@BoltClock well its not a site-wide nav but it isn't a 1 page specific nav either, as in it will be used for a couple of pages. I'm going to interpret this as being ok because I don't see any other way to get the layout I want without having a lot of css issues. Unless there is a way to have h1 outside of main and say this h1 belongs to main?
html has its default useragent style and css also has the capacity to add elements using pseudo elements. so, there is an overlap in the functionality. I mean css is not just for styling. Is that correct?
> Browsers do not always display the image referenced by the element. This is the case for non-graphical browsers (including those used by people with vision impairments), if the user chooses not to display images, or if the browser is unable to display the image because it is invalid or an unsupported type. In these cases, the browser may replace the image with the text defined in this element's alt attribute.
Anyways, I will just throw my question here and hope somebody will help.
So, we have a front-end written in backbone, which looks ugly. There are web designers who don't know Backbone.js but are quite good with designing stuff(CSS, HTML, JS). So my question is, how can I, as a Backbone developer design my application in such way, so somebody else, who doesn't know Backbone, can write a UI for it?