|
New Features in the Second Edition
- Every chapter updated
- New CSS Page Layout chapter
- Chapters contain periodic checkpoints for self-assessment
- Additional case studies
- Flash crossword puzzles for each chapter on companion website
- New Student Materials:
Dreamweaver MX 2004 tutorials, New FrontPage 2003 Tutorials, Revised FTP Tutorial, new section on File Management
Student Materials
The student materials for this edition were distributed on a textbook companion CD.
The student materials contain a wealth of resources for both students
and instructors. The files needed to complete the Hands-On Practices
and Case Studies are included. In addition, a virtual
Web Developer's Handbook is included with the following sections:
- The XHTML Reference
- The Special Characters
- Comparison of HTML and XHTML
- The CSS Property Reference
- CSS Browser Compatibility Web Resources
- File Management
- Using FTP Tutorial
- Using Microsoft FrontPage 2003 Tutorial
- Using Macromedia Dreamweaver MX 2004 Tutorial
Companion Web Site
Web Developer Foundations: Using XHTML provides an
introduction to the skills and concepts that web developers need
to know. The resources at this site are intended to aid you
as you work through the text.
- Links to resources mentioned in the text
- Sample web pages
- Updates and corrections to the text
- Additional tutorials
- RSS newfeed listings on related
topics
- Flash Crossword puzzles and review games for each chapter
As you read chapters in the text, visit this site
to reinforce what you've read and to learn what new developments
may have taken place.
As new versions of the software used in the text
are released, updated tutorials will be added to the web site.
as you surf the Web realize that you are using the tool that has revolutionized
the face of human interaction and communication forever.
Found on the Web... "Imagine
discovering a continent so vast that it may have no end to its
dimensions. Imagine a new world with more resources than all
our future greed might exhaust, more opportunities than there
will ever be entrepreneurs to exploit, and a peculiar kind of
real estate that expands with development... Imagine a place
where trespassers leave no footprints, where goods can be stolen
an infinite number of times and yet remain in the possession
of their original owners, where businesses you never heard of
can own the history of your personal affairs, where only children
feel completely at home, where the physics is that of thought
rather than things, and where everyone is as virtual as the shadows
in Plato's cave."
-- John P. Barlow,
Coming Into the Country,
Electronic Frontier column, Communications of the ACM, 1991. |