The Best Practice Guide to XHTML and CSS by Patrick Griffiths
December 25, 2018
0 Komen
The Best Practice Guide to XHTML and CSS by Patrick Griffiths |
Download The Best Practice Guide to XHTML and CSS by Patrick Griffiths easily in PDF format for free.
A good website follows conventions to keep users happy and
responsive. I can only assume that a good web design book should do the
same. So here are some people “without whom this would not have been
possible.” Or something like that... To my mother, for her share of my
genetic material and all of the environmental stuff, for buying me my
first computer, for putting up with my Kevin & Perry teenage crap,
and, most of all, for forbidding me to get a Michael Jackson perm at the
age of 10, ta, Ma. Even though her grasp of language is somewhat
limited, for frequently walking across my keyboard Nutmeg, the feline
member of the family, should probably have a co-author credit.
At
least blame any typos on her. I am proud to be a member of such an
open, intelligent, friendly professional community. Andy Budd, Andy
Clarke, Jon Hicks, Jeremy Keith, Drew McLellan, Rich Rutter, Mike
Stenhouse, and the rest of the Britpack (and the mighty Pub Standards,
for that matter) have been an invaluable source of discussion, ideas,
and constructive criticism, and have become good friends to boot. And
there’s a plethora of luminaries further from home who have influenced
me, and this book, in one way or another:
Doug Bowman, Dan Cederholm, Joe Clark, Charles Darwin, Molly
Holzschlag, Steve Krug, Jakob Nielsen, Valentino Rossi, and Jeffrey
Zeldman in particular. Through raising awareness, it’s due to many of
these people (and many more), and organizations like the Web Standards
Project (webstandards.org) that the quality web design landscape is a
much lusher one now than it was even a few years ago, so thanks are due
not only for their influence, but for making books like this, and
interest in them, possible. Dan Webb (danwebb.net) has been the single
most influential person when it comes to HTML Dog (site, book, and
philosophy).
From working together on numerous projects across
the years to idle pub banter (across even more years), Dan is the first
person I talked with about web standards, long before the emergence of
that hat-wearing dude’s little orange book, the person I have discussed
around 43,082.6 aspects of web design with, from liquid layouts to
accessibility to Microformats to the absurdity of the term Web 2.0, and
the person who has proofread, edited, tested, and critiqued pretty much
every single article and website that I have ever been involved in.
Cheers, Dan. I’ve had a little something to do with a bash called
@media (vivabit.com/atmedia) for almost as long as the HTML Dog book
project. Thanks to everyone who has made that possible, including all of
those who have attended it. It has been a great example of a genuine
appetite for pushing best-practice web design and development to their
limits, and it has kept my enthusiasm and passion for the subject fresh.
@media and HTML Dog are my babies, so they must be related. I have
always regarded New Riders as by far the best, most discerning, and most
respectable publisher of Web-related books.
It has been a
roller-coaster ride, but I am very proud to finally be a published New
Riders author alongside so many great Web heavyweights. So, to the
publisher, and extended family and friends, thanks to David Fugate,
Linda Bump Harrison, Darcy DiNucci, Marjorie Baer, Nancy Davis, Joe
Marini, Doug Adrianson, and everyone else involved in building this
quality culturally infused slab of ink-sprinkled reconstituted plant
fibers.
Get Copy From Your Book Here
Any question or need any help, please feel free to contact us.
Any question or need any help, please feel free to contact us.
0 Response to "The Best Practice Guide to XHTML and CSS by Patrick Griffiths"
Post a Comment