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The evolution of web design

In this article we will trace the long road traveled by web design, beginning in the early 1990s, when websites were presented as single column, text-based pages, made in HTML. The websites looked like a series of text documents with online links; and the dynamic elements were not even a thought.

Immediately after the formation of the WWC (World Wide Web Consortium) in the mid-1990s, table-based sites and online page builders replaced simple text-based web design. More complex, multi-column sites were created due to table-based HTML. This extended the text-based layout model, allowing for better content organization and navigation layout. Background images were often inserted into tables; animated text, scrolling text, and gif images began bouncing off websites. Frame pages became a popular way to clearly distinguish the body from other website elements and navigation.

Also, visual counters began to appear at the bottom of sites. Another significant advance was the introduction of Macromedia Flash (now Adobe Flash). The end of the 1990s was marked by the rise of the Flash. Many websites have been animated with a combination of table-based design and flash elements, such as company logos that bounce and glow in front of their home page and flash-based animations that expand and change color when clicked by a user. . Great progress was made with the introduction of CSS and PHP: the dynamic layout language (PHP3) gained popularity with its release in 1998.

And 2000 was the year of CSS’s potential recognition. Cascading style sheets allowed designers to separate website content from web design. With CSS, design elements such as background color, images, and text formatting options can be defined separately (in a style sheet), rather than on the main HTML page. This advancement made it easier to control the uniform appearance of a website in addition to the content. The rise of JavaScript began in the early 2000s. Web designers began to dump tables and use JavaScript for page layouts. JavaScript allowed designers to animate menus without Flash. Navigation bars began to move to the top of the page, and dropdown menus became a popular navigation option.

The semantic web was introduced in the mid-2000s. This web design movement aimed to enable machines to understand web pages as well as human viewers do. In the late 2000s, web design began to shift towards interactive content and web applications with the advancement of web 2.0 concepts: interactive content that changes without having to refresh the page. Powerful applications have flooded the Internet. The design focus has been more on the social web and traffic-oriented websites. Social media powered websites tried to engage the user and allow them to share content, articles, graphics, etc., instead of just selling products.

The rise of smartphones and tablets is fueling the popularity of the mobile web. In 2008, mobile Internet access surpassed desktop access for the first time in history. Since then, more and more websites have been designing alternative “mobile” versions for their active users on the go. Mobile sites contain the essential elements of the normal website; navigation is minimal – reduced to the most important areas of the site.

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