
On Fri, Apr 2, 2010 at 12:40 AM, Christopher Done
That's true, it's a nice idea but in practice it's hard to know where to focus. I've gone with a left nav. I've built up the HTML which is cross-browser (ie6/7/8/opera/firefox/safari/chrome compat), still need to add some bits but I can tomorrow import it into a wikimedia skin. It's kind of easy to re-shuffle now that I've built it.
http://82.33.137.16/haskell-website/
Feedback would be appreciated.
There isn't a lot of visual separation between the nav bar and the main content. I think a border or background colour change might be nice. Also, when I let my firefox window fill the screen there's whitespace on the left and right, when I share my screen with another window the site doesn't fit horizontally - it doesn't adjust well to changing window widths. Also, in the nav bar it should be clearer when an item is linewrapping and when it is next in the list - on the left it looks like we have * The Haskell Platform * Glasgow Haskell * Compiler * ... so, bullet points or adjusted vertical spacing might help there. Also still quite grey. But I do like the focus on current events - the first impression you get visiting that page is that Haskell is alive and well, and people are using and developing it right now. The pictures of Real People smiling and huddling together really do help the friendly image we've managed to acquire (and should guard with utmost vigil, in my opinion). I think that the About and Learning sections of the original website are good section titles, and would work well on the navbar. The easiest thing to do on visiting the website is read about why Haskell is so great, and where to find out how to use it.