Monday, December 29, 2008

Microsoft Office Word 2007 QuickSteps or CSS Pocket Reference

Microsoft Office Word 2007 QuickSteps

Author: Marty Matthews

Learn to use Microsoft Office Word the QuickSteps way!

Since its introduction, the Word user interface has grown to contain more than 250 menu items, 30 toolbars, and 20 task panes. Now the interface has been completely rebuilt in Word 2007 to vastly improve and simplify the user experience. This full-color, step-by-step guide helps you get acclimated quickly to the new interface and take full advantage of the powerful new capabilities.

Marty Matthews has used computers for over 40 years, from some of the early mainframe computers to recent personal computers and servers. He has done this as a programmer, systems analyst, manager, vice president, and president of a software firm. As a result, he has first-hand knowledge of not only how to program and use a computer, but also how to make the best use of the information a computer can produce. Over 23 years ago Marty and his wife Carole began writing books as a major part of their occupation. In the intervening years they have written over 70 books including ones on desktop publishing, web publishing, Microsoft Office, and Microsoft operating systems from MS-DOS through Windows Server 2003. Recent books of Marty’s published by McGraw-Hill include a number of the very popular QuickSteps series, including Windows XP QuickSteps and Microsoft Office Office 2003 QuickSteps.



See also: Explore the Tastes of Maryland or Garlic

CSS Pocket Reference

Author: Eric A Meyer

They say that good things come in small packages, and it's certainly true for this edition of CSS Pocket Reference. Completely revised and updated to reflect the latest Cascading Style Sheet specifications in CSS 2.1, this indispensable little book covers the most essential information that web designers and developers need to implement CSS effectively across all browsers. Inside, you'll find: A short introduction to the key concepts of CSS A complete alphabetical reference to all CSS 2.1 selectors and properties A chart displaying detailed information about CSS support for every style element and its cross-browser compatibility This reference neatly condenses the details of its top-selling companion volume, Cascading Style Sheets: The Definitive Guide into one easy-to-use cheat-sheet that delivers all the CSS details you need to complete the task at hand. Whenever you're stuck and need an answer quickly—or if you just want to be sure you're applying CSS correctly—this edition of the CSS Pocket Reference is the book you'll want by your keyboard or, conveniently, in your back pocket.



Table of Contents:
Conventions used in this book1
Adding styles to HTML and XHTML2
Rule structure5
Style precedence6
Element classification8
Element display roles9
Basic visual layout10
Floating rules13
Positioning rules15
Table layout21
Values28
Selectors33
Pseudo-classes and pseudo-elements38
Property reference43
Paged media105
Dropped form CSS2.1108
Visual styles108
Paged media110
Aural styles111

No comments:

Post a Comment