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    HTML & XHTML: The Definitive Guide: The Definitive Guide

    HTML & XHTML: The Definitive Guide: The Definitive Guide

    by Chuck Musciano, Bill Kennedy


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    Chuck Musciano has spent his life on the East Coast, living in Maryland, Georgia, and New Jersey before acquiring a B.S. in computer science from Georgia Tech in 1982. He began his career as a compiler writer and crafter of tools and then went on to join Harris Corporation's Advanced Technology Group, where he helped develop large-scale multiprocessors. His prolonged interest in user-interface research and development finally gave way to a position as manager of Unix systems in Harris' Corporate Data Center. He left Harris in 1997 to become the chief information officer of the American Kennel Club in Raleigh, North Carolina. There he focuses on re-engineering their legacy information systems to exploit client/server technology over the Internet. Throughout his career, he has known and loved the Internet, having contributed a number of publicly available tools to the Net, and helped start the Internet Movie Database.

    Chuck has written on Unix- and web-related topics in the trade press for the past decade, most visibly as the "webmaster" columnist for Sunworld Online and the "Tag of the Week" columnist for Web Review. In his spare time he enjoys life in North Carolina with his wife Cindy, daughter Courtney, and son Cole. He can be reached at cmusciano@aol.com.

    Bill Kennedy is currently president and chief technical officer of ActivMedia, Inc., a new media marketing and marketing research company based in beautiful Peterborough, NH, but which conducts business with clients and associates from around the world, primarily over the Internet. When not hacking new HTML pages or writing about them, "Dr. Bill" (Ph.D. in biophysicsof all things) is out promoting a line of intelligent mobile robots as real-world platforms for artificial intelligence and fuzzy logic research and for education. Contact Dr. Bill directly at bkennedy@activmedia.com.

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    Table of Contents

    Preface

    1. HTML, XHTML, and the World Wide Web

     1.1. The Internet, Intranets,and Extranets

     1.2. Talking the Internet Talk

     1.3. HTML: What It Is

     1.4. XHTML: What It Is

     1.5. HTML and XHTML: What They Aren't

     1.6. Nonstandard Extensions

     1.7. Tools for the Web Designer

    2. Quick Start

     2.1. Writing Tools

     2.2. A First HTML Document

     2.3. Embedded Tags

     2.4. HTML Skeleton

     2.5. The Flesh on an HTML or XHTML Document

     2.6. Text

     2.7. Hyperlinks

     2.8. Images Are Special

     2.9. Lists, Searchable Documents, and Forms

     2.10. Tables

     2.11. Frames

     2.12. Style Sheets and JavaScript

     2.13. Forging Ahead

    3. Anatomy of an HTML Document

     3.1. Appearances Can Deceive

     3.2. Structure of an HTML Document

     3.3. Tags and Attributes

     3.4. Well-Formed Documents and XHTML

     3.5. Document Content

     3.6. HTML Document Elements

     3.7. The Document Header

     3.8. The Document Body

     3.9. Editorial Markup

     3.10. The Tag

    4. Text Basics

     4.1. Divisions and Paragraphs

     4.2. Headings

     4.3. Changing Text Appearance

     4.4. Content-Based Style Tags

     4.5. Physical Style Tags

     4.6. HTML's Expanded Font Handling

     4.7. Precise Spacing and Layout

     4.8.Block Quotes

     4.9. Addresses

     4.10. Special Character Encoding

    5. Rules, Images, and Multimedia

     5.1. Horizontal Rules

     5.2. Inserting Images in Your Documents

     5.3. Document Colors and Background Images

     5.4. Background Audio

     5.5. Animated Text

     5.6. Other Multimedia Content

    6. Links and Webs

     6.1. Hypertext Basics

     6.2. Referencing Documents: The URL

     6.3. Creating Hyperlinks

     6.4. Creating Effective Links

     6.5. Mouse-Sensitive Images

     6.6. Creating Searchable Documents

     6.7. Relationships

     6.8. Supporting Document Automation

    7. Formatted Lists

     7.1. Unordered Lists

     7.2. Ordered Lists

     7.3. The

  • Tag

     7.4. Nesting Lists

     7.5. Definition Lists

     7.6. Appropriate List Usage

     7.7. Directory Lists

     7.8. Menu Lists

    8. Cascading Style Sheets

     8.1. The Elements of Styles

     8.2. Style Syntax

     8.3. Style Classes

     8.4. Style Properties

     8.5. Tag-less Styles: The Tag

     8.6. Applying Styles to Documents

    9. Forms

     9.1. Form Fundamentals

     9.2. The

    Tag

     9.3. A Simple Form Example

     9.4. Using Email to Collect Form Data

     9.5. The Tag

     9.6. The