XHTML
The Extensible HyperText Markup Language, or XHTML, is a markup language that has the same expressive possibilities as HTML, but a stricter syntax. Whereas HTML is an application of SGML, a very flexible markup language, XHTML is an application of XML, a more restrictive subset of SGML. Because they need to be well-formed (syntactically correct), XHTML documents allow for automated processing to be performed using a standard XML library—unlike HTML, which requires a relatively complex, lenient, and generally custom parser (though an SGML parser library could possibly be used). XHTML can be thought of as the intersection of HTML and XML in many respects, since it is a reformulation of HTML in XML. XHTML 1.0 became a World Wide Web Consortium (W3C)
Categories in section: Articles Reviews
Saturday, 17 November 2007 |
Written by
jkent20
|
User rating: Rate it first |
Hits: 914
This is a short video that explains four basic rules for coding XHTML. Most validation errors can be avoided if these rules are followed.
Saturday, 17 November 2007 |
Written by
cscie1
|
User rating: Rate it first |
Hits: 736
Tuesday, 10 July 2007 |
Written by
nutrun
|
User rating: Rate it first |
Hits: 1027
DDA compliance has been a client request for both of the last two projects I’ve been working on. With good reason, too, I believe.
Tuesday, 10 July 2007 |
Written by
nutrun
|
User rating: Rate it first |
Hits: 947
{mos_sb_discuss:22}
XhtmlValidator is a lightweight nano-library for validating XHTML Documents in Java. Current version is 0.2
Saturday, 16 June 2007 |
Written by
Adi Bach
|
User rating: Rate it first |
Hits: 974
{mos_sb_discuss:22}
If you're a web developer, you've probably heard about XHTML, the markup language developed in 1999 to implement HTML as an XML format. Most people who use and promote XHTML do so because they think it's the newest and hottest thing, and they may have heard of some (usually false) benefits here and there.
Tuesday, 27 February 2007 |
Written by
Bogdan V
|
User rating: Rate it first |
Hits: 1213
{mos_sb_discuss:22} Scripts are little programs that add interactivity to your page. You can write simple scripts to add an alert box or a bit of text to your page, or more complicated scripts that load particular pages according to your visitor's browser or change a frame's background color depending on where they point the mouse.
User rating: Rate it first |
Hits: 947
{mos_sb_discuss:22} An unauthorized companion to the Online Style Guide of the Branch Libraries of The New York Public Library XHTML is the standard markup language for web documents and the successor to HTML 4. A mixture of classic (HTML) and cutting–edge (XML), this hybrid language looks and works much like HTML but is based on XML, the web’s “super” markup language, and brings web pages many of XML’s benefits, as enumerated by the Online Style Guide of the Branch Libraries of The New York Public Library.
Wednesday, 31 January 2007 |
Written by
Bogdan V
|
User rating: Rate it first |
Hits: 1168
{mos_sb_discuss:22} The lang attribute is used for setting the language of a whole document or a specific part of the document. Search engines use it when index the page. So when searching for French pages, only those with the fr in the lang attribute will be searched.
Friday, 01 September 2006 |
Written by
Bogdan V
|
User rating: Rate it first |
Hits: 1877
XHTML is the successor to HTML. As such, many consider XHTML to be the “current version” of HTML, but it is a separate, parallel recommendation; the W3C continues to recommend the use of XHTML 1.1, XHTML 1.0, and HTML 4.01 for web publishing. The need for a more strict version of HTML was felt primarily because World Wide Web content now needs to be delivered to many devices (like mobile devices) apart from traditional computers, where extra resources cannot be devoted to support the additional complexity of HTML syntax.
Powered by jReviews
|
|
|
Who's Online |
|
We have 3 guests online |
|