Re: Books or Website References for Training?
by "Martin Clifford" <MLC1(at)nrc.gov>
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Date: |
Wed, 24 Apr 2002 08:30:50 -0400 |
To: |
<camilton(at)hauntedhalloweencastle.com>, <hwg-basics(at)hwg.org> |
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todo: View
Thread,
Original
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www.webmonkey.com always has great resources to start out with. If you're =
looking for languages/scripts that you might want to learn, then I suggest =
brushing up on your HTML 4 until you're comfortable with it, then moving =
on to CSS. CSS is wonderful for formatting... though I think it's a pain =
to get it to work cross-browser. PHP or ASP are very good server-side =
scripting languages to learn.
I wish I could have a year off work just to learn all that I want to... =
don't think it's going to happen, but it'd be nice :o)
Martin Clifford
http://martin.brendabastien.com (if you've written any tutorials, please =
submit them here!)
>>> "C. A. Milton" <camilton(at)hauntedhalloweencastle.com> 04/23/02 05:29PM =
>>>
Hi,
I've unfortunately let my HTML skills rust terribly. Once I worked at
getting my pages to validate HTML 4.01, I let things slide. Now I'm =
getting
ready to dig in again, but find the changes almost too much tackle. I see
questions posted and admit that I know nothing about most of the topics
being discussed now. Can anyone suggest a good web site (tutorial, etc.)
for learning where to go after 4.0? I never even learned Cascading Style
Sheets (CSS) . . . just validated with 4.01 transitional. I now have a
stack of older (expensive) HTML books and hesitate to purchase more =
without
knowing what I need to concentrate on first.
Thanks in advance . . . all suggestions will be very appreciated!
Caryl
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