Locale Page...  Global  |  Germany  |  UK  |  USA
Your privat CyberGadget - The finest Resources for Web-Designer, Web-Master and Web-Developer!
Quick Search
Advertisement
Partner & Friends
Developersdex
Tutorial Guide
Send News    Add URL / Entry    Tag it:digg it!Stumble It!YahooMyWeb!del.icio.us!Simpify!reddit!Netvouz!Ma.gnolia!FurlIt!Blogmarks!BlinkList!
Books: HTML/XHTML & CSS

AVG Rating: 5.00
Added 24 Jan 05   Updated 29 Aug 06
HTML, XHTML, and CSS Bible  
Author Chuck White
Publisher John Wiley & Sons, Inc.
Publication Date 2004-10

Amazon Reviews
amazon.com:
  • An expanded, updated, and retitled edition of HTML Bible, examining HTML, XHTML-a set of extensions to HTML to make it more like XML-and cascading style sheets (CSS), which provide a simple way to add consistent formatting to HTML Web documents
  • Focusing on reader feedback and changing industry trends, this new edition is a major overhaul that addresses the extensive changes in Web development
  • Shows readers the best, most efficient way to use HTML and examines which peripheral technologies are worth learning for the long run
  • Features "before and after" pictures that show the results of improved Web page coding
  • Offers continued coverage of key topics, including site administration, dynamic data-driven pages, and many others, in addition to new sections on hot new topics such as blogs and content management
amazon.com:
  • An expanded, updated, and retitled edition of HTML Bible, examining HTML, XHTML-a set of extensions to HTML to make it more like XML-and cascading style sheets (CSS), which provide a simple way to add consistent formatting to HTML Web documents
  • Focusing on reader feedback and changing industry trends, this new edition is a major overhaul that addresses the extensive changes in Web development
  • Shows readers the best, most efficient way to use HTML and examines which peripheral technologies are worth learning for the long run
  • Features "before and after" pictures that show the results of improved Web page coding
  • Offers continued coverage of key topics, including site administration, dynamic data-driven pages, and many others, in addition to new sections on hot new topics such as blogs and content management
Similar Products
JavaScript Bible, Fifth Edition
New from 14.00 $
Used from 9.75 $
PHP5 and MySQL Bible
New from 11.03 $
Used from 12.17 $
[ Add a Comment ]Amazon Customer Comments
DO NOT BUY!Rating: 1
22 Jul 2006 @ amazon.com
This book is not worth your money. It is poorly written, does not explain code, and is very incomplete. Bible in its title is very misleading...
DisappointedRating: 2
10 Aug 2005 @ amazon.com
The title is misguiding. It’s everything but an HTML, XHTML & CSS Bible. Title should read "Become a webmaster in a month". I expected to have: - The full HTML Specification with an example for each definition - Same for XHTML (DTD, rules to respect, validation, etc...) - Same for CSS and *PLEASE*, at least the basics of tableless CSS layout If the book were to expose the aforementioned information, it would exceed the 800 pages, and the author wouldn’t have had to put some more information that is useful, I agree, but it’s off-topic, sorry. The author should stress a lot more on standards. Standards are important, and one can’t call a book a "Bible" if it only covers 75% of HTML, 50% of XHTML and hardly covers basics of CSS. It lacks information on the PNG file format (open source). Mention of the Opera Browser is almost non-existent, even if it’s the most standard-compliant browser. Using tables to create a layout is old-fashioned and many good books (by Dan Cederholm, Jeffrey Zeldman or Eric Meyer) proove that one should *NOT* use tables for layout so that structure and content are clearly seperated from presentation. Without this discipline, the web won’t be able to evolve toward XML. The book talks about image retouching, which again is off-topic, pretty much like SMIL, multimedia, FTP, maintainance, databases, weblogs, PHP & MySQL. I noticed several errors, and then I stopped writing them down. These are some of them: - p.93 PNG, is stored without being compressed doesn’t loose color or image quality, and does support transparency. At least this can be achieved in Photoshop CS. - p.108 I find it sad that the author doesn’t show how image maps are done with circles and polygons - chap.9 "Special characters" should show a sample for every single entity - p.184 The author puts the e-mail address into the code. How is it possible?! With all the spam problems people keep complaining, how come the author doesn’t display the e-mail address thanks to a javascript to hide it from spambots? - p.188 in Part III instead of in Part II - p.210 He forgot that the label tag can nest the radio button and the text without ID. - p.284 div.div1 table should read div.div1>table - All examples are shown in IE or Netscape 4. Why not show modern browsers (Opera 7.8, Mozilla 1.8, Firefox 1.0) - p.379 user agent is not Opera but Firebird This is not a bad book, it has a lot of useful information, but what drove me nuts is that I wanted a "Bible" for these 3 languages. I had to buy other books. I hope now people who buy this book know it’s a general-purpose book on web design.
Add a Comment!  You must login first, to write an comment/review!
Topic / Title / Summary ...


Comment / Review


 

© 2001 - 2008 CYGAD.NET | All rights reserved. | Terms of Service | About | Time data: GMT +1! | Portal Release X2.6.1 Beta | RunTime: 1.1937
Optimized for Internet Explorer Internet Explorer 6.0+, Firefox Firefox 1.5+!