Welcome bucko!

Well, hierarchical actually means from top to bottom. Even screen
readers need a way to know what site (title) page (h1) they're on and
then navigate away - or within - if it's not what they were after
(menu). This is still the most practical way to present a page. Search
engines are not fussed about the location of your "content" just so
long as it exists and contains keywords relevant to the search query.

In fact, SEO is far more forgiving of a site that is structured as
described above and that includes meta tags. Don't listen to the
'experts' or be dissuaded from doing the job right by cutting-edge
techniques.

Skip links and anchors are still the best way to provide in-page
navigation to relative containers.

On Apr 21, 1:13 am, bucko <[email protected]> wrote:
> Vertical grid.
>
> Hi everyone, I'm new to Blueprint CSS, and evaluating it to use in my
> own development projects. I don't want to reinvent the wheel or ask
> something that's already in a FAQ or tutorial somewhere.
>
> My question is this. I'm adapting a site layout that puts the
> "Content" first to help with search engines... and pegs the header and
> page navigation to the top. Is there a simple straitforward /cross
> platform way to achieve this in Blueprint CSS?
>
> From my perfunctory look at Blueprint CSS it seems geared to
> presenting the content from Top to bottom, from left to right. What
> techniques have people found for putting things in a hierarchical most
> important to least in the HTML, and then placing it visually on the
> page using the template...
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