Elizabeth Castro
Author of HTML for the World Wide Web, with XHTML and CSS
About the Author
Elizabeth Castro has written three bestselling editions of HTML for the World Wide Web: Visual QuickStart Guide. She also wrote the bestselling Perl and CGI for the World Wide Web: Visual QuickStart Guide, and the Macintosh and Windows versions of the Netscape Communicator 4: Visual QuickStart show more Guide. She was the technical editor for Peachpit's The Macintosh Bible, Fifth Edition, and she founded Pagina Uno, a publishing house based in Barcelona, Spain. show less
Works by Elizabeth Castro
EPUB Straight to the Point: Creating ebooks for the Apple iPad and other ereaders (One-Off) (2010) 53 copies, 1 review
HTML, XHTML & CSS - Der Meisterkurs: Lernen Sie HTML, XHTML & CSS auf dem schnellsten und einfachsten Weg! (2009) 3 copies
EPUB : 1 copy
Po prostu HTML 4 1 copy
Associated Works
Tagged
Common Knowledge
- Birthdate
- 20th Century
- Gender
- female
- Places of residence
- Barcelona, Spain
- Associated Place (for map)
- Barcelona, Spain
Members
Reviews
I've come to a realization: If you wish to learn HTML or read a book about HTML, and you go to the book store in order to find such a reference, you will almost certainly procure a book written in the 20th century.
Back then, shortly after we crawled out of the tide pool and descended from the trees to use one of two browsers to surf the Internet, HTML was a simple, forgiving thing. If you forgot to close your tags, it was all right. If you only made your page compatible with Navigator (A show more link in the Firefox evolutionary chain) or Internet Explorer, it was all right.
Nowadays, though, if you forget a closing tag, it could throw off your careful formatting. If you make a page only compatible with one browser, you're angering everybody who doesn't use such a tool. There are at least 5 mainstream browsers now, each with their own little quirks. In today's rough-and-tumble world of web design, the sort of books written in the yesteryear may be helpful at times, but are not good way to learn the language.
Maybe all this will change once HTML 5 hits the floor. Several browser already implement the specifications, but HTML 5 has not yet found its place in our bookstores (or at least mine!).
Castro, in her book, is very exhaustive, but her techniques are dated. The book would be a helpful reference if you're displaying web pages on cave walls, but if you're going to use this book as your only reference, you're going to generate less than respectable web pages.
I'd recommend if you absolutely positively need a book to learn HTML to give this one a try. Otherwise, wait around for O'Reilly to publish a book on HTML 5, which is infinitely better than HTML 4 or even the branching species, XHTML, which at a time was the memento mori for HTML.
But, yeah, if you can't get by using the internet to learn HTML, then give this book a shot. But you'll have to do a lot of work to fill the 12 years of improvements to HTML between now and the original publication of this book. show less
Back then, shortly after we crawled out of the tide pool and descended from the trees to use one of two browsers to surf the Internet, HTML was a simple, forgiving thing. If you forgot to close your tags, it was all right. If you only made your page compatible with Navigator (A show more link in the Firefox evolutionary chain) or Internet Explorer, it was all right.
Nowadays, though, if you forget a closing tag, it could throw off your careful formatting. If you make a page only compatible with one browser, you're angering everybody who doesn't use such a tool. There are at least 5 mainstream browsers now, each with their own little quirks. In today's rough-and-tumble world of web design, the sort of books written in the yesteryear may be helpful at times, but are not good way to learn the language.
Maybe all this will change once HTML 5 hits the floor. Several browser already implement the specifications, but HTML 5 has not yet found its place in our bookstores (or at least mine!).
Castro, in her book, is very exhaustive, but her techniques are dated. The book would be a helpful reference if you're displaying web pages on cave walls, but if you're going to use this book as your only reference, you're going to generate less than respectable web pages.
I'd recommend if you absolutely positively need a book to learn HTML to give this one a try. Otherwise, wait around for O'Reilly to publish a book on HTML 5, which is infinitely better than HTML 4 or even the branching species, XHTML, which at a time was the memento mori for HTML.
But, yeah, if you can't get by using the internet to learn HTML, then give this book a shot. But you'll have to do a lot of work to fill the 12 years of improvements to HTML between now and the original publication of this book. show less
Back before I got lazy and started using sites like Blogger and LibraryThing, I had my own little website. If you would ever see it, you would probably notice a lack of, shall we say, quality. I admit it. The site was constructed by me using SimpleText, the old Macintosh system text editor, and the handful of HTML commands I had picked up off a list or deciphered from source pages. (Oh, and once I did ask the guys over at the Unearthed Ruminations message board how to make a link come up in show more a separate window.) Well, before I sold out, I had become dissatisfied with the status quo. I liked keeping my code short and to the point, but I was getting tired of seeing the iCab frowny face on my web pages and being clueless as to how to fix it. What pushed me over the edge was the discovery of an old friend's personal web site which was quite beautiful in it's design. I was a bit embarrassed to tell her about mine, knowing she might venture and gaze upon the ugly, ol' thing. Anyway, even though I got over that and rededicated myself to the motto "It's ugly, but it's fast", I did pick this book up from the library. It simply describes version four of the HTML code and takes you step-by step through using the various commands. It was very well written and organized. If I wasn't such a cheapskate, I would have bought a copy for myself right away instead of waiting a few years for it to show up at the friends of the Library book sale. But then again, if I wasn't such a cheapskate, I would have been running a DSL modem and not given one thought to those running text only browsers. Anyway, if you want to learn HTML, check it out. I think the wisdom garnered from that tome will one day enable me to make a website upon which iCab can smile. (Assuming I ever find time to code one...)
--J. show less
--J. show less
This is a gem of a book. For the beginning programmer, this presents basic web-programming problems and solutions in a concise, easy to grasp way. Pay attention to the lessons in this book and use it along with your other Perl books and you'll be programming some cool web apps in no time!
This book was required reading for one of my courses (an introduction to information technology for those of us who aren't exactly tech-savvy). This semester I was particularly overworked so I gave up on readings for this course pretty early on, meaning that I only got through the first four chapters of this book. I don't see it as much of a loss that I didn't get to the rest. While the book has plenty of useful information, it's not exactly a book you just sit down and read. It's more like show more a reference guide to consult when needed. Most of what is covered is pretty basic though, and a great deal of it can be found online. However, I do have to say I'm a big fan of the color chart found on the back inside cover -- I think this is the only part I consulted multiple times. I'm not sure I would recommend spending your money on this one, unless you anticipate building a lot of basic websites in the near future. But, hey, I only read the first four chapters, maybe it gets better. show less
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