HTML links

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Revision as of 13:55, 1 September 2008 by Daniel K. Schneider (talk | contribs) (HTML Links moved to HTML links)
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This article or section is currently under construction

In principle, someone is working on it and there should be a better version in a not so distant future.
If you want to modify this page, please discuss it with the person working on it (see the "history")

Page is under reconstruction. Probably lots of broken links - Daniel K. Schneider 11:06, 1 September 2008 (UTC).

Definition

The HyperText Markup Language (HTML) is a simple markup language used to createhypertext documents that are portable from one platform to another. It is the publishing language of the World Wide Web (WWW). HTML documents are SGML documents with generic semantics that are appropriate for representing information from a wide range of applications. XHTML documents are XML documents and you should start coding in XHTML (this page needs some tutorials on XHTML, but since there are so many indexes, you'll have to wait maybe forever).

This is a simple links pages. See:

  • HTML for a short overview of (X)HTML formats.
  • XHTML for a short introduction to XHML


HTML Validation

Manuals & Short References

Specifications

FAQ's

XHTML Tutorials

HTML Tutorials

(HTML is outdated)

Online documentation

Near Future: XHTML & DOM

Specialized topics

See also [../design/pointers.html WWW Design and Style] and [/guides/hypertext/pointers.html Hypertexts Pointers @ TECFA]

Style sheets and fonts

  • SEE [/guides/css/pointers.html CSS Pointers Page]

Icons/Graphics

Chars & Entities

(instead of using old-style entities you can define a character set, a much more simple strategy)

UTF-8 example: \u03a3 is the code for a SUM sign.

URL encoding

  • URL Encoding (or what are those "%20" codes in URLs?') by Brian Wilson

Colors

Frames

(don't use frames, because it destroys the idea of the URL, something you can link to)

HTTP

META TAGs

See also our [/guides/rdf/pointers.html RDF page !]

DHTML

DHTML is a combination of HTML, CSS and JavaScript, but we don't teach it here since it the cost/benefit ratio is usually quite low..... and often [moving-things.html useless] Check other sites please, e.g. Dynamic Drive or ActiveUI or [/guides/toolbox.html general WebMaster's ] sites.

Mobile Devices

Tools / Software

(only some, some maybe outdated)

Validation and Syntax correction

HTML Editors

Filters

(need more here)

Browsers

Links

A note about browsers: IE is not a superior browser. Version 5.5 just implemented CSS much better than Netscape 4.x ever did. Newer versions (IE 6+) still fail in many aspects. They don't even respect the fundamental HTTP protocol, e.g. if you put some html in some text file (served as text/plain by the server), it will not display the html code but render it as HTML which it should *not*. IE has trouble with uploading and many other little problems like it doesn't understand correctly served XHTML as XML application. I suggest the following strategy for non-commercial webmasters who build pages and sites which must last:

  • Do simple HTML. It is much easier to maintain and indexes well with search engines and it will load fast. Go for XHTML (transitional) or HTML 4.01 transitional if you know what I am talking about and don't use any JS code (any stupid beginner can do roll-over menus, so don't be afraid of not using these). People will be able to read your pages for years to come. If your pages must look pretty, you should use external style-sheets, but do NOT use tiny Windows fonts. Windows fonts look big on Windows screens but print very small and look very small on other platforms.
  • If you plan to write web applications, code by W3C DOM standards and ignore NS 4.x and IE 5. Your code may or may not run with IE 5.5 (you can make allowances for this) but it will with Mozilla which is coming along nicely (install its latest Beta release and ignore Netscape if you can). It will also run with Netscape 7.x and IE 6 (unless MS decides to launch some major sabotage project). My home page shows how you can code in XHTML + CSS and still show contents to older browsers. Read A List Apart on a regular basis to keep in touch !

Things to move to a french page

  • See under HTML Trail of [/guides/tie/tie.html TIE slides] (en français)
  • [/guides/htmlman/html-1.html TECFA HTML Manuel], en français [ [/guides/htmlman/html.pdf version PDF] ]