Thanks Larry,
I appreciate you going through all this. It strikes me that access to the smaller browsers, which I also don't know very well, would be one of the bigger buy backs for the time it takes to focus on CSS layouts, unless it turns out they handle tables just fine. I looked for articles that would give me a summary of reasons, and failed to find any. It's time for me to bite the bullet, it seems, even though some of your reasons seem a bit circular (using CSS because it's the "right tool" doesn't tell me why it's the right tool, unless you somehow accept CSS as a devine gift that should not be questioned, and I just can't bring myself to proceed without questioning, hope you understand). Warren Vail _____ From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Larry Garfield Sent: Sunday, May 01, 2011 10:45 PM To: [email protected] Subject: Re: [development] Tables in Themes in Drupal 7 Table-based markup: 1) Is worse for search engines. Search engines handle semantic markup better, because they can extract useful information about the page from the markup. Tables confuse them and they cannot rank the data on the page as well. 2) Is more verbose. While your eyes may have grown accustomed to it, that makes the page load more slowly. With the proliferation of the wireless web (back to dialup speeds we go!), that is a significant problem. The usual example I use here is Slashdot, which switched from table-based to pure-CSS layout back in the early '00s and saved multiple *gigabytes* of data transfer per month. That translates into $$$, as well as a faster user experience. 3) Is harder to maintain. Really. Even in a CMS. 4) Is not accessible. By "accessible" I mean "makes sense to something other than a pair of human eyeballs". Screen readers, search engines, assitive technology (for people that are partially disabled), etc. all work better with intelligent, semantic markup than with purely visual markup. 5) Is harder to build. Really. Especially in a dynamic system like Drupal, table-based layout makes it harder to build a flexible page. 6) Doesn't scale down to mobile browsers. Mobile browsers will be the majority of web traffic within 2 years or so by some estimates. In some parts of the world it already is. Good semantic designs scale down to 4" screens far more easily than tables. I'd go as far as saying that "adaptive design" (where the layout changes depending on the size of the screen automatically) is simply impossible with tables. 7) Doesn't offer anywhere near the expressive power of CSS. If you're trying to get a visual effect fancier than three columns with fixed rectangular color regions, you need to use CSS for styling. Tables just can't do that. Not to put too fine a point on it, but if all you're thinking about is "a good looking theme", use Photoshop, not the web. Building a web page is about far far far more than simply painting a picture, and if you want to do more than paint a picture that has columns in it you need to use CSS-based layout. "Personal preference" is not even on the table (no pun intended) for why CSS-based design is better than table-based. It's not a "prejudice of the lazy". It's a prejudice for using the right tools for the job they were intended for, and using them properly. That's not a subjective statement, nor one simply based on which one learned first. Yes, it's time for you to learn CSS. Fortunately, it's much easier than it used to be since modern browsers finally support CSS properly (now that IE 6 is a virtually non-existent player in most markets). --Larry Garfield On 05/02/2011 12:07 AM, Warren Vail wrote: I was just getting ready to tackle my first theme in Drupal 7, and is my practice, looking through the themes to find for one to hack into being mine, when I found that none of them used tables for layout. Now I have heard many people voice the opinion that tabled layouts (which I've been quite successful with) are bad, and CSS (which I am less prepared to deal with) are good. And in my ages of experience I have, up until now, assumed that the expressed choice between good and bad was based on (as it often is) what people had learned vs what they had not, and did not want to have to bother to learn, so I said nothing until now Now I see that Drupal 7 (a product I have some respect for) seems to have none, in those that I have looked into, at least. Did what I had perceived to be merely a prejudice of the lazy make it's way all the way into the D7 Platform, or is there some legitimate reason for abandoning tabled layouts that I have missed (must I finally buckle down to my own laziness and tackle CSS to that depth)? Why are Tables BAD and CSS GOOD (keep in mind, I'm after a good looking theme, and not good looking code, necessarily, since none of my end users will ever look at the code). I am looking for some reason other than good looking code (or someone's vision of correctness) to get behind CSS for my themes, and believe me "being easier" won't convince me much either. I'm guessing there must be some other good reason I've missed. What would that be? Warren Vail
