November 2000
Intermediate to advanced
384 pages
8h 8m
English
The power of the Extensible Hypertext Markup Language certainly lies in its extensibility. XML offers document authors the ultimate extensibility in allowing them to create entirely new markup languages using whichever design principles they find the most compelling. For those of us who just need to get some work done, however, re-inventing the wheel—even if it meant doing so in a way that we liked better than how the originators did it—uses an awful lot of time and energy.
So, we'll use the power of extensibility and the comfort of HTML to create new document types for our own purposes. An online recipe archive presents just this sort of challenge. HTML provides the basic text features we'll want to ...
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