How to Design WordPress Websites with Fluid Width
A WordPress website designed with a fluid width layout has a flexible width. Unlike a fixed width layout, a fluid width layout can expand or contract in width, based on the screen resolution used by the visitor’s browser.
If you use fixed width layout instead of a fluid width layout, and set it to 960 pixels wide for example, then the website container is exactly 960 pixels in width and never changes. With a fluid width layout, you set the width to a percentage such 90 percent for example, and the container for your website data takes up 90 percent of the browser window, no matter how big or small it is onscreen.
Here is a popular 90-percent-width layout. The header and footer of this site are 90-percent wide; the content area is 50-percent wide; the two sidebars are 20-percent wide; and the content area and first sidebar are separated by 5-percent margins.

A sample fluid width layout at a 90-percent width.
The CSS for the layout shown looks something like this:
body {
background: #ffffff;
margin:0;
font-family: arial, verdana, helvetica, sans-serif;
}
#container {
width: 90%;
margin:0 auto;
}
#header {
width: 90%;
height: 100px;
margin-bottom: 20px;
background: #eee;
}
.content {
width:50%;
margin-right: 5%;
float:left;
background: #eee;
}
.sidebar1 {
width: 20%;
margin-right: 5%;
float:left;
background: #eee;
}
.sidebar2 {
width: 20%;
float:left;
background: #eee;
}
#footer {
float:left;
width: 90%;
height: 100px;
margin-top: 20px;
margin-bottom: 20px;
background: #eee;
}
The fluid width layout, with the width calculated in percentages, creates an elastic layout that changes its width based on the screen size your site visitor uses.
Fluid width has a few advantages — the most important being that it uses all the space (or real estate) of a browser. No real estate goes to waste. Fluid width adjusts to the visitor’s screen resolution and creates, what some feel is, a better user environment. Also, in screen resolutions smaller than 1024 pixels in width, it eliminates the horizontal scroll bar across the bottom of the browser that often happens with a fixed width design created for resolutions greater than 1024.
However, fluid width has several disadvantages that you need to be aware of. Many of these disadvantages are what cause designers to shy away from a fluid width design method. Here are some of these disadvantages:
Multimedia display: One major problem accounts for multimedia files such as photographs, videos, and images within the content of a website. If, for example, you embed a video that is 500 pixels in width and place it within the 50-percent width container, you can never be sure that every site visitor’s browser creates a content area greater than 500 pixels. If the visitor uses a smaller resolution, the embedded video, at 500 pixels in width, may overlap other areas of the site design, which isn’t your intended result.
You can work around this problem by using CSS properties like min-width and max-width; however, these properties aren’t supported by Internet Explorer, which means you have to work harder to create Internet Explorer–specific expressions that resolve the problem, using the height and overflow CSS properties.
Readability: Visitors that have very large monitors or screen resolution settings may cause a fluid width website to span the entire width of the screen, making it sometimes difficult to read — unless you use CSS solutions to create a minimum or maximum width.
Bottom line, it’s sometimes difficult to get a fluid width website to display correctly in all major browser systems without a lot of work — and browser-specific CSS hacks to force it into working and displaying the way it should. Getting such a site to display correctly isn’t impossible, but the extra time and work (and brain power) involved in making it happen make some designers stick with a fixed width layout method of designing websites, which is a perfectly acceptable practice.

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archive
1. (noun) A list of previous blog posts, in chronological order. 2. (verb) To place files or blog posts in a safer place (on DVD or another server) for longer-term or backup storage.

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attribute
Used in an HTML tag to give an instruction to a Web browser. For example, in This link goes to <a href="http://www.google.com">Google</a>, the <a> tag gets an attribute (href) and a value ("http://www.google.com") to go along with the basic tag. In this case, the attribute indicates to the browser that what comes next is a hypertext reference — in this case, a Web page.

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blacklist
An often-centralized list of e-mail addresses, URLs, and IP addresses used by spammers that are then forbidden in any blog post on your blog. With an up-to-date blacklist, a lot of spam is stopped before it becomes a comment.

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block
To stop all contact with a MySpace user. He can’t comment on your blog page or send you any message that you actually receive.

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blog
A combination of the words Web and log. Bloggers (individuals, groups, or businesses) post a chronological log of information. Content is determined entirely by the author(s) of the blog; many are personal journals.

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blog post
An entry in a blog, possibly containing text, images, and other media.

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blogger
The author of a blog.

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blogging policy
Outlines what you’re allowed to post in your blog.

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blogging software
Technology that enables you to blog. Can be either hosted or nonhosted.

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blogroll
A collection of links used or recommended by a blogger.

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cookie
A short piece of computer code, stored on your computer, that enables Web sites to remember certain settings and information the next time you visit that site.

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Dashboard
A kind of control panel in Blogger that shows you the blogs you’ve set up, giving you access posting, using help resources, or even creating another blog.

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definition list
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disk space
Amount of room available on your hard drive.

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domain
A domain is the address, or main URL, that people type in the browser to get to your Web site. The domain name you choose can’t be used by anyone else.

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domain registrar
A service that enables you to register a domain name.

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entry
An single posting in a blog containing text, images, or other media, or any combination of those things.

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Facebook
A social-networking service that enables you to keep in contact with families and friends via the Web.

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Flickr
A Web site that allows you to share, organize, edit, and otherwise manage your photos.

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Friend List
Your virtual online address book in MySpace. You can become someone’s friend by either sending a fellow MySpacer a Friend Request or by being on the receiving end of a Friend Request from another MySpace user.

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hosted services
Manages the data, software, and Web hosting of a blog; the blogger just manages the content.

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HTML
The computer coding used by Web designers to create Web pages.

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hyperlink
A navigation tool that allows a user to go from one Web location to another by clicking. Hyperinks (or just links) are typically underlined.

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hypertext reference
In HTML, the address that a hyperlink connects to when clicked. For example, in This link goes to <a href="http://www.google.com">Google</a>, the hypertext reference (href) is http://www.google.com. Hyperlink references can also jump to new positions on the same page, open a new e-mail message, or begin a file download.

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link
Short for hyperlink, a navigation tool that allows a user to go from one Web location to another by clicking. Links are typically underlined.

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A self-test that flags inappropriate blog posts. If you’d let your mom read the post, then it’s probably passed the Mom test. Specifically, don’t blog about topics you think will hurt others; don’t blog about others without their permission, even about topics you consider inconsequential; and don’t identify friends and lovers by name without their permission.

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MySpace
A social-networking service that enables you to keep in contact with families and friends via the Web.

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MySpace profile
Your MySpace identity. It can contain as much or as little information about you as you’d like.

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news aggregation
The ability to aggregate news by using RSS feeds. Having a news aggregator included with your blog package allows your site to pull in information from another blog.

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nonhosted service
Blog software that you set up on your own Web server. It allows you to take on all responsibilities related to maintaining your blog.

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ordered list
Contains items that must be listed in a particular order, such as a list of ranks or preferences. It may also indicate a list of steps for the reader to follow.

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pinging
An automated notification system for search engines and newsreaders, letting those services know that your blog has been updated. A ping occurs when one computer asks another whether it’s there; the second computer confirms its presence.

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post
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A MySpace profile that’s limited on who can view it, such as only people on your Friend List.

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public domain
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social network
A service, such as Facebook or MySpace, that enables to keep in touch with people you know — and meet people you don’t know.

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spam
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tag
A relevant keyword associated or assigned to a piece of information, such as an image, a blog entry, or a video clip. Tags are usually chosen informally by the content creator or by the online community; they help give content to nontext media and organize information for ease of searching.

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transparent
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unordered list
unordered list is a series of bulleted items and is used for lists that don’t require numbering.

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video blog
A blog consisting of video files, or the practice of placing a video file in a blog post.

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video-sharing service
A service, such as YouTube, that enables you to share video with others.

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The Web server where you software, graphics, and other files live online.

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Web server
Technology that looks at what Web page is requested and then feeds the browser the appropriate file. It does most of the hard work of serving Web pages to visitors coming to your Web site.

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whitelist
A list of preselected users who are allowed to comment on your blog.

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YouTube
A video-sharing service.