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HTML, XHTML, and CSS, Sixth Edition (Visual QuickStart Guide)

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, , and , Sixth Edition (Visual QuickStart Guide)
by Elizabeth Castro

# Paperback: 456 pages
# Publisher: Press; 6 edition (August 16, 2006)
# Language: English
# ISBN: 0321430840

Book Description:


03214308405001nk9 HTML, XHTML, and CSS, Sixth Edition (Visual QuickStart Guide)
It’s important for anyone who creates Web sites–even those who rely on powerful editors like Dreamweaver or GoLive–to know . The World Wide Web Consortium rewrote as a subset of XML (dubbing it “ 1.0″) and the allowable code will eventually be stricter. Tags that are being phased out are labeled “deprecated”–current browsers can still handle them, but if you want your site to keep up with future browsers, not to mention conform to accessibility requirements, you will want to get on top of .

Of course, Elizabeth Castro manages to write books that not only speak to those who are already fluent in , but are good for newbies too. She makes it a breeze to create sites that are visually stylish and technically sophisticated without the expense of buying an editor.

Among the topics covered in her new book, for the World Wide Web with and : using the (relatively newer) structural tags (like doctype and div); correctly using older tags (like p and img) that have been modified in ; writing so that formatting is done by the style sheets; writing those style sheets (cascading style sheets, a.k.a. “”); creating a variety of layouts; and dealing with tables, frames, forms, multimedia, a bit of JavaScript (including mouseovers), WML (for mobile device displays), debugging, publishing, and publicizing your site.

As with all Visual QuickStart Guides, this one features clear and concise instructions side by side with well-captioned illustrations and screen shots that show both the source code and the resulting effect on the Web page. The index is extremely detailed, making this a great reference.

Also great for reference are the outstanding appendices. The first is an extensive list of tags and attributes, indicating which are deprecated and/or proprietary and on which page they are discussed. A similar appendix shows properties and values; given the future of Web coding, this chart alone is worth the price of the book. Other handy charts cover intrinsic events, symbols and character Unicodes, and an expanded color chart that goes way beyond the virtually archaic Web-safe palette. All of which makes this a definite must-have for every Web designer’s bookshelf. –Angelynn Grant –This text refers to the Paperback edition.

From Library Journal
’s “Visual Quickstart” guides are real meat-and-potatoes works for beginners. Nothing fancy to be found here, just one annotated screen shot after another. An advanced user will finish one of these books during a two-hour airplane ride; beginners will need a day. But everyone will welcome the purely practical approach.
Copyright 1997 Reed Business Information, Inc. –This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

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