a beginner's guide to HTML, CSS, JavaScript, and web graphics
Niederst Robbins, Jennifer
2012
Explains how to build web pages, with text, links, images, tables, and forms using current standards including HTML5 AND CSS3, and exercises to practice various techniques.
Provides information on how to create Web pages using HyperText Markup Language, covering such topics as the three main components of Web sites, common tags, page formatting, and publishing pages on the Internet.
Step-by-step instructions and screen shots guide readers through web publishing with HTML and CSS, providing tools and techniques for designing, creating, and maintaining websites.
"Whether you're new to programming or a skilled programmer eager to cash in on today's game bonanza, this guide helps you build powerful games that also work on mobile devices"--Source other than Library of Congress.
A comprehensive guide to building Web pages by using HTML, XHTML, and CSS that covers formatting, style, integrating scripts, linking to online resources, finding and using images, working with forms, and other related topics.
A guide for four key web technologies, showing how they work together to create web services, validate web forms, and set up a members-only site, and covering PHP, MySQL, Javascript & HTML5.
The ninth edition of Sams Teach Yourself HTML and CSS in 24 Hours brings the entire book in line with the HTML5 and CSS3 specifications and capabilities and includes fresh material and examples that take full advantage of the book's full-color layout and design. Anyone who completes the lessons in this book can have his or her web pages be among those that appear on the Internet. In fact, within the first two lessons in this book, someone with no previous HTML experience at all can have a web page ready to go online. If you like learning by doing, this is the book for you. It organizes lessons in the basics of HTML5 and CSS3 into simple steps and then shows you exactly how to tackle each step. Many of these HTML code examples are accompanied by pictures of the output produced by the code. You see how it's done, you read a clear, concise explanation of how it works, and then you immediately do the same thing with your own page.