Introductions to HTML
- http://www.ncsa.uiuc.edu/General/Internet/WWW/HTMLPrimerAll.html
- NCSA's HTML Primer. One of the oldest is also one of the
best. Covers all the basic concepts needed to get started with the HTML language.
Highly recommended starting point.
- http://www.utoronto.ca/webdocs/HTMLdocs/NewHTML/htmlindex.html
- Ian Graham's 'Introduction to HTML'. A thorough treatment and fair
introduction to the language. Topics organized by location in HTML
document structure.
- http://www.cwru.edu/help/introHTML/toc.html
- Case Western Reserve's 'Introduction to HTML'. A great introduction
tutorial to the language but not a great deal of depth on any one topic.
- http://www.cwru.edu/help/interHTML/toc.html
- Case Western Reserve's 'Intermediate HTML'. The sequel to the
previous site goes into more depth on several topics including Forms.
- http://www.hut.fi/~jkorpela/HTML3.2/
- Jukka Korpela's 'Learning HTML 3.2 By Example'. Excellent resource
with both introductory topics and advanced tag reference information.
Based in Finland, but well worth the trip time.
- http://www.mcli.dist.maricopa.edu/tut/
- The Maricopa Center for Learning and Instruction's 'Writing HTML:
A tutorial for creating WWW pages' site. This site has many tutorials
organized in lesson format. A very nice introduction, and it is also
available in Spanish.
- http://www.zdnet.com/pcweek/eamonn/crash_course.html
- Crash Course on Writing Documents for the Web. Does not go
in-depth or get very technical, but it is a good quick &
glossy overview of the subject.
- http://www.projectcool.com/developer/
- 'Project Cool Developer Zone'. A fair introduction and some
very good tips to keep in mind when creating pages. It is a bit
dated though with respect to current HTML practice.
- http://www.ncsa.uiuc.edu/demoweb/url-primer.html
- NCSA's URL primer: 'A beginner's guide to URLs'. Not a general
introduction to HTML, but a good introduction to probably THE
most important topic in HTML.
- http://www.devry-phx.edu/webresrc/webmstry/lrntutrl.htm
- Devry's 'Learning HTML' Resource list. This is a meta-index of links
to many tutorials and guides listed here along with many more to get
you started with HTML.
- http://www.htmlgoodies.com
- Joe Burns 'HTML Goodies' site. Quite a few original primers, articles
and tutorials on many HTML topics. Main page is very tables-intensive
and can take a while to load.
Complete HTML References
- http://www.stars.com/Vlib/
- Alan Richmond's 'Web Developers Virtual Library'.
A MONSTER reference full of information and links on any web
topic desired. Highly recommended.
- http://werbach.com/barebones/index.html
- Kevin Werbach's 'Barebones Guide to HTML'. A good cheat sheet for
current HTML information, and it is available in 20 languages! Very good site.
- http://www.htmlhelp.com
- The Web Design Group (WDG) site. Good overall reference on HTML
containing references on HTML, style sheets, and articles. Very good site.
- http://www.sandia.gov/sci_compute/html_ref.html
- Michael J. Hannah's 'Sandia HTML Reference Manual' originally created
for use by Sandia National Laboratories in creating pages. This reference
is now out of date (last updated January 1996.) Very HTML 3.0 centric.
HTML 3.2 and new browser extensions are not covered at all.
- http://www.htmlcompendium.org/index.htm
- Ron Woodall's 'A Compendium of HTML Elements'. Another
list of tags, brief explanations and who supports them.
- http://www.willcam.com/cmat/html/tags.html
- The Willcam Group's 'Comprehensive HTML Cross Reference'.
Another list of tags, brief explanations and who supports them.
- http://www.hwg.org/resources/
- HTML Writer's guild resource page. Many great links
to tutorials and references for HTML.
- http://www.quadzilla.com/
- DJ Quad's 'Ultimate HTML Site'. A good reference with tag lists, tutorials
(style sheets and tables), editor lists, programming and much more. Worth a
look. Warning: graphics intensive.
- http://utopia.knoware.nl/users/schluter/doc/tags/index.html
- 'Rob Schluter's HTML Tag List' - support listings
(official standards, MSIE, NS and WebTV), descriptions, and examples. This one looks
good but I haven't looked very deeply yet.
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