I agree with John,
Thinking about website flow and the user's point of view, everybody
enters from your index page; that's why many web designers also call it
the welcome page. It is the doorway to your website, structually
nothing comes before it nor beside it. While your internal structure
Joseph Banks wrote:
> Those tips much more elegantly help me get around this issue, but it
> still leaves me wondering why the home page can't have siblings. Do we
> know why this design decision was made?
It removes the special cases. What do you find strange about it?
--
John Long
http://wis
Thank you John and Eli,
Those tips much more elegantly help me get around this issue, but it
still leaves me wondering why the home page can't have siblings. Do we
know why this design decision was made?
--
Posted via http://www.ruby-forum.com/.
___
Joseph Banks wrote:
> I recently installed Radiant and started playing around with it a bit.
> Since I only know html/css I've been looking at various CMS systems (the
> only other one to really catch my eye was Modx) to figure out if these
> could give me easy access to more dynamic features.
>
> I employ a rather simple (in my mind) 2 level tab-based navigation bar
> on many of my websites (example: www.ambitiouslemon.com note: not IE
> compatible). I was hoping Radiant could code this in a snippet that I
> could call from my layout.
One solution to this problem is to create a pag
I recently installed Radiant and started playing around with it a bit.
Since I only know html/css I've been looking at various CMS systems (the
only other one to really catch my eye was Modx) to figure out if these
could give me easy access to more dynamic features.
I really enjoy how simple th