September 2002
Intermediate to advanced
480 pages
15h 30m
English
Because mobile devices (like cell phones) are so small and their connection to the Internet is so slow (and costly), they are just not very good at browsing regular Web pages, written with (X)HTML and full of complex layouts and striking images (not to mention sounds, videos, and Flash animations).
Instead, the standard language for writing Web pages for mobile devices is WML, or Wireless Markup Language. Based on XML—indeed, it’s an application of XML—WML insists you follow the same syntax rules that you’ve learned for XHTML: lowercase tag and attribute names, quoted attributes, end tags, in short, valid and well-formed documents. In addition, WML asks that you be extremely careful about size. Images ...
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