Chapter 1. HTML, XHTML, and the World Wide Web
Section 1.2. Talking the Internet Talk
Section 1.3. HTML and XHTML: What They Are
Section 1.4. HTML and XHTML: What They Aren't
Section 1.5. Standards and Extensions
Section 1.6. Tools for the Web Designer
Section 2.2. A First HTML Document
Section 2.5. The Flesh on an HTML or XHTML Document
Section 2.8. Images Are Special
Section 2.9. Lists, Searchable Documents, and Forms
Section 2.12. Style Sheets and JavaScript
Chapter 3. Anatomy of an HTML Document
Section 3.1. Appearances Can Deceive
Section 3.2. Structure of an HTML Document
Section 3.3. Tags and Attributes
Section 3.4. Well-Formed Documents and XHTML
Section 3.6. HTML/XHTML Document Elements
Section 3.7. The Document Header
Section 3.8. The Document Body
Section 4.1. Divisions and Paragraphs
Section 4.3. Changing Text Appearance and Meaning
Section 4.4. Content-Based Style Tags
Section 4.5. Physical Style Tags
Section 4.6. Precise Spacing and Layout
Section 4.9. Special Character Encoding
Section 4.10. HTML's Obsolete Expanded Font Handling
Chapter 5. Rules, Images, and Multimedia
Section 5.2. Inserting Images in Your Documents
Section 5.3. Document Colors and Background Images
Section 5.6. Other Multimedia Content
Section 6.2. Referencing Documents: The URL
Section 6.3. Creating Hyperlinks
Section 6.4. Creating Effective Links
Section 6.5. Mouse-Sensitive Images
Section 6.6. Creating Searchable Documents
Section 6.8. Supporting Document Automation
Section 7.6. Appropriate List Usage
Chapter 8. Cascading Style Sheets
Section 8.1. The Elements of Styles
Section 8.5. Tagless Styles: The <span> Tag
Section 8.6. Applying Styles to Documents
Section 9.1. Form Fundamentals
Section 9.3. A Simple Form Example
Section 9.4. Using Email to Collect Form Data
Section 9.7. Multiline Text Areas
Section 9.8. Multiple Choice Elements
Section 9.9. General Form-Control Attributes
Section 9.10. Labeling and Grouping Form Elements
Section 9.11. Creating Effective Forms
Section 9.12. Forms Programming
Section 10.1. The Standard Table Model
Section 10.2. Basic Table Tags
Section 10.3. Advanced Table Tags
Section 10.4. Beyond Ordinary Tables
Section 11.1. An Overview of Frames
Section 11.5. The <noframes> Tag
Section 11.7. Named Frame or Window Targets
Chapter 12. Executable Content
Section 12.1. Applets and Objects
Section 12.2. Embedded Content
Section 12.4. JavaScript Style Sheets (Antiquated)
Section 13.1. An Overview of Dynamic Documents
Section 13.2. Client-Pull Documents
Section 13.3. Server -Push Documents
Chapter 14. Netscape Layout Extensions
Section 14.1. Creating Whitespace
Section 14.2. Multicolumn Layout
Section 15.1. Languages and Metalanguages
Section 15.2. Documents and DTDs
Section 15.3. Understanding XML DTDs
Section 15.5. Element Attributes
Section 15.6. Conditional Sections
Section 15.7. Building an XML DTD
Section 16.2. Creating XHTML Documents
Section 16.3. HTML Versus XHTML
Section 16.5. Should You Use XHTML?
Chapter 17. Tips, Tricks, and Hacks
Section 17.2. Cleaning Up After Your HTML Editor
Section 17.3. Tricks with Tables
Section 17.4. Transparent Images
Section 17.5. Tricks with Windows and Frames
Section A.1. Grammatical Conventions
Appendix B. HTML/XHTML Tag Quick Reference
Section B.2. HTML Quick Reference
Appendix C. Cascading Style Sheet Properties Quick Reference
Appendix F. Character Entities
Appendix G. Color Names and Values
Section G.3. The Standard Color Map