I'd like to learn how to make a good website. I'll start with a personal website. I already know the basics of HTML, but I'd like to know more about how to make a good layout, arrange content, use divs, etc. Does anyone know a good book or resource on how to make a website?
>>58759790
It is called "Web Design".
>>58759801
Rereading, that comes off as a bit "asshole"-ish. I apologize.
Google "good books on web design". /g/ will not know, because we do programming, not design.
W3schools
>>58759790
Also, something I just learned is that in HTML5 they introduced whole bunch of useful tags, like "nav". Whoa. I've been out of the game for a while.
>>58759813
>tripfag
Fuck off, faggot.
skip learning about tables, floats, img's, css cross-browser hacks,
learn flexbox, picture, polyfills, and css grid property
this is new web structure already supported by most modern browsers. I just saved you a headache.
>>58759845
Thanks.
>>58759790
>arrange content, use divs, etc
https://www.google.com/search?q=flexbox+tutorial
>>58759834
> useful tags, like "nav"
These tags aren't useful and don't doing anything meaningful by themselves; they're just glorified divs. They're part of some hand-wavey attempt at reviving the "semantic web" idea the W3C never succeeded at. I guess they're useful to search engines and text-to-speech programs possibly as well.
Flexfroggy is a good one. Check out the jon duckett books if you are new
>>58759834
>Not recognizing The Falcon
Dude, like, I may not agree with him on everything, but how new are you?
Also, you're going to have to learn CSS and maybe JS if you want your website to not look like it came out of 1995. You can always read up on /wdg/ if you so choose right here, >>58734288.
>>58761719 is good advice. Though you might want to not become to reliant on the flexbox property since it can't solve everything.