November 2000
Intermediate to advanced
384 pages
8h 8m
English
Back at the beginning of this book, in Chapter 1, "XHTML Fundamentals," we talked about how the W3C recognized it needed some sort of transition between the HTML most Web authors were used to working with, and XML, the new language that provided a framework for customized language definitions and new markup vocabularies. The job of making that transition was given to XHTML. XHTML 1.0 takes on many of the traits of XML, while retaining backward compatibility with HTML 4, acting as that metaphoric bridge between the two technologies.
This chapter teaches you:
How XML provides more freedom for document authors
What constitutes well-formedness
How languages can be defined using document type definitions
How a ...
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