November 2000
Intermediate to advanced
384 pages
8h 8m
English
There's no doubt that HTML has been embraced as a powerful means of producing documents for the World Wide Web. Its success was fed by the myriad of new features introduced over each successive version. Even so, it was still very much limited by the elements and attributes defined in the HTML Recommendations. Web authors clearly saw the need for more freedom in defining structures and behaviors for those structures beyond the bounds of HTML.
This chapter teaches you:
How modularization works
How to group elements into abstract modules
How to understand the DTD implementation of an abstract module
How to combine predefined modules into a new DTD
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