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Entries for October 2009

Wednesday, October 28, 2009 by Cuong Dang

Pros and Cons of Using CSS Framework in DotNetNuke

Filed under: Tips & Tricks, Skinning

I’ve been a big fan of using grid in most of my work in recent years. One of the main things I enjoy doing it is because of the symmetrical of the design and the aspect of re-using many of the CSS selectors within the same project. It’s exciting to write less markup and CSS to do more with design and implementation. And as many have heard “less is more”; by using CSS framework, it allows you to do just that.

I consider DotNetNuke community (at least the web designer community within DotNetNuke) is sort of a laggard group in adopting web standards until recently. Many people have talked and written books about the benefits of using web standards as well as how to do it properly, but I’ve seen a slow progress within DNN community.

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Monday, October 26, 2009 by Cuong Dang

DNNMenu Improved in DotNetNuke Version 5.1.4

Filed under: Tips & Tricks, Skinning

For those of you who are using DNNMenu (or DNNNav) from the core DotNetNuke framework, you might notice there is a huge change in DotNetNuke 5.x with the inclusion of DNNMenu version 2. The change for this webcontrol had not been well documented in details so people might find a hard time to get up to speed with what’s new when using it.

As you may know, many experts in the DNN forum have been talking about eliminating SolPartMenu and start using DNNMenu for years when developing skins, but the details about controlling the design of this challenging webcontrol isn’t easy to find or even unavailable out their on the web.

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Wednesday, September 30, 2009 by Cuong Dang

Best Practices to Improve Site’s Performance through Front-end Development

Filed under: Tips & Tricks

Some claims DotNetNuke is notorious when it comes to performance. I beg to differ. Consider the advantage that you’ll get from using an enterprise-level platform for every web project can possibly build, a little bit of performance sacrifice is worth the tradeoff in my opinion.

But that’s not the point. You can build DotNetNuke sites that have kick-ass performance if you do it the right way. There are many respected developers in the community have spoken about this specific topic, but rarely touched on the front-end aspect. In this post, I’d like to share a few best practices that help to get the most out of your DotNetNuke site's performance by just improving front-end development approaches.

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