID or adjust the margins and padding per instance. Lots of coders do this to try and get the CSS as close to the designers comp as possible. However this is inefficient in development time and file size. Establish a set rule for differnt types of content and how they should be styled, this should include basic things such as:

  • Font sizing (all normal text is 12px, featured text is 14px bold)
  • Margin’s (normal margin is 10px between elements, margin between two content blocks is 40px, etc…)
  • All navigation tabs will have 15px height and 13px font
  • etc…

This way you don’t have to rewrite the code for every new item added to the site. Additionally it will keep the site feeling consistant and well balanced visually. If all elements and every page follows the same rhythm it will feel more unified as a whole.

Some call this object oriented css, it is worth looking into for rockstar like front end coding.

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Microsoft.com: a failed redesign

Looks like Microsoft is the latest to be guilty of a failed redesign. Their current homepage iteration sports a table-based layout circa 1998.

They’ve also released a beta preview of their new new homepage – which you can view only with Internet Explorer. (When I attempted to view the preview site in Firefox, I was simply redirected to the existing homepage.) The preview site appears to use semantic markup, although the source has been compacted down to only a few lines, so it’s nearly impossible to read. And with no Web Developer extension in IE, outlining all block-level elements (or all table cells) isn’t an option.

Funny that with the IE 7 team touting how standards-compliant the new browser will be, the Microsoft homepage flies in the face of standards. (Is that for-real ironic or only Alanis ironic?) Having worked for a few large corporations, I understand that one department’s products can appear to be the antithesis of another department’s, with the worker bees in both departments being none the wiser. Still, this is pretty egregious, given the emphasis Microsoft claims to be placing on web standards.

Although… we’ve been there before with Microsoft, haven’t we? Perhaps these things are cyclical.

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