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Images for Web Pages

Graphical images enliven web pages, but must be used with skill and caution to avoid various problems. This page illustrates different kinds of images and how to use them effectively.

Before

 

you burden your web page's download time with big graphics, consider other techniques for adding visual interest - e.g. colored table cells, or colored underscores (see below), or style sheets.

Buttons and Icons

Buttons and Icons provide a simple way to spice up web pages. In most cases they can be small in byte size and so download relatively quickly - but be aware that every image causes an additional trip to the server and so lots of icons can weigh your page down even more than the corresponding number of bytes in a single image. If your purpose is to provide image-based navigation then consider using image maps.

Backgrounds

Backgrounds can enliven a web page. Take care that they are not too large, and that they don't diminish your page's readability. Extremely small but still interesting backgrounds can be made by clever use of patterns; this (6x6 but shown here as 30x30) makes the background on this page.

Rules

Horizontal rules can be used to segment a page. However, they're frequently overused and may often be considered a sign of amateurism. Consider the alternatives, e.g.

  • use <HR>
  • split the page into separate pages;
  • Use colored underscores: ___________________________________

GIF Animations

The WDVL The original GIF format was designed by CompuServe in 1987, so images in this format are of the type GIF87. When the GIF format was extended in 1989, CompuServe added several new capabilities to the GIF format including transparency, and streaming animation using multiple images in one GIF89a file. GIF Animation GIF89a animation is a simple and cheap way to create "instant animation". It will allow a limited form of sprite-based animation. You can add a smaller image to a larger one and change its co-ordinates in following images. You could for example, make a bird fly or a ball bounce. Since the animation is done on the client side, animated GIF89a images can be cached by the browser, resulting in much faster frame rates. When someone not using a browser that can handle GIF animation, views your animation, they generally see the first of your series of images, not a broken icon.


Up to => Home / Authoring / Graphics




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