A DOCTYPE (document type declaration) is the few lines of code placed before your opening <html> tag. Many novice coders omit this but even if you are in habit of including it, you need to ensure that you’re using the correct document type. Why use a document type? You’re code might not validate without the […]
Posts Tagged ‘W3C’
Web Design: What DOCTYPE do I use?
January 9, 2010
Posted in Web Design |
Tags: browser, compliance, CSS, DOCTYPE, frameset DOCTYPE, HTML, HTML 4.01, loose DOCTYPE, quirks mode, render, strict DOCTYPE, transitional DOCTYPE, validate, validator, W3C, Web Design, XHTML
Leave a Comment »
XHTML: What is XHTML?
January 9, 2010[PLEASE REVIEW THE XHTML CRITICISM SECTION AT THE END OF THIS POST] XHTML (EXtensible HyperText Markup Language) is a stricter and cleaner version of HTML and has been a W3C Recommendation since January, 2000. W3c is an organization founded and headed by Sir Tim Berners Lee, the inventor of the World Wide Web. W3C alledges […]
Posted in XHTML |
Tags: browser, coding, difference, display data, DOCTYPE, element, EXtensible HyperText Markup Language, Extensible Markup Language, HTML, HTML 4.01, HyperText Markup Language, language, lowercase, nested, notepad, plain text, predefined tags, programming, rooted element, Sir Tim Berners Lee, standards, store data, strict DOCTYPE, tags, transitional DOCTYPE, transport data, W3C, Web Design, XHTML, XHTML DOCTYPE, XML
Leave a Comment »