Spacer GIF

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Prior to the adoption of Cascading Style Sheets (CSS), the spacer GIF was a transparent image, often used to control blank space within a web page, that can be resized according to the width and height dimensions it is given. Spacer GIFs are not browser specific. The reason a spacer GIF is invisible is so that an HTML developer can create a table cell and fill the background with a specific color that can be viewed through the transparent spacer GIF. For instance, let's say the developer wants to create a blue box that is 500 x 500 pixels wide. Instead of using a separate blue graphic that is 500 x 500 pixels (taking up additional bandwidth), the developer can specify the table cell background color and specify the dimensions of the spacer GIF that already exists.

To create a spacer GIF, simply open a new Adobe Photoshop, Macromedia Fireworks, GIMP (or whatever graphics software you have) file with a transparent background and with the dimensions 1 pixel by 1 pixel. You only need it to be 1 pixel as you will specify the height and width in the HTML. Normally you would not do this with a GIF image but since the spacer GIF is transparent, stretching it will not matter. Save the image as a transparent GIF named "spacer.gif".

The use of spacer GIFs has declined due to the prevalence of CSS for laying out web pages, which achieves the same effect by changing the margin or padding on a given element. CSS is preferable as it, if used properly, reduces unnecessary code in a web page. Blank 1x1 GIFs are still occasionally used to fix a PNG rendering bug in Microsoft Internet Explorer versions 5.5 - 6.

[edit] History

David Siegel's 1996 book "Creating Killer Web Sites" was allegedly the first to publish the Spacer GIF technique. According to David Siegel himself, he invented the trick in his living room, while others were probably inventing the same trick at around the same time. [1]

[edit] External links

  1. ^ Justaddwater (2006-03-03). Justaddwater: Who invented the Spacer GIF. Justaddwater. Retrieved on 2006-11-26.