CST8281 - Introduction to HTML - Teaching

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Transcript CST8281 - Introduction to HTML - Teaching

Internet / Protocols / WWW
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What is the Internet?
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What are Internet protocols?
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a network of networks – an inter-network, or Internet
the rules for transferring information between programs
HTTP - hypertext transfer protocol
FTP - file transfer protocol
SMTP – simple mail transfer protocol
What is the World Wide Web?
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a set of HTML pages accessible using the HTTP protocol
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How the WWW Works
How does a Web Browser (Firefox) fit in this picture?
- your browser connects, using the HTTP protocol, to a web server
- the web server fetches an HTML web page and sends the HTML to your browser
- your browser turns the HTML page into a nice-looking page on your screen
Internet
connection
Your computer,
Your web browser
e.g. Firefox
Internet
Their computer,
Routers
Their web server
(an HTTP server)
e.g. Apache
/mypage.html
Text file containing
an HTML web page
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Hyper Text Markup Language - HTML
Hyper Text Markup Language (HTML) Basics
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HTML is a “mark-up language”
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You add the mark-up tags to your text document
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Now follows a published standard via http://w3c.org/
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HTML is a language of mark-up “tags” in angle brackets: <>
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each tag has a name and may have one or more quoted attributes
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eg. <p class=”thesis” style=”color: red”>
Tags usually come in pairs (with some exceptions)
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<html>...</html>, <body>...</body>, <p>...</p>, <hr>, <br>
Web pages are free-form input; line breaks can be used most
anywhere and don't affect the appearance of the document
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Yes, your entire page could be a single line of text!
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HTML – Required Tags
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<html> … </html> (Required!)
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Basic tag to identify portion of file that contains HTML
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<html> is an opening tag
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</html> is a closing tag (note the direction of the slash!)
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text between the opening and closing tag is called the “element”
<head> … </head> (Required!)
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placed at the top of document immediately after the <html> tag
tags information about the document, e.g. author, style, etc.
contains the required document <title>...</title> tag
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HTML – Required Tags
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<title> … </title> (Required!)
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included as an element inside the <head>…</head> section
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element of this tag is the title displayed in title bar of the browser
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may also be used as title of page when page is bookmarked
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should be meaningful and uniquely identify the page
<body> … </body> (Required!)
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included as the second element inside the <html>…</html> tags.
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follows the <head>…</head> portion of the document
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contains the information to be displayed in the browser window
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any attributes set on this tag will apply to the entire page
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HTML – Required Tags
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<p> … </p> (Required!)
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included as an element inside the <body>…</body> section
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Surrounds a paragraph of text
DOCTYPE (Required!)
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Must be the very first line of your file, before <html>
NOT an HTML tag; it is an instruction to your web browser
Tells the browser what version of HTML to expect
In this course we use only the “strict” HTML version 4.01 type:
<!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC
"-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01//EN"
"http://www.w3.org/TR/html4/strict.dtd">
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HTML – Required Tags
That's all you need for a basic web page!
<!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC
"-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01//EN"
"http://www.w3.org/TR/html4/strict.dtd">
<html>
<head>
<title>My Title</title>
</head>
<body>
<p>This is my first web page.</p>
</body>
</html>
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HTML - Basic Tags
More useful basic tags:
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<br>
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(no closing tag needed)
put a line break in the text (starts a new line)
<h1> … </h1> through <h6> ... </h6>
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used to identify text as a Level 1 (major) to Level 6 (minor) heading
Comment Tag
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<!-- comments here -->
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notice that the comment is typed as an attribute inside the tag
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comments may be one or multiple lines long (HTML is free-form)
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text within this tag will not be displayed or processed by your browser
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comments do not nest! No comments inside comments!
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The comment may not contain two (or more) adjacent dashes, e.g. --
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HTML - Basic Tags
The Anchor Tag – Hyper Linking - making the web a web
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<a> … </a>
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one major attribute – the location of the hyperlink:
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href=”string”
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element is clickable/selectable as a document hyperlink
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browser attempts to load the page specified by the href= attribute
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the href= string can be a relative URL on the same server:
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without the leading http://host/ it is in the same directory structure:
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e.g. <a href=“page2.html”>Click here to continue</a>
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e.g. <a href=”images/box.jpg”>See the box here.</a>
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e.g. <a href=“../another_dir/page3.html”>Click here</a>
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HTML - Basic Tags
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<a>…</a> anchor tag continued
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The href= string can be an absolute URL on any server:
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string can be any HTTP URL (web address) you like:
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e.g. <a href=“http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/”>Free Software</a>
The href= string can be an email address:
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string can be an email address preceded by “mailto:”
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e.g. <a href=”mailto:[email protected]>Ian! D. Allen email</a>
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Attempts to open an email client (specified in the web browser's
options) and places the specified email address in the To: field of a
new email message.
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HTML - Basic Tags
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<img>
(no closing tag needed)
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used to display graphics (.jpeg, .png, .gif) in your web pages
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you must specify the URL for the image source, and an alt= text
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the basic attributes of <img> are:
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src=”string” - the absolute or relative location of the image file
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alt=”string” - Alternate Text for people who don't see images
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height=”string” - image height, percent or absolute pixels (optional)
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width=”string” - image width, percent or absolute pixels (optional)
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title=”string” - mouse-over title of the image (optional)
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Etc….
specifying height= and width= lets your browser reserve space in
the document to load the image in the background and avoid
redrawing the page after the image is fully loaded
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HTML - Basic Tags
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<hr>
(no closing tag needed)
– Hard/Horizontal Rule – draw a horizontal line
– rule appearance can be changed with styles
<blockquote> … </blockquote>
– block quotation, indented
<q> … </q>
– a short, in-line “quotation as part of running text”
<pre> … </pre>
– preformatted text (e.g. computer code or output)
– fixed-width font (e.g. Courier fixed width)
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preserves spaces and line breaks
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HTML - Basic Tags
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Font-style tags – for more control, use CSS instead
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<b> … </b> and <i> … </i>
– bold and italic text (in-line)
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<tt> … </tt>
– Teletype Text: fixed-width font (e.g. Courier)
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<big> … </big> and <small> … </small>
– bigger and smaller text (in-line)
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HTML - Phrase Tags
Phrase tags – often better done using CSS
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<em> … </em> and <strong> ... </strong>
– text to be emphasized and strongly emphasized
– browser decides how: usually italicized, made bold
Less often used:
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<code>...</code>, <samp>...</samp>, <kbd>...</kbd>
– computer code, sample code, keyboard text
– usually rendered in Courier fixed-width
font
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HTML – Style Element/Attribute
The <style> element and the style= attribute
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The style= attribute can be used on most tags
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defines features for a single HTML element, e.g.
<p style=”text-align: center”>Center me.</p>
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The <style> element: <style type=”text/css”> ... </style>
– <style> tag always goes in the <head> section
– defines style information for the whole HTML page
– requires the type=”text/css” attribute
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more details to come in the description of CSS
to link to a separate CSS style sheet, use instead:
<link rel=”stylesheet” type=”text/css” href=”string”>
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HTML - Lists
Lists – <ul> Unordered List and <ol> Ordered List
<ul>
<li>Apple</li>
<li>Pear</li>
<li>Kiwi</li>
<li><ul>
<li>Big</li>
<li>Small</li>
</ul></li>
</ul>
<ol>
<li>Apple</li>
<li>Pear</li>
<li>Kiwi</li>
<li><ul>
<li>Big</li>
<li>Small</li>
</ul></li>
</ol>
HTML
HTML
– Unordered
- Basic Tags
Lists
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<li>…</li>
– List Item: surrounds each list item inside a list
– used inside both <ul> and <ol> list types
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<ul>…</ul>
– surrounds an unordered list – no numbering
– <li>...</li> items each indented and bulleted
– use styles (style= attribute) to change type of bullet:
– CSS style: list-style-type: string
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string can be: circle, disc, square
e.g. <ul style=”list-style-type: square”> ... </ul>
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HTML – Ordered Lists
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<ol> … </ol>
– surrounds an ordered list
– items are indented and numbered (or alphabetized)
– use styles (style=) to change type of numbering:
– CSS style: list-style-type: string
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examples of string: decimal, lower-alpha, upper-roman
e.g. <ol style=”list-style-type: upper-latin”> ... </ul>
the start= attribute determines first item's value
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e.g. <ol start=“3”> - begin numbering at 3 (or c, or iii)
but this is deprecated, with no CSS replacement!
http://www.w3schools.com/tags/att_ol_start.asp
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HTML – Definition List
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<dl>…</dl>
– definition list containing <dt> and <dd> items
– <dt>...</dt> definition title
– <dd>...</dd> definition description
Example definition list containing two definitions:
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<dl>
<dt>Hacker</dt>
<dd>An expert or enthusiast of any kind.</dd>
<dt>Cracker</dt>
<dd>An intruder into computer systems.</dd>
</dl>
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HTML - <meta> - Page Attributes
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<meta>
(no closing tag needed)
– used only inside <head> section of page
– gives details about page, e.g. author, keywords
– search engines may ignore keywords, since many
pages use fake keywords to boost search results
<head>
<title>CST8281 Course Homepage</title>
<meta name="Keywords" content=”Fundamentals, HTML, CSS”>
<meta name="Description" content=”An introductory course
dealing with computer and Internet fundamentals.">
<meta name="GENERATOR" content="Arachnophilia 5.4">
</head>
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HTML - <meta> - continued
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elements of <meta> include:
– name=string identifies what type of meta content will follow
– content=string details relating to the name
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<meta> can also be used to have your page automatically
load another web page after a short delay:
<meta http-equiv="refresh" content="10; url=index.html">
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note the attribute name: http-equiv=”refresh”
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the content= string begins with number of seconds
before next page is loaded, followed by a
semicolon, then url= giving the URL of the next
page to be loaded
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HTML – <meta> - charset – Character Set
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Use <meta> to set the character set for the HTML page
– needed to pass W3C validation without warnings
<meta http-equiv=”Content-Type”
content=”text/html; charset=UTF-8”>
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also frequently used: charset=iso-8859-1
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iso-8859-1 is “Latin-1” and includes French
Latin-1 common in North America, Western Europe
but UTF-8 includes all languages (preferred)
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HTML – Identify/Group Tags
Identifying and Grouping elements (e.g. for CSS)
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<div>...</div>
– division or section
– groups and identifies one or more block-elements
– usually causes a line break before and after
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<span>...</span>
– groups and identifies in-line elements (e.g. words)
– no visual change by itself (no line break)
– used to apply styles to parts of a text line, e.g.
This <span style=”color: red”>red</span> apple.
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HTML – Entities (Special Characters)
HTML Entities – for special characters, accents, foreign
– starts with ampersand and ends with semicolon
&nbsp; non-breaking-space – acts like a letter
– words connected with &nbsp; will not separate
across a line break; they stay together as one word
– e.g. Mr.&nbsp;Ian!&nbsp;D.&nbsp;Allen
&lt; (less than) = <
&gt; (greater than) = >
&quot; (double quote) = " &apos; (apostrophe) = '
&amp; (ampersand) = &
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many, many others!
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