This site presents a nice overview of what PHP can do, why you would want to use it. It starts you off with a very simple explanation and examples. I know there are alot of different introductions out there, but this is just another example. We all have to find things that we personally find easy to use.
I came across this site dealing with HTML through Google. Browsing through, I found it to be great, even for myself, a stone cold beginner to this stuff. It's pretty much a complete tutorial regarding HTML starting from the most basic parts all the way to the advanced material and know-how. In the page itself you will see [Previous] and [Next] buttons which walk you to the next level of the tutorial, down the left side of the page is each part of the tutorial. Hope this helps!
This is a free HTML tutorial site that requires "no prior knowledge of programming." It is a step by step, 15 lesson tutorial that is short with photo examples. It also promises to equip you with information that will have you creating a website within an hour. Simple. Quick. Easy to understand.
I came across this site, from the same provide that I found some good stuff for HTML. This is a great tutorial set up to help beginners like myself get a better idea for 'STYLE'
A group of ten nice PHP instructional articles. The first is a friendly Introduction to PHP tutorial. The entire site (AllSyntax.com) looks like a good resource for ICM 505.
This site is basically a brief introduction to me, Ellise. Nothing complex or fancy, just wanted to use some basic and tags as well as link in the site, and out of the site.
Take a look at the course blog for the topic "TextEdit Travails." Looks like you need to set the preferences to "plain text." Go ahead and do this, and re-upload (and re-tag, so I look at it again), and you should be good.
This is a good introduction that explains alot about the value of Javascript. It explains how it simplifies tasks that used to be server-intensive by placing some of the load on the user's local machine. It is more efficient, can be re-used and sends the server a simplified information set that is easily processed.
Getting started with HTML is from The World Wide Web Consortium (w3c). This particular article is helpful because it includes the basics of html, including what it is and how to write in html. W3C has to do with the development of html, which I found out from the book, Web Design In A Nutshell by Jennifer Robbins.
The following is a site complete with all sorts of tutorials for PHP and MySQL. It is separated by topics such as Setup, Admin, Syntax, Database, Connect, etc, and allows you to jump in where ever you feel the need to. I'm a newbie, so this site has been great to read through.