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OpenLayers 2.10 Beginner's Guide

You're reading from   OpenLayers 2.10 Beginner's Guide Create, optimize, and deploy stunning cross-browser web maps with the OpenLayers JavaScript web mapping library

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Product type Paperback
Published in Mar 2011
Publisher
ISBN-13 9781849514125
Length 372 pages
Edition Edition
Languages
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Toc

Table of Contents (18) Chapters Close

OpenLayers 2.10
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface
1. Getting Started with OpenLayers FREE CHAPTER 2. Squashing Bugs With Firebug 3. The 'Layers' in OpenLayers 4. Wrapping Our Heads Around Projections 5. Interacting with Third Party APIs 6. Taking Control of Controls 7. Styling Controls 8. Charting the Map Class 9. Using Vector Layers 10. Vector Layer Style Guide 11. Making Web Map Apps Index

What is CSS?


CSS is an acronym for Cascading Style Sheets . It is a type of markup language used to specify the appearance of HTML elements. CSS is actually quite simple, and if you've been able to follow along up to this point in the book, you will have absolutely no problem at all with CSS. Before we get into it a little more, let's talk a little bit about how CSS works.

Ideas behind CSS and HTML

HTML, CSS, and JavaScript serve three distinct purposes.

  • HTML is used, as we've seen, to create the structure and content of a webpage

  • CSS, on the other hand, is used to control the site's presentation, or how the page should look

  • JavaScript, as we've seen throughout the book, is used to handle the logic behind the site

So, when you make a site you will have at least three discrete things to consider—the HTML behind it, the CSS that styles the HTML, and the JavaScript that handles any logic or user interaction. For now, we'll focus on HTML and CSS.

Ideally, HTML, CSS, and JavaScript should not mix (i...

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