Markup Languages Books


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Markup Languages Books sorted by Average customer review: high to low .

Markup Languages
HTML and XHTML Step by Step (Step By Step (Microsoft))
Published in Paperback by Microsoft Press (2006-03-08)
Author: Faithe Wempen
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html and xhtml sterp by step
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-08-06
This book was extremely easy to follow and relate my personal informattion. I built an entire 13 page website within two days using only html codes.

Html Xhtml Book
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2007-03-10
Very good book for beginners who know very little about HTML and XHTML.

The First Step to Learn about Web Design
Helpful Votes: 12 out of 13 total.
Review Date: 2006-06-17
If you want to learn about web design, the first step is learning HTML and XHTML. The last official version of HTML (4.1) was released in 1999. In January, 2000, the W3C release XHTML. HTML and XHTML are very similar; XHTML uses the stricter syntax of XML.

I have been looking for a book to teach an introductory HTML class. Most books I reviewed were not up-to-date. I really needed a book that did NOT use deprecated tags, that used XHTML syntax, and that introduced cascading style sheets. HTML and XHTML Step-by-Step is the book I have been looking for.

The book is very well-organized with plenty of exercises. The explanations are clear. It's a great book to teach yourself HTML and XHTML even if you are a completely new to web design.

What is absent is a discussion about cross-browser compatibility. Being a Microsoft Press book, it only addresses IE. If you are using another browser, for example, Firefox, you will find that some of the css code will display differently in other browsers. But this is a basic book and a good web design teacher should be able to point out the differences. There are also a few syntax errors, but they a minimal.

On the whole, this a great book to start with if you are learning about web design.

Good starting point
Helpful Votes: 3 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2007-05-13
This is a good starting point for learning the basics. I especially like the instructive exercises. I have only one caveat: there are some typos, one of which gave me some minor grief trying to get my first web page validated at one of the online validation sites. In chapter 2 the author explains how the opening tag should look in an XHTML document, but transposes two of the letters (xlmns should read xmlns). The same mistake is repeated in the instructional exercise (step 8 of the first exercise in chapter 2).

To repeat: it is a good starting point to learn the basics and the exercises provide clarity, but be aware of the typos and get a good reference work to go with it. I bought HTML & XHTML: The Complete Reference (Osborne Complete Reference Series) to go with it, and am satisfied that these two books will put me on the path to competence in creating web pages.

This book is easy to use, but takes you a long way
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2007-02-18
A beginner will go from nothing to intermediate very quickly. I've been working with web pages at work for a year, and decided I needed some better grounding in html
I am using Visual Studio to make web pages and have been doing quite well, but I realized "something was missing" in my knowledge, as I was running into "walls". So I picked up this book. As the author says, "but you will be a much better Web designer--and understand what is going on in Word or FrontPage much better--if you tough it out with Notepad in the beginning.". Visual Studio is great, but I needed to "fill in the holes" in my knowledge of what' going on underneath and how I can manipulate that.
This book works for learning and also as a reference. I hope this author continues to write other books in this manner - I will be looking for books by her.
It's what the "Step by Step" books should be like.

Markup Languages
Professional ASP.NET 2.0 XML (Programmer to Programmer)
Published in Paperback by Wrox (2006-01-18)
Author: Thiru Thangarathinam
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PoloU
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2007-02-06
This is an excelent book. The section about MsSQL server and XML is excelent. I highly recommended

Absolutely fantastic book - well worth the money!
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-01-24
Thiru Thangarathinam is one of the few authors out there who truly know how to teach and convey the knowledge they are presenting. The manner in which he approaches and expounds a topic should be formulated and used in all books. Most books these days simply show how to do the simplest of tasks and never provide real world scenarios. But guess what, in the real world your tasks are never that simple.

Thiru does a great job in not only showing "how to" but also provides best practice tips so that you know "when to", "when not to", "when you do be sure to". These are the things I need to know in the real world. Without a doubt this was one of the best technical books I have read in a while. I will definitely buy any future books that he authors. Glad to see he's a fellow Phoenician also!

ASP.NET 2.0 XML explained
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2006-02-28
This book was very useful. It covered a wide variety of topics and explained most topics very well. I would have liked the book to get into some more subjects a little more in depth, but when you are covering so many topics that is a little difficult to do. This book did cover a lot of the new XML classes in the 2.0 framework. I would have liked some more info on the sql server 2005 xml stuff, particulary xquery. The book talked about OPENXML and even made the statement that you should use .nodes for these types of queries now. But it made no mention of how to do so. Overall, this was a very useful text.

Great For ASP.NET and its XML Features
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 2006-06-20
This is an excellent book covering the XML features of ASP.NET. It is very professional but, not for any beginner. It has the first 2 chapters which pretty much cover the basics but, throughout the rest of the book you need to know what you are doing. It is very detailed but is not really "step-by-step" like 1-2-3...It will walk you through how to do something through reading; so if your not one of those people who don't like to read, I wouldnt fully recommend this book to you. It shows a many screenshots in there so it makes it fairly simple to follow along. The book has almost 500 pages that are completely dedicated to the XML features of ASP.NET. If you are willing to take out the reading glasses and read a little bit. Overall, its an outstanding book!

Good Book to understand xml 2.0 features
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2006-02-03
I would recommend this book to anyone working on ASP.NET 2.0. XML is the integral part of .NET framework and used widely on all projects.
Book explains XML classes, Data Validation, XML transformation, XML and ADO.NET, Web Services and use of XML in Web.Config and Configuration files.

Markup Languages
SVG Essentials (O'Reilly XML)
Published in Paperback by O'Reilly Media, Inc. (2002-02-05)
Author: J. Eisenberg
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Sehr zufrieden mit dem Buch
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-07-30
Das Buch (in englischer Sprache) erklärt sehr genau die Details. Auch als Nachschlagewerk sehr gut geeignet.

Best ORA book since HTML: The Definitive Guide
Helpful Votes: 11 out of 12 total.
Review Date: 2002-10-03
While it's difficult to separate my excitement over SVG from the contents of this book, it's quite possible that the two are so directly related as to be inseperable. Within a few hours of buying this book, I was producing and printing extremely high quality images that I had found all but impossible to produce w/other technologies (JPEG codecs, etc.). If you are familiar with the basic mark-up language concepts, then you should have no trouble gleaning the essential elements of SVG.

After an excellent introductory chapter that provides a general overview, subsequent chapters cover aspects of SVG in detail, such as how to create basic shapes or generate text. One thing I particularly liked was that the author mostly uses a single example (SVG code to create a picture of a cat) to illustrate new concepts, creating a sense of cohesiveness that tied the chapters together. This book is *not* just a scattershot collection of essays that characterizes so many other technical books -- the text is clear, concise, and to the point. Finally, there is a very uselful appendix that summarizes the most frequently used attributes.

Perhaps the only drawback is that if you are coming to SVG from a non-technical background, you might find this book a little too gear-headed for your liking. For technical readers that want a thorough introduction (i.e., not a PhD thesis) to this exciting and useful technology, however, this book is a must.

In a Nutshell
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 6 total.
Review Date: 2002-03-17
This subject perfectly fits O'Reilly's "In a Nutshell" tradition, for SVG itself is just that: Web design, including text, graphics, animation, and programming, all in a nutshell -- concise, pithy, simple, and deep.

SVG, a refactoring of several generations of Web technology and a public standard approved by the World Wide Web Consortium, can be authored without any special tools and without any special background, other than the immediately productive background provided by this book.

Eisenberg swiftly, but with diverting variety, illuminates the process of drawing, assembling shapes, creating textures, transforming coordinates, structuring documents, enriching text, creating reusable components, fine tuning color, animating shapes and colors and structures, creating lighting effects, and programming user interactions. All of this is built upon the simple SVG architecture: arrange your elements in a hierarchy and set their attributes.

There is an art to conveying important points without belaboring them and Eisenberg moves from example to example with perfect pitch.

The book also contains an eight page section with full color images.

Some people have complained about the lack of reference books on SVG. The SVG reference is in fact widely available, all 500+ pages of it, on the W3C site. What is really needed, and would have been useful in this or any SVG book, is a five page guide to using that reference -- how do I, in ten seconds or so, determine whether this element can be a child of that element, or if this element supports this attribute?

While I was developing SVG Composer the only book available was Watt's "Designing SVG Web Graphics" (another fine book with a rather different pitch).. When Eisenberg's work came out I happily relearned SVG, doing every example and picking up any number of new tricks.

I do have some reservations: I didn't care for the cat drawing (hated it!) and the final two chapters on generating and serving SVG seemed aimed at the wrong audience (adepts at Java, servlets, and Perl) though the material itself is perfectly fine.

At first I had the same feeling about the appendices, which include brief samples of subjects from programming to fonts to matrix algebra, that surely Eisenberg was misjudging his audience. However he may have things just right -- SVG may well become the greatest crossover hit ever in computer languages, a lingua franca for logic and art.

Good introduction, needs more recipes
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2004-03-23
The book provides a solid introduction to SVG through an increasingly complex set of examples of SVG use. It is well written and edited, it also provides a thorough description of the entirety of the standard. What it lacks is more depth in the area of recipes for commonly used image effects. It also needs more advice about how complex SVGs are organized and built for efficiency. I understand that SVG is still on the adoption curve, so perhaps we could see these improvements in a second version of the book when the standard has picked up a little more.

For the time being the book earns it's four stars by providing a nice learning curve and having high quality examples that demonstrates the concepts effectively.

Good starter book, but...
Helpful Votes: 7 out of 16 total.
Review Date: 2002-09-27
Not a bad book if you want to learn just the basics; however, I think you can easily find everything in this book on the Web if you take the time to dig around. If you're looking for a book to get you started, this one will do nicely. But if you're looking for more advanced/esoteric SVG material, I'd keep looking.

Markup Languages
Web Design Tools and Techniques (2nd Edition)
Published in Paperback by Peachpit Press (2001-07-24)
Author: Peter Kentie
List price: $39.99
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Average review score:

Providing superior content, structure design, visual appeal
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2002-07-08
Now in an updated and expanded second edition, Web Design Tools And Techniques by Peter Kentie (author of the monthly "DTP Maserclass" column in Macworld Nederland) is a comprehensive, "user friendly" guide to all aspects of effective web designs. The relevant subjects covered in accessible detail include creating a storyboard or diagram structure; designing effective navigation systems; implementing effective user testing within the limiting constraints of a budget; applying cutting edge methods without alienating visitors; minimizing user wait times (this alone is worth the entire cost of this outstanding reference); and utilizing site statistics as web design planning data. If you want your website to provide superior content, structure design, visual appeal, enhanced with invisible technology and visitor ease-of-use, then read and study Peter Kentie's Web Design Tools And Techniques!

Dated...
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2003-06-09
If you you know anything about webdesign, don't even think of buying this book. It can bore you to death, with its sometimes dated terminologies, and fascinations at technologies that are now dead. I don't recommend this book if you're interested in the process of web design or if you have the slightest experience. If you allready know some webdesign skills and are interested more in the process, "Web Redesign, workflow that works"(kelly Goto & Emily Cotler) is the book for you. If You don't know web design and would like to start somewhere, Lynda weinman's "Macromedia Dreamweaver MX Hands-On Training " is a great place to start.

A highly recommended instruction and reference guide
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2001-02-24
In Web Graphics Tools And Techniques, expert webpage designer Peter Kentie provides a profusely illustrated, full- color guide to the development and utilization of HTML tags to make a web site functional and aesthetically pleasing. Additionally, Kentie offers a wealth of clearly demonstrated, practical, "user friendly" information on advanced all the current techniques that an HTML programmer must master, including formatting tables, converting copy to HTML files, understanding how to use GIF and JPEG image file formats, integrating typography into design, creating backgrounds, designing effective web page navigational devices, and more. Web Graphics Tools And Techniques is a highly recommended instruction and reference guide for intermediate and advanced HTML programmers and website designers.

Value for money and a great deal of help !
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 1998-02-03
Unlike other web design books that mainly seem to focus on how to spell HTML-tags, this book really discusses what web design is about. How can I use HTML-functions and graphics to spice up my site and get attention from the site's visitors ? What are the choices I have, and what do I have to consider when making these choices ? How to deal with different browser types ? All these topics and many more are extensively covered. The book is not only a good start-up for newbies, but also a guide for advanced web designers. Subjects are well organized and easy to find. I've seen many web design books so far, but none got even close to this one. And of course the glossy (but functional) appearance of the book adds to the fun of using it.

The best web book for web graphic desiner ever!!!
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 1999-10-14
I have spent lots of times to look for a book that is written for graphic designer who wants to design the web pages, I find out that some web design books are too complicate for the beginners and of course, some are to easy for the web masters. Only Peter Kentie's book I believe that is designed for both beginner and advanced web designers.

Markup Languages
XML Internationalization and Localization (Sams White Book)
Published in Paperback by Sams (2001-07-06)
Author: Yves Savourel
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Single Most Important Book in the Industry in 5 Years!
Helpful Votes: 10 out of 10 total.
Review Date: 2001-07-12
At last! A book that addresses a key instructional and informational need in the localization (l10n) and internationalization (i18n) industries. To date, there is no single authoritative source on the subject of XML l10n and i18n, despite the fact that XML is a key driver behind the growth of the Internet, B2B, content management and large-scale data exchange and will be increasingly important in the future, and central to e-commerce and globalization in general.

Up to now, most writings on XML, that I have seen, are generally non-l10n and i18n specific, and only make reference to these areas in passing, as part of a wider technological discussion. There is development information available on the Internet about XML standards, which includes sections on i18n, but this is divorced from any business logic or discussion on practical deployments within the localization industry. The best discussions I have seen on the possible applications of XML tend to be piecemeal, such as white papers or magazine articles in publications. This book changes all that.

The structure is very good - comprehensive without being overwhelming and it is well thought out and illustrated with code samples and screen shots. Content ranges from a practical and clear education on XML technology, through to where XML i18n and l10n fits into the product development cycle, content authoring and localization processes. Central to the book's appeal is it's practicality and relevance to modern day industry developments such as XLIFF, ITS, online translation, translation memory use and even WML and Flash too! The book is aimed at doing, not at theorizing, and it fills a key gap in the market.

Potential for this book’s influence is huge given the trends in business models and product/service deployment globally over the Internet. I think this book could become more important than Nadine Kano’s "Developing International Software for Windows 95 and NT". It should be on the bookshelf of every serious content development house NOW, nestling up to "The Lexus and The Olive Tree" (Thomas Friedman) and "Translating Into Success" (Robert C. Sprung, Eds.) as a well-thumbed, coffee-stained source of reference for anyone seriously interested in developing and maintaining a globalization presence.

I would certainly recommend the book to all content developers, and translation tools development teams. I would envisage the book could be useful for content authors and developers of all types - DB architects, content managers, documentation writers, ML website developers, etc. Anyone who needs to develop, manage and maintain global content, which has to be localized and deployed in multiple languages.

Great book - sorely needed - just in time
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2001-07-26
Yves Savourel has a firm grasp of the technical aspects of XML development - completed by a wealt of experience in the product globalization arena. The writing style in XML internationalizaion and Localization is clear and unambiguous - easily understood by the novice and guru alike, and using terms that are familiar to anyone working in the internationalization and localization industries. The book's content is comprehensive with useful and practical examples, directly applicable to the real world. Thorough, interesting examination of one of critical development formats for entrprise, database and internet computing, the book is much needed! I hope there is more to come.

Well worth the money - essential for Product Globalizers
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2001-07-26
This is a great book for the 'doers' in the product globalization technology fields. Well worth the money. Extremely credible combination of industry guru Yves Savourel's content with some additional flavoring of content from globalization expert Ultan O'Broin of Oracle Corporation provide a wide-ranging discourse on how to design, develop and build XML content that is multilingual and fully globalized and easily translated. For the first time we see the words "pseudo-translation" mentioned in a book at this level (please take note Nancy Kano et al) as well as the treatment of the localization process as a business activity (and not some kind of warm armpit partnership between developers and translators). Brilliant. I hope the book heralds a new departure in content creation and also attitudes in the internationalization and localization industry - it's badly needed. My only quibble is the lack of CD-ROM with example XML files that we might have used to evaluate our own XML tools and processes with to compare with the books findings.

A truly excellent book
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 9 total.
Review Date: 2002-03-13
This book was truly a pleasure to read. A good writing style, a lot of information, and a tight editing job that really makes both the messenger and the message look better. What more could a person ask for?

XML is definitely out there, and it seems to be a lot more than just a buzzword. Finally there is a book that makes it seem more accessible to international markets.

Well, not everything was perfect. But it was so much better than some of the other books out there, that it definitely deserves 4/5 stars.

Excellent book on "XML tools for Internationalization"
Helpful Votes: 9 out of 10 total.
Review Date: 2001-09-15
Yves Savourel's book on XML Internationalization and Localization is an excellent resource and definitely worth reading for anyone working with XML in an international environment.

I found the first part of the book especially helpful, the second part is very focussed on translation processes, assuming that web content internationalization and localization occurs in a similar fashion to software product development, which is not necessarily the case. "XML Tools for Internationalization and Localization" might have been a more appropriate title.

The comparison of translation tools is very long and difficult to read, with unnecessary screenshots showing all samples. A tabular overview on standards compliance and supported features, together with one set of testcases, would be sufficient. The XML database chapter, on the other hand, could be expanded with more information on native XML databases.

Typographical conventions leave room for improvement, including the choice of fonts, indentation in structured example and the overuse of line continuation characters in places where line breaks are not significant.

Markup Languages
250 HTML and Web Design Secrets
Published in Paperback by Wiley (2004-07-09)
Author: Molly E. Holzschlag
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Average review score:

Easier long term maintenance
Helpful Votes: 12 out of 13 total.
Review Date: 2004-09-23
If you have already used HTML to make some web pages, then this book might be of value. That is, if you plan on adding more pages or perhaps you want to maintain the website hosting these pages? The book talks about how to handle this next level of complexity. The author does not bog you down in the fine details of HTML syntax. Instead, she gives many suggestions ["secrets"] on making a logical arrangement of content. Like giving simple, intuitive names to the directory hierarchy and files. So that users can traverse your website easily.

Typically, most of the suggestions are of this style. The payoff is often easier long term maintenance. Like her ideas on effectively using CSS and XHTML. Again, like with HTML itself, you need some minimal prior acquaintance with these packages, to take advantage of this book.

Concise and thorough reading for any web designer
Helpful Votes: 14 out of 14 total.
Review Date: 2004-07-30
I'm always hungry for new knowledge as a web designer, looking for that one trick to make my site either faster, easier to understand, accessible, and better. Sure, you could scour the web for weeks, looking for all the little tips and tricks that makes a good website great, or you can get this book and discover it all easily. All from a person who has, for many years, made the web a better place.

Molly's attention to detail, her teaching methods, and approach to giving these secrets and tips makes is utterly easy to digest and remember. By all means, this book is a treasure trove of knowledge that belongs in every web designer's personal collection.

Diamond in the Rough!!!!
Helpful Votes: 5 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2005-08-12
Great book!
Very complete overview and many snippets of experience.
I only called it "in the Rough" because of the paper & binding... it isn't shiney, and no color prints, but the info is the Diamond, and worth much more. As they say, "Don't judge a book by its cover"!
Molly's books are always worth keeping. She delivers. =)

Cal

Good reference to keep at hand
Helpful Votes: 6 out of 8 total.
Review Date: 2004-11-01
This is one of the few web books that has great breadth and gives sufficient depth to help not only the novice, but a seasoned web developer. This book has been quite helpful for the web team I am on to understand what current best practices are and how we get to this level.

There are so many poorly developed sites on the web it is great to have a book at hand to point to when needing to explain how to do it right. Molly's book is one of the quickest ways to start building web sites right

Preview in person
Helpful Votes: 8 out of 11 total.
Review Date: 2004-11-17
To be certain there are some invaluable hints in this book. But since the items covered are just spots of information from here and there around the landscape of web and design standards you need to check this book out in person to make sure you are getting your moneys worth. In particular I liked the material on CSS layout, but I was disappointed with coverage of basic topics like web safe colors, which requires a more in-depth discussion than the few paragraphs presented. Worth the look, but be sure to look before you buy.

Markup Languages
Html: Publishing on the World Wide Web (Teach Yourself)
Published in Paperback by Teach Yourself (1997-08)
Author: Mac Bride
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Best HTML book ever!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 1999-05-02
This is the best HTML book I have ever read. It is the best of the best. Get it!

Teach Yourself Some HTML
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2000-05-02
Teach Yourself HTML is a simple guide, almost too simple. Though most of the basic rules and tags are explained, which is good for the beginner, it's bias in Netscape's favor, which, down the road, can lead to IE conflicts. The chapters parts are listed in logical order, however, the chapters themselves don't seem to follow a logical path. Nothing is mentioned about web page design, pros or cons, and many of the illustrations don't give a good sense of good web design. All in all, the book is good for beginners who don't mind making a few mistakes down the road. It can get the student a head start toward more advanced HTML.

Great for beginners and seasoned pros
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 1999-06-18
This book is execllent. Shows the commands to use and what it will look like on the web page. It's in plain english so even HTML dummies (like myself) will have no problems. AND...it's cheap.

The most consice guide to html you'll find.
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 1998-12-15
This book teaches html in a manner that is both easy and fun. After reading this book, you'll understand the basics of how to create a web page without having to wade through tedious details of what each and every tag does. As you learn to create bigger and better pages you will find yourself refering frequently to this book for reference. Since you must learn to walk before you can run, this is the best book with which to take your first steps.

This book is a real bargain, and a good resource.
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 1999-11-24
In this day and age, you can easily spend $50.00 on a book designed to introduce you to some small part of the computer experience; a book that might well sit on your shelf. This book, HTML Publishing on The World Wide Web, is clear, concise, well written, easy to read, an excellent introduction to HTML, and CHEAP!

Markup Languages
IE5 Dynamic HTML Programmer's Reference
Published in Paperback by Peer Information Inc. (1999-02-18)
Authors: Brian Francis, Alex Homer, and Chris Ullman
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vbScript is for IE5
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 3 total.
Review Date: 2001-08-16
The Code works the examples are easy to follow and the title of the book says IE5 Dynamic HTML which means that it has to work with vbscript. this is another excellent Wrox book

Must have
Helpful Votes: 1 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2001-07-25
Although web browsers have evolved beyond IE5, this is still a great book. It is well organized and easily referenced. I keep it handy for the quick look up need without having to go into the MSDN library. There is a heavy emphasis on VBScript. It is worth the investment.

Really usefull Programmer's Reference
Helpful Votes: 10 out of 10 total.
Review Date: 2000-03-09
I knew some (D)HTML before buying this book, but I was looking for a book I could use when I needed to make something besides "normal" DHTML (use on many sites). AND THIS IS IT!

The books first half is about Dynamic HTML (methods, events ect.), and the second half is a really great reference!

This gave me the opportunity to make better pages than on so many other sites, so if you're looking for a book where you don't have to read many pages of useless stuff before getting to the point, then this is defiantly what I would advise you to buy! (A great combination with this book could be "Professional VB6 Web Programming" - Wrox)

Best book on this topic I've read
Helpful Votes: 29 out of 30 total.
Review Date: 1999-05-26
This book is very readable, gets right to the point, and will not put you to sleep. Several others (such as Inside DHTML) are so anhydrous they'll suck up all the rain in Seattle. This book however is a great intro to DHTML. You don't have to be an expert in HTML to get a lot out of this book. Has good appendices on HTML, DHTML, JScript, and VBScript.

examples use VBScript, not Javascript
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 7 total.
Review Date: 2001-07-25
Although the subject matter is well covered, all the code examples that I saw are written in VBScript. That renders the book effectively useless if you code your client side script in javascript (which is the industry standard).
If you are a javascript coder then get Danny Goodman's Dynamic HTML, published by O'Reilly.

Markup Languages
Teach Yourself VISUALLY HTML (Teach Yourself VISUALLY (Tech))
Published in Paperback by Visual (2005-08-05)
Author: Sherry Willard Kinkoph
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Ok but could be better-
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-11-21
Two weeks ago I decided to re-work my company web sit. I ordered this book
and "Creating Web Pages with HTML". Creating came first and with it I was able to create a seven page site with pictures in under twelve hours.

Then came this book. There are three or four things in it that were not covered in "Creating" but "Creating" was much easier and simpler to follow and excecute. Creating did a much better job of taking it one step at a time, from the basic to the more complex in a more logical order.

I am far from an expert and this will probably get the job done for you even with out any previous html experience, but I would recommend "Creating" for its simplicity.

Exactly what I was looking for!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-11-11
I bought this book back in 2002 to learn HTML and it was exactly what I was looking for. Easy to follow VISUAL instruction. After years of webpaging I STILL referance this book for quick easy to find reminders and brushing up. I recommend it to anyone, but especially those who know absolutely nothing about HTML nor where to begin.

FIRST AND LAST BOOK YOU EVER WANT TO OWN!!!!!
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 0 total.
Review Date: 2007-09-10
This is the most colorful and most cutest book to have!!! Everything's fully explained.. Makes you what to explore further and eager to learn. I have gone through it repeatedly. by the end, you feel HTML is so powerful that other programming languages can stand aside. Simply LOVE Teach Yourself Visually HTML !!! GRAB YOUR COPY NOW!!!

The book I recommend for learning HTML
Helpful Votes: 10 out of 10 total.
Review Date: 2006-10-28
When I am asked the question, "I want to learn programming, were should I begin?" my response is always, "learn HTML." While some people will legitimately argue that HTML is not true programming, it is easy to learn and the results are visual and immediate. The skills learned in the study of HTML are fundamental to more advanced programming and the ease of learning gives the beginner immediate and clear success.
This book is the easiest way to learn HTML that I have ever seen. With the illustrations all in full color, it is the epitome of What You See Is What You Get (WYSIWYG). Every step is set out in clear detail and all of the most commonly used features of HTML are covered. From this point on I will recommend it as my preferred first book in HTML.

learning html
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2007-05-11
The book is very helpful. The instructions are very clear and easy to follow.

Markup Languages
Upgrading to PHP 5
Published in Paperback by O'Reilly Media, Inc. (2004-07)
Author: Adam Trachtenberg
List price: $29.95
New price: $3.95
Used price: $2.97

Average review score:

Clear and well-written
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2005-03-11
The author does a great job summarizing common PHP characteristics and elaborating on PHP 5 improvements, with plenty of well-chosen code examples. Well suited for the established PHP programmer making the transition to PHP 5. For those starting out, use "Learning PHP 5" instead.

Awsome refference tool.
Helpful Votes: 0 out of 1 total.
Review Date: 2005-01-28
A very good choice. PHP5 is a new wave in dynamic web development. It dramaticly improved the handeling of classes and objects. This little book is your quick and easy to use refference of objects, methods, variables, scopes, functions. At Procreative Designs (procreative.ca), the company I work for this one was distributed all over our web development department at the beginning of last month. I personally find this book really handy and useful. Previously I owned PHP4 Refference and it always served me well. Overall its a great choice for quick refference.

Another Excellent Offering From O'Reilly
Helpful Votes: 2 out of 2 total.
Review Date: 2005-07-11
I own a sizable collection of O'Reilly books and have found them to in general be very well written and useful. "Upgrading to PHP 5" continues this tradition superbly.

This book is _not_ for new PHP coders; the vast majority of the text assumes good familiarity with PHP 4.x. If you have this familiarity then you will find this book to be a thorough and well-organized primer on the many new features in the new PHP.

The first chapter merely lists the major areas that have changed in the latest PHP, each of which roughly corresponds to a chapter in the book.

Major enhancement to the OOP facilities of PHP are appropriately discussed in the next chapter. Unfortunately, this is probably the most clumsily written chapter due a strange desire to educate the reader in OOP basics (about the only place in the book where this mistake is committed). The result is a schism that imposes redundancy in the material while simultaneously making it unduly hard to locate specific topics.

Thankfully the subsequent two chapters (on the new MySQL interface and the SQLite database) are uniformly well-written. Especially useful is a (perhaps oddly-situated) section on migration strategies from a PHP 4/MySQL 4.0 platform to a PHP 5/MySQL 4.1 platform.

A chapter on XML follows, but I did not read it in great detail since my applications tend to not require it, so other reviewers are likely to provide greater insights here.

Iterators, yet another feature completely new to PHP 5, are covered next. Unlike much of the conventional PHP fare (even OOP) this topic really does require understanding of rather abstract concepts (especially when debugging the RecusrsiveIterator interface). For this reason, while clearly written it may take hobbiests some time to take this material to heart.

The new error-handling functions are introduced next. I think that the chapter could have benefited from a little more discussion; Trachtenberg seems to think providing code samples is almost self-explanatory. At the end of the day, though, the chapter does its job.

The chapter on streams and filters is another one that I barely perused, so I defer to other reviewers on this topic.

The penultimate chapter provides a very cursory evaluation of a handful of extensions to PHP. While certainly useful to the practicing PHP programmer they are covered in so brief a manner that you will need a separate text to implement them meaningfully. But this chapter does give enough information to at least evaluate the extensions' potential usefulness in an application.

Trachtenberg concludes with an example PHP application. I do not like such examples in books - between space limitations and the complexity of real life this and other examples feel too... contrived... to be worthwhile. But I understand that it is included practically as canon, and do not fault the author for its inclusion.

So, all things considered, this text covers the changes in PHP 5 in detail in a surprisingly brief 300 pages (and small page footprint). A worthy addition to a book collection, provided you already have general PHP reference available.

Exactly what I needed
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 4 total.
Review Date: 2004-09-04
Being fairly proficient on PHP 4 but looking for more info on version 5, the idea of getting books on PHP 5 that, once again, starts from scratch wasn't exciting at all. This book instead was exactly what I needed, it assume you know PHP 4 and covers only the new features with a good amount of details and a bunch of useful suggestions for code migration. The only reason I don't give it 5 stars is that in the chapters covering OOP and DOM the author try to explain the new functionalities but also attempt to throw in the mix more generic info on this two topics. The end results are somewhat mixed, the coverage of PHP 5 is, in my opinion, very good, but the material about OOP and DOM instead aren't up to the rest and does more harm than good.

Awesome Book for PHP4 Developers!
Helpful Votes: 4 out of 5 total.
Review Date: 2004-08-05
This is a fantastic book. I frequently find that when an existing developer buys a book, he/she has to sort through all the garbage review in the beginning. This book assumes you are a competent PHP4 programmer. Then it takes you step by step through new PHP5 syntax and features that are unique to PHP5. It reviews and explains Object Oriented Programming (OOP), then discusses a variety of PHP5-only concepts, like SimpleXML and SQLite.

I recently installed a PHP5 server and this book has been by my side since. All PHP4 developers who expect to use PHP5 within the next year or so should really have a copy of this book handy.


Books-Under-Review-->Computers-->Data Formats-->Markup Languages-->21
Related Subjects: XML SGML XHTML SMIL HTML
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