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Wednesday, January 27, 2010

TCP/IP Guide, 1st Edition



You can't build a monument without bricks, and you can't make bricks without straw--everyone who has seen the film The Ten Commandments knows that. Likewise, if you plan to establish your own monumental presence on the World Wide Web, you have to start with the straw--HTML.
The World Wide Web is built of Web pages, and those pages are themselves created with HyperText Markup Language, or HTML. Though many folks talk about HTML Programming with a capital P (particularly recruiters), HTML is really not a programming language at all. HTML is exactly what it claims to be: a markup language. You use HTML to mark up a text document, just as you would if you were an editor using a red pencil. The marks you use indicate which format (or style) should be used when displaying the marked text.

Table of Contents:

Part I - Publishing a Web Site

Part II - Creating Basic Web Pages with HTML 4.0

Part III - Creating Advanced Web Pages with Dynamic HTML

Part IV - Serving Multimedia Content

Part V - Pushing Content

Part VI - Scripting on the Web Server

Part VII - Managing your Web Site

Part VIII - Learning by Example

Part - Appendixes

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