|
Posted by Hywel Jenkins on 10/01/96 11:17
In article <rVrme.38885$Ph4.852256@ursa-nb00s0.nbnet.nb.ca>,
someone@somewhere.nb.ca says...
> I learned HTML 3, Javascript 1.2, and Perl 5 circa 1998, but haven't done
> any serious web programming since.
>
> Looking around, I notice that web programming has changed quite a bit with
> XHTML, XML, DHTML, etc... Heck, I haven't gotten used to CSS files yet!
>
> I still enjoy creating web pages but I could obvioulsy acomplish much more
> using the latest code.
>
> I'd like to buy a book but which one?
>
> Should I buy a book on XHTML or XML, and if DHTML is for browser scripting,
> couldn't I just keep usign Javascript?
No point getting a book on XML - it's just a data format so won't help
with builing web pages unless you want some sort of content management
system and have the skill to translate XML to suitable markup. DHTML
isn't for browser scripting - it's what you get when you combine HTML,
CSS and JavaScript (or other client-side scripting).
Reckon you should skip buying a book and head over to that little known,
under-used web resource at http://www.google.com/
--
Hywel
Kill the Crazy Frog
http://www.petitiononline.com/crzyfrg/
Navigation:
[Reply to this message]
|