Javascript for the World Wide Web: Visual Quickstart Guide, Fifth Edition
by Tom Negrino; Dori Smith
Creating a Web Page with HTML: Visual QuickProject Guide
by Elizabeth Castro
Dreamweaver CS4 for Windows and Macintosh: Visual QuickStart Guide
by Tom Negrino; Dori Smith
JavaScript and Ajax for the Web: Visual QuickStart Guide, Seventh Edition
by Tom Negrino; Dori Smith
CSS: The Missing Manual, 2nd Edition
by David Sawyer McFarland
Head First HTML with CSS & XHTML
by Elisabeth Robson; Eric Freeman
CSS: The Definitive Guide, 3rd Edition
by Eric A. Meyer
CSS Pocket Reference, 3rd Edition
by Eric A. Meyer
Need to learn HTML fast? This best-selling reference's visual
format and step-by-step, task-based instructions will have you up
and running with HTML in no time. In this completely updated
edition of our best-selling guide to HTML, Web expert and
best-selling author Elizabeth Castro uses crystal-clear
instructions and friendly prose to introduce you to all of today's
HTML and XHTML essentials. You’ll learn how to design,
structure, and format your Web site. You'll create and use images,
links, styles, lists, tables, frames, and forms, and you'll add
sound and movies to your site. Finally, you will test and debug
your site, and publish it to the Web. Along the way, you'll find
extensive coverage of CSS techniques, current browsers (Opera,
Safari, Firefox), creating pages for the mobile Web, and
more.
Visual QuickStart Guide--the quick and easy way to learn!
Easy visual approach uses pictures to guide you through HTML and show you what to do.
Concise steps and explanations get you up and running in no time.
Page for page, the best content and value around.
Companion Web site at www.cookwood.com/html offers examples, a lively question-and-answer area, updates, and more.
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Based on 200 Ratings
Read the 1-3 ratings before buying - 2009-09-30
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I bought this book because of all of the high ratings. I find the format very hard to follow and wish I had paid more attention to the low rating reviews. I want to buy another book but don't know what to buy now since this one had such high ratings.
Beginner Classic - 2009-09-26
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This book is a great source book for beginners. Information is well written and easy to understand. This is a "must have" reference book.
IDWIMIE - 2009-11-19
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It Doesn't Work In Microsoft Internet Explorer (IDWIMIE)
A quick note to all beginning website developers/designers is to keep in mind that acronym. My experience with website development, and I know I'm not alone, is that you tend to tweak your code so that it actually works, or even looks decent, in Internet Explorer. All other browsers typically do not have problems with standards-compliant code. Internet Explorer is the exception. Reading through this book, you will see that the author points these problems out and usually offers a tweak to get the code working in Internet Explorer. If you are serious about web design, test your code in multiple browsers (i.e. Firefox, Safari, Opera, and Internet Explorer). A good web developer can create a website that looks consistent across the major browsers.
I recently read this book. I consider myself fairly versed in (X)HTML and CSS, so I didn't read it as a beginner. However, I can certainly see that this book might be a bit confusing to follow for beginners. Don't get me wrong. It's a good book, but you will most certainly want a second book on hand to reference or get a different view on the subject. (I recommend the HTML & XHTML Pocket Reference, 3rd Ed. or later, by Jennifer Niederst Robbins.)
My first quarrel with this book is that it tends to get repetitive. I noticed this by the end of the third chapter. It really got to me by the time I got to the seventeenth chapter. Perhaps this is because I didn't read this book as a beginner, and maybe it would cater to the absolute beginner.
My second quarrel with this book is the formatting. This book is set up as a step-by-step approach with the parts you actually type being bolded. I personally do not like this format. This works most of the time, but the author uses standard English punctuation in the list of steps and at times it interferes with the code being typed in the steps. For instance, each step ends with a period, and sometimes the period is bolded with the code to type and it would appear as if the reader is supposed to type the period as well. Also, there are parts of the code the author is trying to get the reader to type and it's not bolded. In my opinion, the code should be presented in its entirety and *then* explained one step at a time. That way the reader can see the code in its entirety and have it in mind as it's being explained. The author does give examples of code, but they are offered in very small snippets in the margins. Sometimes the code is in the middle of a bunch of other code, with the part pertaining to the example being highlighted in blue. Like I said before, this works most of the time, but it may lead to some confusion for beginners.
One thing I did enjoy about the book (6th edition) was that it is in full color. This is tremendously helpful for web design. It's hard to explain color in a black-and-white printed book. Props to the publisher for offering full color.
Another thing I like about this book is the "tips" portion at the end of each section. These tips provide a lot of good information about the code which was just explained. Reading these tips, you'll quickly begin to see why I put that acronym at the top of this review. The tips will offer advice for using the code, tweaks for standards compliance, suggestions for making your code accessible to disabled users, and tweaks for making your code work with Internet Explorer. For me, the tips offered a lot of good information.
This book also does a good job of explaining the use of different style sheets for different media. There is a chapter which covers style sheets for handheld devices, which is important with mobile phones increasingly utilizing the Internet. There is also a chapter that covers style sheets for printing on paper, which is very useful if your site provides print-worthy information. Both of those chapters provide for a good learning experience.
Overall, this book is a good book. I would recommend it for anyone wanting to learn website development. However, be prepared to have a second book on hand to offer an alternate view for clarity.
nice way to get started - 2009-11-09
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i picked up this book to brush up on my css and some html. the book is really mostly about css with some reference to html. its really great because it shows you the css tags and syntax side by side with the results in the browser. but dont look at as inspiration for design tho. its really just a quick reference book to the basic tools of css.
Great book, decent shipping, great condition. - 2009-10-19
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The shipping was lack luster. Like 7 days or so, order another book at same time and got that one in two days. Booyakasha.
The CONDITION HOWEVER! HOLY HELL! It was slammin! Perfect. Nice! Clean! AWESOME.
Great book btw. Enjoy.
Top Level Categories:
Internet/Online
Markup Languages
Sub-Categories:
Internet/Online > CSS
Markup Languages > HTML
Markup Languages > XHTML
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