Beginning HTML and CSS

Beginning HTML and CSS

by Rob Larsen
Beginning HTML and CSS

Beginning HTML and CSS

by Rob Larsen

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Overview

Everything you need to build websites with the newest versions of HTML and CSS

If you develop websites, you know that the goal posts keep moving, especially now that your website must work on not only traditional desktops, but also on an ever-changing range of smartphones and tablets. This step-by-step book efficiently guides you through the thicket. Teaching you the very latest best practices and techniques, this practical reference walks you through how to use HTML5 and CSS3 to develop attractive, modern websites for today's multiple devices. From handling text, forms, and video, to implementing powerful JavaScript functionality, this book covers it all.

  • Serves as the ultimate beginners guide for anyone who wants to build websites with HTML5 and CSS3, whether as a hobbyist or aspiring professional developer
  • Covers the basics, including the different versions of HTML and CSS and how modern websites use structure and semantics to describe their contents
  • Explains core processes, such as marking up text, images, lists, tables, forms, audio, and video
  • Delves into CSS3, teaching you how to control or change the way your pages look and offer tips on how to create attractive designs
  • Explores the jQuery library and how to implement powerful JavaScript features, such as tabbed content, image carousels, and more

Get up to speed on HTML5, CSS3, and today's website design with this practical guide. Then, keep it on your desk as a reference!


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781118340189
Publisher: Wiley
Publication date: 03/11/2013
Series: Wrox Beginning Guideswrox Programmer to Programmer
Pages: 672
Product dimensions: 8.90(w) x 7.30(h) x 1.30(d)

About the Author

Rob Larsen is a lead front-end engineer with deep technical knowledge and more than a decade of hands-on experience. Rob has developed HTML, CSS, and JavaScript for clients including Samsung, Adidas, Reebok, and Philips and is an active technology author and speaker.

Wrox Beginning guides are crafted to make learning programming languages and technologies easier than you think, providing a structured, tutorial format that guides you through all the techniques involved.

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Table of Contents

Introduction xxxiii

Chapter 1: Structuring Documents for the Web 1

A Web of Structured Documents 1

Introducing HTML5 2

Attribute Groups 9

Core Elements 13

Basic Text Formatting 17

Understanding Block and Inline Elements 24

Grouping Content 25

Working with Lists 30

Summary 35

Chapter 2: Fine-tuning Your Text 39

Elements That Describe Text-Level Semantics 39

Editing Text 49

Using Character Entities for Special Characters 51

Comments 51

Summary 52

Chapter 3: Links and Navigation 55

Basic Links 56

Understanding Directories and Directory Structures 60

Understanding URLs 61

Creating In-Page Links with the Element 65

Advanced E-mail Links 74

Summary 75

Chapter 4: Images, Audio, and Video 79

Adding Images Using the Element 80

Using Images as Links 84

Choosing the Right Image Format 85

Adding Flash, Video, and Audio to Your Web Pages 95

Summary 106

Chapter 5: Tables 111

Introducing Tables 111

Adding a Caption to a Table 122

Grouping Sections of a Table 123

Nested Tables 129

Accessible Tables 130

Summary 135

Chapter 6: Forms 139

Introducing Forms 140

Creating a Form with the <form> Element 143

Form Controls 145

Creating a Contact Form 172

Creating Labels for Controls and the Element 174

Structuring Your Forms with <fieldset> and <legend> Elements 176

Focus 177

Disabled and Read-Only Controls 181

Sending Form Data to the Server 183

Creating More Usable Form Fields 185

Summary 187

Chapter 7: Cascading Style Sheets 191

Introducing CSS 192

Where You Can Add CSS Rules 197

CSS Properties 201

Controlling Text 203

Text Formatting 210

Text Pseudo-Classes 220

Styling Text 221

Selectors 224

Lengths 231

Introducing the Box Model 233

Creating a Style Sheet for Code 248

Summary 252

Chapter 8: More Cascading Style Sheets 257

Links 258

Backgrounds 259

Lists 267

Tables 271

Outlines 280

The :focus and :active Pseudo-Classes 282

Generated Content 283

Miscellaneous Properties 288

Additional Rules 291

Positioning and Layout with CSS 293

Summary 308

Chapter 9: Rounded Corners, Animations, Custom Fonts, and More with Css3 311

The Modular Approach of CSS 3 312

Mature CSS3 Modules 312

New and In-Development Modules 326

Summary 336

Chapter 10: Learning Javascript 339

What Is Programming About? 340

How to Add a Script to Your Pages 343

Create an External JavaScript 345

The Document Object Model 346

Starting to Program with JavaScript 347

Variables 349

Operators 351

Functions 354

Conditional Statements 357

Looping 360

Events 363

Built-in Objects 364

Writing JavaScript 377

Summary 380

Chapter 11: Working with Jquery 383

Why jQuery? 384

Adding jQuery to Your Page 384

jQuery Basics 386

jQuery and the DOM 387

Managing Events with jQuery 397

Summary 403

Chapter 12: JQuery: Beyond the Basics 407

Ajax with jQuery 407

jQuery UI 420

Summary 433

Chapter 13: Checklists 437

Search Engine Optimization Checklist 437

Accessibility Checklist 441

Appendix A: Answers to Exercises 447

Chapter 1 447

Chapter 2 448

Chapter 3 449

Chapter 4 451

Chapter 5 454

Chapter 6 455

Chapter 7 458

Chapter 8 463

Chapter 9 466

Chapter 10 468

Chapter 11 470

Chapter 12 472

Chapter 13 474

Appendix B: Html Element Reference 475

Appendix C: CSS Properties 515

Font Properties 515

Text Properties 518

Color and Background Properties 521

Border Properties 523

Dimensions 525

Margin Properties 528

Padding Properties 528

List Properties 529

Positioning Properties 531

Outline Properties 534

Table Properties 535

Classification Properties 537

Internationalization Properties 538

Selected CSS3 Properties 539

Lengths 548

Appendix D: Color Names and Values 551

Using Hex Codes to Specify Colors 551

Understanding Hex Codes 553

Using Color Names to Specify Colors 554

Color Name and Number Reference 555

Appendix E: Character Encodings 561

Appendix F: Special Characters 565

Character Entity References for ISO 8859-1 Characters 566

Character Entity References for Symbols, Mathematical Symbols, and Greek Letters 570

Character Entity References for Markup-Significant and Internationalization Characters 575

Appendix G: Language Codes 577

Appendix H: Mime Media Types 583

Text 584

Image 585

Multipart 586

Audio 586

Video 588

Message 589

Model 590

Application 590

Appendix I: Changes Between Html4 and Html5 595

New Elements 595

New <input> Element Types 596

New Attributes 597

Global Attributes 598

Changed Attributes 598

Obsolete Elements 600

Obsolete Attributes 600

At-Risk Elements 602

Index 603

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