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There may be nearly infinite grid systems/mechanisms/whatever that promise to help you, dear designer, to hold your horses and follow a structure. This one is different.
The Golden Grid System is fluid, loves vertical rhythm and is so very easy to be to used.
However, do follow the advice written on the website: the system becomes even better if you tame it and change it according to your needs.
I’m pretty sure you know about the recent tragedy in Oslo, Norway. You might want to turn away from anything that reminds it. However, I think there’s something positive in this story as well.
When reporters asked the mayor of Oslo whether the city is in need for more security, he said:
I don’t think security can solve problems. We need to teach greater respect.
This very moment when the masses asked for more blood, he took a pause. He responded in a quite unexpected way. He talked about respect. He selected education instead of violence.
I don’t know anything about Fabian Stang and most probably I’ll never hear his name again. But his response worths two moments of our time.
In this example when a paragraph comes right after an h1 it is red.
By extending the example above we can declare this:
h1+h2+p{
color: red
}
Now the paragraph turns to red only when it follows an h2 which comes right after an h1.
The technique works in Safari, Chrome, Opera and Firefox and its validity has been confirmed by Eric Meyer. Adjacent sibling combinators work for Internet Explorer 7+ too, but I have not tested my discovery there yet.
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