HTML and XHTML: The Definitive Guide (HTML & XHTML: Definitive Guide)

ClanBrandon Books
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Chuck Musciano, Bill Kennedy

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Pages: 800 (Paperback)

ISBN: 059600382X

Pub: O'Reilly

Pub date: 2002-09-03

Amazon.co.uk Sales Rank: 101433

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Editorial Review:


HTML is a familiar FLA (four letter acronym) but what about XHTML? Is it merely a typographical error or simply XML by another name? The readable preface to this book puts us right and there is more detail in Chapter 1 which is also an interesting potted history of the web and web technologies.

HTML (Hypertext Markup Language) is for controlling layout and specifying hypertext links for documents viewed with a browser. The World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) controls its standardisation. XML (Extensible Markup Language), also defined by the W3C, is a standard that allows structured data to be presented in a standard way that it can be understood by many different technologies, for example, relational database engines and web browsers. Use of XML for the exchange of data between businesses on the Internet is increasing rapidly. Now, finally, comes XHTML (Extensible Hypertext Markup Language), which is HTML reformulated to bring it into line with the XML standard.

The authors try to instil good habits and style considerations, as well as an appreciation of kumquats (a recurrent theme in the examples). They revile use of the blink tag extension that causes text to oscillate between two colour states and blink, constantly, irritatingly and advocate visiting a wide range of Web sites to learn what works and what doesn't.

The comprehensive coverage of the topic is divided into chapters like Text Basics, Formatted Lists, Forms, Frames and Executable Content. HTML & XHTML: The Definitive Guide is a feature-driven guide to what the languages can do rather than a guide to producing a finished item, but it should help a beginner to make good progress nevertheless, and is written in an approachable style. --Mark Whitehorn

Reader Reviews:


5/5 stars

A reference rather than a tutorial (11/12 people found this helpful)

If you need a handy HTML or XHTML reference, then this is the book for you. If you are a complete novice, then you need to read another book, such as 'Learning Web Design' by Jennifer Niederst (yet another O'Reilly book) first.

Did I say this was just a reference? Well, this is untrue. If you have some experience this book cuts nicely through the jargon and dogma and explains how an HTML document is structured, and then describes in detail all the elements (tags) in the structure. The book is organised in such a way that the HTML Quick Reference at the back of the book is cross-referenced to the main text down to the exact page (as is the CSS Quick Reference).

When it comes to the issues about standards and deprecated attributes and tags in the HTML 4.01 standard, Musciano and Kennedy are pragmatic and practical, rather than treating this as some form of religious debate. They are realistic enough to suggest that you should adhere to the standards wherever possible, but be prepared to make concessions where otherwise you would not be able to achieve what you want. There is also some good discussion on browser take up of CSS 1 and CSS 2.1.

The only beef I have is that in Chapter 6, Links and Webs, the explanations of URLs and of TCP/IP port numbers are not as good as they could be. It seems the writers have sacrificed clarity for brevity. Be that as it may, I have found this book invaluable and use it on a daily basis.

5/5 stars

The Bible for (real) web designers (9/12 people found this helpful)

I was completely new to HTML, XHTML and WYSIWYG editors, and this book was recommended to me as the best place to start. I took it on holiday to Greece - and read it from cover to cover in a week, while everyone else was on the beach! - and it gave me a superb grounding on which to build a web design career. So, read it now, and read it first.

4/5 stars

A non-patronizing guide to modern html (20/24 people found this helpful)

"HTML and XHTML: the definitive guide" will give you a thorough grounding in creating web pages. XHTML, by the way, is just HTML5 - the more mature version of the whizzy dynamic HTML4.

This book does not patronize - not that it's not "for idiots". It doesn't have cartoons, or annoying icons saying "kule stuff" either.

What it does do is to take you through the process of creating websites - from your first steps through to the deep end of HTML. Each element is detailed with sufficient examples; nothing is glossed over. Particular strengths are

are the trickier areas - its treatment of forms, GET and POST, frames, CSS and tables are very clear.

The book is careful to delineate what it deals with and what it doesn't. Although it touches upon Java, Javascript, Applets and server technology, these tend to be pointers to the reader - saying what the various things do, evaluating the options and pointing you to an O'Reilly book to buy!

"Kule stuff" includes the chapter on XML (should be on your resume!), "tips, tricks and hacks", the tag reference summary and some rather excellent history on the internet and all the various parties that try and work together to make it work. It's a neat book - personally, I'm an XML-type who's having to reverse-engineer my know-how down to HTML and it hits the mark for me!

5/5 stars

Essential Book in a web page designer's tool box (9/10 people found this helpful)

This book couldn't have been more perfect for me. I was on the brink of understanding HTML in depth before buying this book. After reading I am now more fluent and more confident in what I use in my pages. I have a more wide spread knowledge of what I can use in my pages with a better understanding of the standards that uniform the web. I am now creating pages to standards - not to browsers.

This book has given me a very opening and logical insight into XHTML and XML.

2/5 stars

DON'T BELIEVE THE HYPE! All theory, No practical. (4/34 people found this helpful)

I was looking for a very practical HTML book so I could start writing web-pages immediately, and after reading all of the raving reviews about O'Reily books I thought that this book would be the right choice.

When I received this book I quickly flicked through it to find all of the practical exercises and tutorials with matching illustrations; I found very few. What I did find was pages and pages of theory, that don't help you write web pages at all. The tutorials that are provided are incredibly complex; they throw you in at the deep end before you can swim and expect you to back-stroke it home.

If you're looking for step-by-step, practical tutorials then look elsewhere; if you want a book to read on a long haul flight, with no PC for a 1000 miles then this is the one. I don't dispute that this book has a lot of valuable information in it, because it does; but extracting it is the difficult part.

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Categories

Amazon.co.uk places this book into the following categories:

Books -> Subjects -> Computers & Internet -> General
Books -> Subjects -> Computers & Internet -> Web Development -> Web Scripting & Programming
Books -> Subjects -> Computers & Internet -> Software & Graphics
Books -> Subjects -> Computers & Internet -> Programming -> Languages -> HTML & XHTML -> XHTML
Books -> Subjects -> Computers & Internet -> Digital Lifestyle -> Online Shopping -> Amazon
Books -> Refinements -> Language (feature_browse-bin) -> English
uk-shops -> Education Resources -> Books -> Computer Science -> Programming -> Languages -> HTML & XHTML -> XHTML

 

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