Cheap Web Hosting and Domain Registration - Dayana Host Cheap Web Hosting and Domain Registration - Dayana Host Cheap Web Hosting and Domain Registration - Powered by Dayana Networks   Cheap Web Hosting with 30 Days Money Back Guarantee by Dayana Host
More than 68,217 web sites hosted. Latest client joined at Nov 21, 2008, 2:30am PST

Useful Books and Software

Related CSS Books

     
 
Books and Software > Books > CSS > Page 8 > Beginning Web Programming with HTML, XHTML, and CSS
 
     
 
Beginning Web Programming with HTML, XHTML, and CSS
 
4.0 of 5.0
 
Beginning Web Programming with HTML, XHTML, and CSS
This beginning guide reviews HTML and also introduces you to using XHTML for the structure of a web page and cascading style sheets (CSS) for controlling how a document should appear on a web page. Youll learn how to take advantage of the latest features of browsers while making sure that your pages still work in older, but popular, browsers. By incorporating usability and accessibility, youll be able to write professional-looking and well-coded web pages that use the latest technologies.

 
Publisher: Wrox
Author: Jon Duckett
Release Date: 2004-08-06
ISBN/EAN:

New Price: $23.75 / Used Price: n.a. / Collectible Price: n.a.
Buy it Now!
Average Rating: 4.0
Number of Reviews: 13

 

ProgrammerRating:
I as a programmer think that this book is a productive book, the guy go over all the materials you need to learn step by step and smoothly.
Total Votes: 0, Helpful Votes: 0, Date: 2008-10-19
 
Excellent - InformativeRating:
It's an excellent and informative book! It helped me very much to teach the item to a very "difficult audience"!
Total Votes: 0, Helpful Votes: 0, Date: 2008-10-14
 
Great teaching bookRating:
Great introduction to front-end web programming using XHTML and CSS. It even gets into the nitty-gritty of SEO strategies, rating your site for child access, testing methods, and accessibility for the visually impaired. Also provides a good, although brief intro to JavaScript, database driven websites, and programming for mobile devices.

Yes there is a lot of repetition and a bit of wandering back and forth across subjects, and yes it can be annoying. But most books in this genre are guilty of that. This one is no better nor worse than the others. Nice reference and appendix. Recommended.
Total Votes: 1, Helpful Votes: 1, Date: 2007-12-11
 
Hard to followRating:
I have gone from being frustrated with this title to disliking it intensely. I would suggest alternate materials such as the O'Reilly publication, "HTML & XHTML: The Definitive Guide."

First, "BWP w/HTML, XHTML, and CSS" is dated. Its publication date is 2004. This text often complains that features "are not supported by browsers" that have since been updated. There are more current materials published within the last year. (And on the subject of browsers, I have not found a single mention of Mozilla, Safari, or Opera in this book).

Second, the author's presentation is often difficult to follow. Concedely it is a difficult subject to organize when there are "live" tags, "deprecated" tags, the ongoing effort to separate stylistic elements into CSS, and different browswers' idiosyncracies with which to deal. Duckett, however, is next to hopeless in separating these subjects.

Most critical is the fact that this book is a very unhappy blend between an introductory tutorial and a reference "bible." Duckett will introduce a basic concept -- say, "tables" and will then load up on all of the attributes that the element might take. Learning the key ideas gets lost in the process. The book often leads off into asides and references to more advanced topics that will easily lose the initiate. It is no coincidence that several of the reviews here use the word "intermediate" in connection with this text.

The author does not seem to understand the principle that individuals learn by working from the "known" step-by-step to the "unknown." Instead, he seems to rely upon the idea that "if I throw everything at them in a random fashion, they'll figure out a good amount of it."

As an example of its "random walk" approach, Chapter 4 first provides a sound introduction into the use of colors and making references to images. The closing section of the chapter, however, branches off into a discussion of the element which introduces all kinds of ideas and side-references that will be premature for many.

As usual with a Wrox publication (I am familiar with three), there is the usual complement of careless typographical errors. Many are immaterial, but there are even errors in the code that accompanies the text (to be downloaded from the publisher's website -- see e.g. the revised "registration form" at the end of Chapter 6.

I don't recommend this "Beginning" book for anyone other than someone who already has a reasonable grounding in the subjects it covers. Go elsewhere.
Total Votes: 9, Helpful Votes: 7, Date: 2007-06-03
 
Great intro for novice programmerRating:
I have only dabbled in programming before, mainly in C#. I am well-pleased with this book.

PRO: 1. This book was a solid introduction to HTML and XHTML. What impressed me most is that the author gives you the fundamentals of the HTML language, and also teaches you modern Web methods using CSS.
2. Follows a logical order, putting you into practice from the first chapter.
3. Good primer for [...]and general web development for the new programmer. In fact, if you are interested in XML, I would study this book first, and then move on to XML. By the end of the book, you will have mastered many concepts of XML, and will have learned HTML in the process.

CON: It could have used a better scheme of highlighting points, bulleting, etc. But the dedicated reader will overcome this small failure.
Total Votes: 0, Helpful Votes: 0, Date: 2007-04-20
 
ProgrammerRating:
I as a programmer think that this book is a productive book, the guy go over all the materials you need to learn step by step and smoothly.
Total Votes: 0, Helpful Votes: 0, Date: 2008-10-19
 
Excellent - InformativeRating:
It's an excellent and informative book! It helped me very much to teach the item to a very "difficult audience"!
Total Votes: 0, Helpful Votes: 0, Date: 2008-10-14
 
Great teaching bookRating:
Great introduction to front-end web programming using XHTML and CSS. It even gets into the nitty-gritty of SEO strategies, rating your site for child access, testing methods, and accessibility for the visually impaired. Also provides a good, although brief intro to JavaScript, database driven websites, and programming for mobile devices.

Yes there is a lot of repetition and a bit of wandering back and forth across subjects, and yes it can be annoying. But most books in this genre are guilty of that. This one is no better nor worse than the others. Nice reference and appendix. Recommended.
Total Votes: 1, Helpful Votes: 1, Date: 2007-12-11
 
Hard to followRating:
I have gone from being frustrated with this title to disliking it intensely. I would suggest alternate materials such as the O'Reilly publication, "HTML & XHTML: The Definitive Guide."

First, "BWP w/HTML, XHTML, and CSS" is dated. Its publication date is 2004. This text often complains that features "are not supported by browsers" that have since been updated. There are more current materials published within the last year. (And on the subject of browsers, I have not found a single mention of Mozilla, Safari, or Opera in this book).

Second, the author's presentation is often difficult to follow. Concedely it is a difficult subject to organize when there are "live" tags, "deprecated" tags, the ongoing effort to separate stylistic elements into CSS, and different browswers' idiosyncracies with which to deal. Duckett, however, is next to hopeless in separating these subjects.

Most critical is the fact that this book is a very unhappy blend between an introductory tutorial and a reference "bible." Duckett will introduce a basic concept -- say, "tables" and will then load up on all of the attributes that the element might take. Learning the key ideas gets lost in the process. The book often leads off into asides and references to more advanced topics that will easily lose the initiate. It is no coincidence that several of the reviews here use the word "intermediate" in connection with this text.

The author does not seem to understand the principle that individuals learn by working from the "known" step-by-step to the "unknown." Instead, he seems to rely upon the idea that "if I throw everything at them in a random fashion, they'll figure out a good amount of it."

As an example of its "random walk" approach, Chapter 4 first provides a sound introduction into the use of colors and making references to images. The closing section of the chapter, however, branches off into a discussion of the element which introduces all kinds of ideas and side-references that will be premature for many.

As usual with a Wrox publication (I am familiar with three), there is the usual complement of careless typographical errors. Many are immaterial, but there are even errors in the code that accompanies the text (to be downloaded from the publisher's website -- see e.g. the revised "registration form" at the end of Chapter 6.

I don't recommend this "Beginning" book for anyone other than someone who already has a reasonable grounding in the subjects it covers. Go elsewhere.
Total Votes: 9, Helpful Votes: 7, Date: 2007-06-03
 
Great intro for novice programmerRating:
I have only dabbled in programming before, mainly in C#. I am well-pleased with this book.

PRO: 1. This book was a solid introduction to HTML and XHTML. What impressed me most is that the author gives you the fundamentals of the HTML language, and also teaches you modern Web methods using CSS.
2. Follows a logical order, putting you into practice from the first chapter.
3. Good primer for [...]and general web development for the new programmer. In fact, if you are interested in XML, I would study this book first, and then move on to XML. By the end of the book, you will have mastered many concepts of XML, and will have learned HTML in the process.

CON: It could have used a better scheme of highlighting points, bulleting, etc. But the dedicated reader will overcome this small failure.
Total Votes: 0, Helpful Votes: 0, Date: 2007-04-20
 
ProgrammerRating:
I as a programmer think that this book is a productive book, the guy go over all the materials you need to learn step by step and smoothly.
Total Votes: 0, Helpful Votes: 0, Date: 2008-10-19
 
Excellent - InformativeRating:
It's an excellent and informative book! It helped me very much to teach the item to a very "difficult audience"!
Total Votes: 0, Helpful Votes: 0, Date: 2008-10-14
 
Great teaching bookRating:
Great introduction to front-end web programming using XHTML and CSS. It even gets into the nitty-gritty of SEO strategies, rating your site for child access, testing methods, and accessibility for the visually impaired. Also provides a good, although brief intro to JavaScript, database driven websites, and programming for mobile devices.

Yes there is a lot of repetition and a bit of wandering back and forth across subjects, and yes it can be annoying. But most books in this genre are guilty of that. This one is no better nor worse than the others. Nice reference and appendix. Recommended.
Total Votes: 1, Helpful Votes: 1, Date: 2007-12-11
 
Hard to followRating:
I have gone from being frustrated with this title to disliking it intensely. I would suggest alternate materials such as the O'Reilly publication, "HTML & XHTML: The Definitive Guide."

First, "BWP w/HTML, XHTML, and CSS" is dated. Its publication date is 2004. This text often complains that features "are not supported by browsers" that have since been updated. There are more current materials published within the last year. (And on the subject of browsers, I have not found a single mention of Mozilla, Safari, or Opera in this book).

Second, the author's presentation is often difficult to follow. Concedely it is a difficult subject to organize when there are "live" tags, "deprecated" tags, the ongoing effort to separate stylistic elements into CSS, and different browswers' idiosyncracies with which to deal. Duckett, however, is next to hopeless in separating these subjects.

Most critical is the fact that this book is a very unhappy blend between an introductory tutorial and a reference "bible." Duckett will introduce a basic concept -- say, "tables" and will then load up on all of the attributes that the element might take. Learning the key ideas gets lost in the process. The book often leads off into asides and references to more advanced topics that will easily lose the initiate. It is no coincidence that several of the reviews here use the word "intermediate" in connection with this text.

The author does not seem to understand the principle that individuals learn by working from the "known" step-by-step to the "unknown." Instead, he seems to rely upon the idea that "if I throw everything at them in a random fashion, they'll figure out a good amount of it."

As an example of its "random walk" approach, Chapter 4 first provides a sound introduction into the use of colors and making references to images. The closing section of the chapter, however, branches off into a discussion of the element which introduces all kinds of ideas and side-references that will be premature for many.

As usual with a Wrox publication (I am familiar with three), there is the usual complement of careless typographical errors. Many are immaterial, but there are even errors in the code that accompanies the text (to be downloaded from the publisher's website -- see e.g. the revised "registration form" at the end of Chapter 6.

I don't recommend this "Beginning" book for anyone other than someone who already has a reasonable grounding in the subjects it covers. Go elsewhere.
Total Votes: 9, Helpful Votes: 7, Date: 2007-06-03
 
Great intro for novice programmerRating:
I have only dabbled in programming before, mainly in C#. I am well-pleased with this book.

PRO: 1. This book was a solid introduction to HTML and XHTML. What impressed me most is that the author gives you the fundamentals of the HTML language, and also teaches you modern Web methods using CSS.
2. Follows a logical order, putting you into practice from the first chapter.
3. Good primer for [...]and general web development for the new programmer. In fact, if you are interested in XML, I would study this book first, and then move on to XML. By the end of the book, you will have mastered many concepts of XML, and will have learned HTML in the process.

CON: It could have used a better scheme of highlighting points, bulleting, etc. But the dedicated reader will overcome this small failure.
Total Votes: 0, Helpful Votes: 0, Date: 2007-04-20
 
 
     
Dayana Host
  Home
  Process Guide
  Affiliate Program
  Testimonials
  Sample Clients
  CPanel Demo
  AUP / ASP / TOS
   
Network and tools
  Network Maps
  Network Status
 

NS Lookup

  Whois Search
   
Product and Services
  Domain Registration
  Say5 Web Hosting
  Personal Web Hosting
  Business Web Hosting
  Reseller Web Hosting
  Dedicated Servers
  Traffic Blazer
  Web Design Themes
  Members Area
   
Customer Support
  Support Center
  Forums
  CPanel Tutorials
  FAQ
  Getting Started Guide
  Useful Links
  Downloads
  Books and Software
   
Contact us
  Contact
  Customer Service
   
   

Say5 Hosting Control Panel
© Copyrights 1998-2008 Dayana Networks. All rights reserved. Privacy Policy - AUP/ASP/TOS

Home | Process Guide | Affiliate Program | Network Maps | Testimonials | Uptime Monitor | Contact | Table of Contents | phpOnline
Domain Registration | Personal Web Hosting Plans | Business Web Hosting Plans | Reseller Web Hosting Plans | Sample Clients
Customer Service | Support Center | Forums | Control Panel Demo | Useful Resources and links | Books and Software
CPanel and WHM Tutorials | Web Site Design Templates | Upgrade, Renew and Maintenance | Free Counter | NS Lookup | Whois
Acceptable Use Policy, Anti Spam Policy, Terms of Services | Privacy Policy