Learn (at least) some basic HTML.
Whenever I suggest this to beginners they
always ask why should they learn to code HTML when you have
programs like Dreamweaver and FrontPage that do it all for you?
The short answer is that they don’t, at least not all the time.
While these programs are very useful (and I highly recommend
that all web page designers learn to use one), they do have
their limitations where it can be easier to hand code the HTML
yourself. If you don’t know HTML, this can be a problem. You
don’t have to learn everything there is about HTML, but you
should learn the basics and some key tags that are used all the
time:
<a href=””></a> : The
link tag is the most important tag there is. HTML is all about
linking documents (web pages) together and as such they form the
basis of making the web work.
<table> </table> : The
table tag is used to create tables. Originally it was invented
to present data (like a stock report) in tabular form. Soon
after inventive HTML designers started to use them to format the
entire web page by inserting not only text but images as well
into tables. Today 99% of web pages are formatted using tables.
<div></div> : Div tags
allow you to demark a portion of your page so that you can do
things to it. Another way of saying ‘demark a portion’ can be
‘to put into a container’. Once a part of your web page is in
this <div> container you can do all kinds of stuff like style
it, animate it, make it visible or invisible etc … Div’s
represent the next generation of formatting HTML pages that in
many ways superior to tables.
Learn one *wysiwyg program like
DreamWeaver or GoLive and learn it well.
Each of these programs has its advantages
and you may be tempted to jump from one to another because of
some neat thing that it does. Often times you find when you are
using the new program, that you miss features of the old one
that you rely on. So you should stick to one and really learn it
well. This will go a long way to making you a productive web
designer.
Keep your web pages simple.
Once you start to understand how to make
web pages, you will be tempted to go all out with animated gifs,
rollover affects and fancy designs. The problem with this is
that it can easily lead to confusing pages for the viewer and
hard to maintain sites for you. Web sites are always in need of
changes and updates, you will be thankful when that inevitable
day comes and you have an easy to update modular site to work
with instead of an inflexible over-designed mess.
*. wysiwyg stands for: 'what you
see is what you get.'