Frames were vaguely useful when you had a static Web site, to avoid repeating navigation menu in all pages, for example. It also reduced overall size of page. Both these arguments are obsolete now: sites doesn't hesitate to server fat pages...
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1203068/why-should-i...
I do not have any special question. I am just trying to learn some positioning for Web development/design. OK, I tried the solution with frames. And it worked. Now, I am trying it with CSS and here's the CSS I use to embed the sidebar. Plea...
http://www.highdots.com/forums/alt-html/html-frames-goo...
I'd like to rephrase your question: what are the advantages of using Html frames for templating? A detailed read about the subject: http://www.yourhtmlsource.com/frames/goodorbad.html Quote from that article: So, in conclusion, frames viol...
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/158155/what-are-the-...
You can split a HTML into several parts using HTML frame function so that you can see multiple HTML in one browser window.
http://www.ulead.com/tech/ma/ma10faq.htm#4
If the FrameSetDecoratorMapper sits in the decorator chain (sitemesh.xml) the frame definition page and the frame pages are not decorated.
http://opensymphony.com/sitemesh/faq.html
I think the real question is: Why am I using Frames in my Website design? There are plenty of ways to do something similar without using Frames. Why I even bring it up is that MANY users HATE Frames. At a minimum, I would provide a paralle...
http://answers.yahoo.com/question/index?qid=20090717130...
No. A frame is essentially an HTML file within an HTML file. Web pages that use frames usually have more than one window, and more than one set of scroll bars, and typically have a part of the page, which is static. An example of this would...
http://financial.rrd.com/wwwFinancial/Resources/Library...