Steve's Brief Guide
To "Good Web Style"
The goal of this page is to point out a few VERY
BRIEF things about "good" web style. I emphasize the "very brief"
part of this description because trying to explain what makes for a
good web site in the few words that are on this page is a little like
trying to explain "good writing" in a few paragraphs. It's more
complicated than that. But it's a start.
A Few Great Sites on Style and Other Things HTML
Here's a collection of links to get you started on
your quest for "good web style" and for making your web sites more
sophisticated and spiffy:
- The
Yale Web Style Guide A very
straightforward and well-written guide to everything you'd ever
want to know about "good web style." Probably the definitive site
on "professional/academic" web style.
- Styleguides
100 Dos and Don'ts Just what the title
suggests: a simple series of lists on classic dos and don'ts, some
of them obvious, some of them less so.
- The
Eightfold Path to the Enlightened Web
Site Kind of a cute little site with a
little Eastern mysticism thrown in for good measure, but it has
some "bad links" and other outdated information.
- The HTML
Goodies Page Not really a style page,
but I go back to this site again and again for ideas about doing
"fancy stuff" and for getting graphics and all the rest
My Idea of "Good Web Style"
I don't want to say too much here about what I
think counts as "good style" because I think the other sites that I
list above do better than what I could do quickly here, and also
because (since this site is for my students creating web sites) I
don't want you to think about creating web pages only in terms of
"what Steve likes." But I would like to offer a few ideas that I
think count as some of the most "basic of basic rules" for good web
design:
- Keep it
simple. I am a firm believer that most
web sites that are a sea of animated graphics and huge images and
fancy JavaScript doodads and all the rest are ineffective and not
persuasive. And I'm an especially strong believer that this is the
case with sites designed to make some sort of point, like a
web-based essay for a college course.
- The writing comes
first. This is certainly a debatable
issue, but I'd argue that the web is a textual interface where
writers can publish writing in new and exciting ways. What
I'm getting at here is you will want to include graphics, you'll
want to take advantage of the hypertextual features of the medium,
etc. But don't forget that your audience will want to not just
look at your site; they'll want to read it. That
means (to be simplistic about it) you need to have something to
write and you need to write it well.
- Be sure to divide up things
on your site into manageable chunks.
Another way of putting this is to think in terms of Web
sites, not Web pages. Web sites that break the text up into
smaller chunks by dividing it up onto separate pages tend to be
easier to read. Also, when you have a lot of text like this site
does, bulleted lists like this one are usually easier to
read.
- Use backgrounds that help
readers read your writing, not ones that make it
hard. If your background is a
dark color, use a light color for your text; vice-versa if your
background is a light color. Avoid using a patterned background
with text because it's hard to read text in any color on a
background with lots of different shades and textures.
- But don't forget the
graphics and colors. "Text only" sites
are boring-- you've got to do something to take at least some
advantage of the graphic possibilities of the web by cleverly
incorporating images, colors, backgrounds, etc. On this site (for
example), I have some graphics, backgrounds, and arrangement
issues to try and make the opening page interesting enough to
encourage people to read further. I've also included graphics
where I think they can help explain things within the text (like I
do on some of the other pages on the site).
- You can break rules, but
only if you know what rules you're breaking and why you're
breaking them. Always remember that
this web stuff isn't rocket science, nor is it particularly fixed.
After all, the web's style is still rapidly evolving and is likely
to continue to change, mostly as the result of improvements with
the technology and experiments with the rules. But if you want to
do something on your page that seems to be a "violation" of some
of the style guidelines that you've researched, then you ought to
have a reason for it.
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