Web design refers to the design of websites that are displayed on the internet. It usually refers to the user experience aspects of website development rather than software development. Web design used to be focused on designing websites for desktop browsers; however, since the mid-2010s, design for mobile and tablet browsers has become ever-increasingly important.
A web designer works on the appearance, layout, and, in some cases, content of a website. Appearance, for instance, relates to the colors, font, and images used. Layout refers to how information is structured and categorized. A good web design is easy to use, aesthetically pleasing, and suits the user group and brand of the website. Many webpages are designed with a focus on simplicity, so that no extraneous information and functionality that might distract or confuse users appears. As the keystone of a web designer’s output is a site that wins and fosters the trust of the target audience, removing as many potential points of user frustration as possible is a critical consideration.
Static Web Design contains a website with web pages linked to each other using a font or graphics-based logo, and containing text, and simple design graphics. Furthermore, our Professional web designers Create an attractive, professional, unique website design which is easy to navigate, browser compatible and with easily downloadable graphics.
A dynamic website is made up of a bunch of different pieces that come together and form a page. Unlike static sites, dynamic sites use server technologies, like PHP or JavaScript, for web development. These computer codes automatically create HTML and CSS “on the fly.” This means that when someone loads a dynamic web page, all the parts that make up that page will pull together and that is what is viewed. When you want one part of the site to be updated, such as the header or footer, you can change that one piece and it will appear across every page that contains that piece. So, overall, dynamic sites may be more costly and time consuming to create at the forefront, but they can make up for it a hundred times over down the road.
These computer codes automatically create HTML and CSS “on the fly.” This means that when someone loads a dynamic web page, all the parts that make up that page will pull together and that is what is viewed. When you want one part of the site to be updated, such as the header or footer, you can change that one piece and it will appear across every page that contains that piece. So, overall, dynamic sites may be more costly and time consuming to create at the forefront, but they can make up for it a hundred times over down the road.