FRAMES or NO FRAMES


The following article outlines the Pros and Cons of using frames with a
deeper look at how they might affect your search engine ranking.

When designing a new website, one of your first decisions is whether or not
to use frames. Frames technology allows you to have more than one web page
on your screen at the same time.

Typically a frames site will include a navigation menu down the side or
across the top, with the main or contents page filling the rest of the
screen, however you can use 3, 4, 5, or more frames if there is any
advantage to your site from doing so.

ADVANTAGES OF FRAMES

1) Frames can make your site easier to navigate because you can have a
constantly visible navigation menu - and as you should know, easy navigation
is one of the most important aspects of website design.

2) Frames can make your site faster because you can include the site theme
(images, logo, etc..), and the navigation menu, in frames that do not have
to download each time a visitor looks at a new page. Only the contents page
changes. (Take a look at the website success center at
http://crosswinds.net/~webpageafrica/index.htm for an example of this. This
site has 5 frames with the contents frame in the middle.)

3) Using frames can make it easier to design and maintain your site,
especially if you have a large site. If for example you want to add a new
page that is linked from the other pages on your site, you simply add a link
on your navigation menu; you do not have to add links on each and every
page.

(However the top web design software allows you to create templates which
can give similar results. You create a template and then create the pages
for your site based on this template. Then whenever you make a change on the
template, the web pages based on this template can be automatically updated.
This is essential if you have a large site and don't use frames.)

4) Frames can make your site more interesting and can also allow you to have
permanently visible advertising banners. Take a look at the Word magazine
site www.word.com - well worth a visit and one of the most innovative sites
we have found from a design point of view.

DISADVANTAGES

1) The original argument was that not all browsers support frames, but this
must be a very small percentage now. You can get around this by including a
area below your frameset. In this noframes area you
include the normal area and in this you place information such
as a simple navigation menu and a "Sorry your browser does not support
frames" statement.

2) Some search engines only index the home.htm or index.htm page without
spidering the rest of the site, so unless you have good tags your
site might not rank very well, especially since many search 500 engines also
take into account the contents of your pages and frames are treated as
hyperlinks to other pages. You can however get around this by creating
"doorway" pages which redirect visitors to your index.htm page.

To redirect a visitor from an optimized "doorway" page you simply put the
following line in your section.



and replace index.htm with the page you want to redirect the visitor to.

The other aspect here is that for search engines which only index your home
page, you would need to submit each of your site content pages separately.
If one of these content pages is indexed and found in a search, the visitor
will 600 only see the contents page and will not see the rest of your site,
something you definitely don't want to happen ! This brings us to the next
and maybe the most important disadvantage of using frames.

3)Frames can make it difficult for you to direct people to a particular page
on your site. This is especially so if you want to use email to send a
visitor to a particular page that has details of an affiliate program for
example. If you don't send them to your index.htm page they will not be able
to see the rest of your site, only the contents of the page you have
directed them to. 700

4)Frames within frames can be confusing, so you have to pay special
attention to your hyperlinks when you are designing your pages. For example
if one of the links in your main or contents frame redirects a visitor back
to the index.htm page, the result will be a mess unless the hyperlink
specifies the target frame as "top" (eg: HREF"http://www.yoursite.com/index.htm TARGET"top">) to prevent the index
page opening inside the contents page.

All in all, whether you use frames or not is a personal decision, but you
need to aware of the advantages and disadvantages before you design your
site.

Learning how to use frames is easy once you have mastered the concept that a
hyperlink can lead to a page in its own frame (TARGET"self") the default
option, or in another frame in the frameset eg:(TARGET"main").

About the Author

Richard Igoe is the driving force behind TheWebsEye, a newly launched
website which is building up a library of useful website design articles. If
you have something to contribute please visit the http://TheWebsEye.com
Library to submit your article for inclusion. We are also building a list of
website designers with links to their work.