Category Archives: Editorial

So long, Jeff! Next, say “Hi,” to Chris Minnick

Hello! Ed Tittel here, with some interesting news about the next planned edition of our book:

I’m very sorry to  report that my co-author and collaborator, Jeff Noble, has decided to drop out of the upcoming revision to our book. We’re probably going to call it HTML5 and CSS3 For Dummies, and it’s going to be a complete rework to get everybody up to speed on HTML5 markup and some of the HTML5 canvas capabilities, along with coverage of Cascading Style Sheet (CSS) markup with an emphasis on CSS3 stuff. Jeff, however, is too busy with his job as Director of Product Design at CA Technologies (the huge conglomerate formerly known as Computer Associates) to bite off and chew upon the upcoming edition. I’m sad about this, because Jeff has been a great influence on and driver for the two previous editions of HTML, XHTML, and CSS For Dummies, sixth and seventh editions, and had already started to gear up with me to get going on the next edition of the book. But he has wisely decided to opt out of this project because he needs to concentrate on his real job, and keep his many and mischievous minions in line.
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HTML & CSS From Around the Web on December 21, 2012

Check out these cool web design links from around the web!

HTML & CSS From Around the Web on December 7, 2012

Check out these cool web design links from around the web!

HTML & CSS From Around the Web on November 30, 2012

Check out these cool web design links from around the web!

HTML & CSS From Around the Web on November 23, 2012

Check out these cool web design links from around the web!

Killing Bugs, One at a Time, and Other Fun HTML Adventures!

Thing 1: Thanks to eagle-eyed reader Jed Corman, I was alerted to a typical no-brainer mistake in the HTML examples for Chapter 13 on this Website. Instead of naming the file in the Chapter13/css/ folder sansStyle.css, we omitted the lower-case s after san and named the file sanStyle.css instead. But because the HTML markup references the file as it should have been spelled rather than the way we actually spelled it, the example doesn’t work properly until the offending file gets properly renamed.
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