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Learn HTML 5 Tutorials


4.4 ( 7264 ratings )
Istruzione Libri
Sviluppatore Saqib Masood
2.99 USD

Learn HTML 5 Tutorials Guide 2024. HTML is the standard markup language for Web pages. With HTML you can create your own Website. HTML is easy to learn. Create a Website − You can create a website or customize an existing web template if you know HTML well.

Covers the absolute basics of HTML, to get you started — we define elements, attributes, and other important terms, and show where they fit in the language. We also show how a typical HTML page is structured and how an HTML element is structured, and explain other important basic language features. Along the way, well play with some HTML to get you interested.

What is HTML?
Okay, so this is the only bit of mandatory theory. In order to begin to write HTML, it helps if you know what you are writing.
HTML is the language in which most websites are written. HTML is used to create pages and make them functional.
The code used to make them visually appealing is known as CSS and we shall focus on this in a later tutorial. For now, we will focus on teaching you how to build rather than design.

The History of HTML
HTML was first created by Tim Berners-Lee, Robert Cailliau, and others starting in 1989. It stands for Hyper Text Markup Language.
Hypertext means that the document contains links that allow the reader to jump to other places in the document or to another document altogether. The latest version is known as HTML5. A Markup Language is a way that computers speak to each other to control how text is processed and presented. To do this HTML uses two things: tags and attributes.

What are Tags and Attributes?
Tags and attributes are the basis of HTML.

What is HTML?
The History of HTML
What are Tags and Attributes?
HTML Editors
Creating Your First HTML Webpage
Adding Content
How To Close an HTML Document
Troubleshooting
Our Other HTML Tutorials
Intermediate & Advanced Tutorials
HTML Reference Guides
HTML Attributes Reference Guide
HTML Cheat Sheet
The HTML.com Blog

They work together but perform different functions – it is worth investing 2 minutes in differentiating the two.