Head First HTML with CSS & XHTML
by Elisabeth Robson; Eric Freeman
Learning Web Design, Third Edition
by Jennifer Niederst Robbins
Visual Design for the Modern Web
by Penny McIntire
Head First iPhone Development
by Dan Pilone; Tracey Pilone
The Twitter Book
by Tim O'Reilly; Sarah Milstein
Designing Interfaces
by Jenifer Tidwell
Web Design in a Nutshell contains the nitty-gritty on everything you need to know to design Web pages. It's the good stuff, without the fluff, written and organized so that answers can be found quickly. Written by veteran Web designer Jennifer Niederst, this book provides quick access to the wide range of front-end technologies and techniques from which Web designers and authors must draw.
It is an excellent reference for HTML 4.0 tags (including tables, frames, and Cascading Style Sheets) with special attention given to browser support and platform idiosyncrasies. The HTML section is more than a reference work, though. It details strange behavior in tables, for instance, and gives ideas and workarounds for using tables and frames on your site. Web Design in a Nutshell also covers multimedia and interactivity, audio and video, and emerging technologies like Dynamic HTML, XML, embedded fonts, and internationalization.
The book includes:
Discussions of the Web environment, monitors, and browsers
A complete reference to HTML and Server Side Includes, including browser support for every tag and attribute
Chapters on creating GIF, JPEG and PNG graphics, including designing with the Web Palette
Information on multimedia and interactivity, including audio, video, Flash, Shockwave, and JavaScript
Detailed tutorial and reference on Cascading Style Sheets, including an appendix of browser compatibility information
Appendices detailing HTML tags, attributes, deprecated tags, proprietary tags, and CSS compatibility
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Based on 130 Ratings
one of the best books around - 2009-05-29
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the author knows the subject well, and she writes well. i found myself reading the book for hours, and learning new things in a nice and organized way. if just all books are like that...
it is good for beginner and intermediate level. if you are at an advanced level or guru level, you may find that you know about it already. but since this book talks about so many aspect of web technologies, unless you advanced in most areas, you probably still find it useful or good to have as a reference.
Useful and a pleasure to read. - 2009-02-19
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I've read this book like 6 times now. The writing style is plain and straightforward, and that is a pleasure to read. I have had never left this book be far from my computer since I am always reading it through. I has a lot, and I mean a lot of links for you to read beyond the book on a lot of topics that should not be fully covered on this particular book.
The design is easy to follow. Brilliantly written and organized. The reading train wont get you lost, and by that I mean you can easily read from chapter 1 to the end without skipping or reading this or that chapter before proceeding.
It has all the basics; all the goods. From servers 101, character encoding, design pros and cons (not bluntly put that way), and most importantly (up to this edition, that is) browser cross-compatibility. The main target in this book is XHTML/CSS, however. The appendixes have a list of all XHTML elements known to date. CSS was not left aside. Which by it self, its a huge reason to consider this book.
If you have been using html/css/js before, you already know it's a bit of a torment and an exhausting task to make a fully all-browsers compatible site. This will do indeed tell you why your site will look different on a Gecko or a Trident layout engine. I wasn't even aware that a layout engine was a very separate part of the browser at all. Info like that makes this book a must-have, not to mention it will make you a well rounded web developer.
CSS, Flash, DOM Scripting, ECMA-262, web graphics, HTTP headers and such are subjects you at least should be a bit familiar with. Weather you decide to go further in any technology in specific, this will give you a friendly jump start. I was always reluctant to learn/try DOM scripting. Not anymore.
One big thing if you are planning to get this book as of 2009, is that this 3rd edition was first published on '06. It's time for an update. Specially with CSS 3.0 and words on 'web 3.0' around the corner.
If you get this book, be sure to get the HTML & XHTML Pocket Reference (also by Jennifer Niederst). Both will become invaluable tools you should keep right next to your work place.
Web Design in a Nutshell - 2009-10-05
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This is a great desk reference book! While it is a challenging book to read, I know it will come in super handy when I need to find the answer to a specific technical question!
Late Shipping - 2009-10-04
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I had ordered this book within my state (Michigan) so that I might get it faster. It was not mailed until a week after I had placed my order. Very disappointed as I needed this book for a college class.
Good Textbook - 2009-02-28
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Reached me in time (Amazon Prime) in excellent condition. This book is perfect for all those who are beginners in Web Designing. Five stars. No Fault!
Top Level Categories:
Internet/Online
Sub-Categories:
Internet/Online > Web Authoring
Internet/Online > Web Development
Internet/Online > Usability
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