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Titre : | HTML5 & CSS3 Visual QuickStart Guide |
Auteurs : | Elizabeth Castro |
Type de document : | document électronique |
Editeur : | [S.l.] : Peachpit Press, 2011 |
ISBN/ISSN/EAN : | 978-0-321-71961-4 |
Résumé : |
Want to learn how to build Web sites fast? This best-selling guideÔÇÖs visual format and step-by-step, task-based instructions will have you up and running with HTML5 and CSS3 in no time. This Seventh Edition is a major revision, with approximately 125 pages added and substantial updates to (or complete rewrites of) nearly every page from the preceding edition. Authors Elizabeth Castro and Bruce Hyslop use clear instructions, friendly prose, and real-world code samples to teach you HTML and CSS from the ground up. Over the course of 21 chapters you will learn how to: * Write semantic HTML, both with elements that have been around for years and ones that are new in HTML5. * Prepare images for the Web and add them to your pages. * Use CSS to style text, add background colors and images, and implement a multicolumn layout. * Build a single site for all usersÔÇöwhether they are using a mobile phone, tablet, laptop, desktop computer, or other Web-enabled deviceÔÇöbased on many of the components of responsive Web design, including CSS3 media queries. * Leverage new selectors in CSS3, add Web fonts to your pages with @font-face, and use CSS3 effects such as opacity, background alpha transparency, gradients, rounded corners, drop shadows, shadows inside elements, text shadows, and multiple background images. * Improve your siteÔÇÖs accessibility with ARIA landmark roles and other good coding practices. * Build forms to solicit input from your visitors. * Include media in your pages with the HTML5 audio and video elements. * Test and debug your Web pages. * Secure a domain name and publish your site. And much more! All book code samples and more are available on the companion web site. ### Review If your budget only allows for one HTML5 and CSS3 book, this book is a terrific way to invest your money. IÔÇÖve reviewed HTML5 for Web Designers and Introducing HTML5 on this blog. I think this book is better than either of those books. ThatÔÇÖs not saying the two books mentioned are not excellent books, because they are. IÔÇÖve read both of those books carefully and I still learned new and helpful things from HTML5 and CSS3. Plus, the VQS style is inherently easy to use with each topic detailed in small step-by-step bits. ItÔÇÖs so easy to find the one thing you need to know at any given moment with a VQS book. Another advantage this book over the others I mentioned is that it can get a beginner going but it also offers a lot of good information for the experienced HTML and CSS wonk. If youÔÇÖre teaching either of these topics, this book is classroom gold. Definitely recommended. - Virginia DeBolt, webteacher.ws ### About the Author Bruce Hyslop began developing for the Web in 1997 and focuses on interface technical architecture, development, usability, accessibility, and advocating best practices. He is the author of The HTML Pocket Guide (Peachpit Press, 2010), a thorough discussion and reference of all HTML elements (HTML5 and prior). Bruce also teaches a CSS course at UCLA Extension and occasionally speaks on matters regarding front-end development. Over the years, he has overseen front-end teams or been a developer for more than 150 projects, including those for ABC, BBC, Disney, Logitech, Microsoft, NBC Universal, Nokia, Target, Toyota, and Yahoo!, among others. Bruce is an independent developer and consultant to agencies, start-ups, and others, previously having spent a decade in the digital agency world. Formerly, he was the senior director of the Interface Engineering Group (IEG) at Schematic, where he oversaw company-wide efforts to define and implement best practices regarding HTML, CSS, JavaScript, and accessibility wherever they may be applied: the browser, desktop, mobile devices, and emerging platforms. Bruce was an early adopter of Web standards. At a previous agency in the early 2000s, he lead companies such as Baskin-Robbins and Pacific Gas & Electric into the fray of modern client-side practices while managing development between offices in Los Angeles, China, and New York. |