The whole purpose of this post is to help you master HTML5 rich features through simple guidelines and easy to follow techniques. These useful HTML5 tutorials will help you keep a track providing more tips and tricks that you can use in your HTML5-based projects. Still if you find something missing, share it kindly in the comments below. After all, another effective HTML5 tutorial won't be out of place here.
Le HTML 5 est la prochaine version importante du HTML. Bien qu'étant en compétition avec le XHTML 2, le HTML 5 fait davantage parler de lui parce qu'étant plus facilement implémentable et plus pragmatique dans l'utilisation des nouvelles balises qu'il introduit.
As the processes in HTML 5 & CSS3 working groups move forward everyday, it is getting much more clear that new standards are not too far.
There are lots of new tutorials, resources being created on HTML 5 / CSS3 including cheat sheets which are very functional helpers for anyone willing to code with these standards.
HTML5 commence à montrer le bout de son nez. Les navigateurs "modernes" dans leurs versions récentes prennent en charge de plus en plus des nouvelles fonctionnalités prévues.
Attention tout de même, HTML5 n'est qu'un brouillon! Une version "draft" du W3C .
Une des nouvelles fonctionnalités, très pratique pour les applis web et autres sites, est la possibilité de pouvoir embarquer une base de données SQLite directement dans la navigateur du client. Sans qu'il soit nécessaire de gérer une base de données en plus de votre site.
The HTML5 specification has added quite a few interesting and useful tags for structuring your markup. For a majority of everyday uses, these tags will replace many of our typical div entries from our code. So let's dig in.
Working with XHTML forms can be somewhat daunting; they not only use some niche HTML elements, but also blur the line between static content and user interaction. Let's review some things to remember when creating your next form.
HTML5 and CSS3 have just arrived (kinda), and with them a whole new battle for the 'best markup' trophy has begun. Truth to be told, all these technologies are mere tools waiting for a skilled developer to work on the right project. As developers we shouldn't get into pointless discussions of which markup is the best. They all lead to nowhere. Rather, we must get a brand new ideology and modify our coding habits to keep the web accessible.
"This page contains the 252 allowed entities in HTML 4 and XHTML 1.0, as outlined in section 24 of the official HTML 4 specifications, published by the W3C. If you're new to this site, you can find help on how to use this reference."