Here is a simple three-page site about the Pilates method of physical conditioning. The site features a what is pilates page, history of pilates page and basic equipment page with photos and descriptions. Visitors are able to navigate to each of the three pages from one another. An issue I ran into was knowing how to gage the size of the images and how that affected the text size of the headings.
At first, I was messing this up, but I think I caught on by the end. I think its is very much like Diigo, but for videos. Very easy to use once I realized that what I was doing was incorrect and not what the site was giving me back as wrong.At first, I was messing this up, but I think I caught on by the end. I think its is very much like Diigo, but for videos. Very easy to use once I realized that what I was doing was incorrect and not what the site was giving me back as wrong.
At first, I was messing this up, but I think I caught on by the end. I think its is very much like Diigo, but for videos. Very easy to use once I realized that what I was doing was incorrect and not what the site was giving me back as wrong.
This, like the w3 schools, is helpful because of the simple nature in which it describes the layout of css. By showing what the code looks like and describing what should go where, it helps the person learning what the final (if basic) outcome should resemble.This, like the w3 schools, is helpful because of the simple nature in which it describes the layout of css. By showing what the code looks like and describing what should go where, it helps the person learning what the final (if basic) outcome should resemble.
This, like the w3 schools, is helpful because of the simple nature in which it describes the layout of css. By showing what the code looks like and describing what should go where, it helps the person learning what the final (if basic) outcome should resemble.
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.
Well, it's a good start, but you need to have it run the first 500 numbers, not up to 500 :). So, it's running about 480 short right now.
As far as the code goes, just make use of a basic template, except for the PHP bit of it in the middle.
Getting columnated is a little tricky for beginners like myself. In lecture 2-3: Columnated, I added a comment with a link to a site that lays out the fundamentals of the language used. I think this would be especially helpful to someone who aspires to be a web producer because a producer needs to speak in html and css language. The link is http://css.maxdesign.com.au/floatutorial/definitions.htm
I found that the "margin: auto;" tag does not work in IE7. I looked for a work around, but it appears that inline styles may be the only way. Thanks Microsoft. :-)
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.
My recommendation is the one I suggest here: NearlyFreeSpeech. It's a new host to me, but comes recommended, and does everything we need it to.
I use Dreamhost for this (and most of my) sites. It's a solid host--and works pretty well. I'm not sure I love it, but moving costs (in time) are too high for me to choose to go elsewhere...
Derek Jeter is a great baseball player, but is he Hall of Fame caliber? Check out his statistics against a couple of other Hall of Hame shortstops and decide for yourself.
And then there's this competition. Probably a bit much for this class, but if student(s) are interested, I would be happy to do an ind. study in the summer.
I added a menu bar to my recipe page. Now, the page links to "Other Recipes", "Other Soups" and "College Inn," all with dropdown options linking to external sites.
I forgot to add that I used this site as a reference for the Menu Bar: http://www.alistapart.com/articles/dropdowns/
A friend of mine also helped me with the positioning of the nav as well.
A fine effort, but need to do this in a plain text editor. Word is definitely not your friend on this one. It might feel like going backward, but please put this up without the markup. Thanks!
Clearly this page doesn't pertain to learning HTML per se, but it helps put in to perspective the whole notion of learning a new skill/language/subject. Knowing HTML may quite possibly be the one attribute that helps one candidate land a coveted job over another. Or, it may never come up in our careers -- but our minds will have been made "more interesting" nonetheless.