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WRITING HTML WAS CREATED to help teachers
create learning resources that access information on the
Internet. Here, you will be writing a lesson called
Volcano Web. However, this tutorial may be used by
anyone who wants to create web pages. You can get a sense of
the results by looking at our illustrious alumni
and kudos
or what people say about the tutorial.
By the time you have reached the end of this tutorial you
will be able to construct a series of linked web pages for any
subject that includes formatted text, pictures, and hypertext
links to other web pages on the Internet. If you follow the
steps for the Basic Level (lessons 1-14) you will develop a page
about volcanoes and if you go on to the Advanced Level
(lessons 15-29), you will create an enhanced volcano
web site.
For faster performance, you can download
an archive of all files used in this tutorial as well as a printable
version of the lessons. Most of the lessons can be done
off-line. If you are having trouble connecting to this site,
try our experimental servers, Azurite
or Realgar
but please be nice to these machines; they are doing other
work for us. |
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THE WEB IS BECOMING AN INTEGRAL PART of
our working (and playing) world. You cannot spit anymore these
days without hitting a URL (if you do not know what a URL is,
you will find out here). In a very short time span, the web
has revolutionized the way we access information, education,
business, entertainment. It has created industries where there
were none before.
Being able to develop information on the web might be a job
skill, a class requirement, a business necessity, or a
personal interest. Unlike any other previous medium, the
ability to "write" HTML allows you to potentially connect with
millions of other people, as your own
self-publisher. |
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IN THESE LESSONS YOU WILL:
- identify and use different HTML formatting codes.
- create and modify HTML documents using a simple text
editor.
- write a series of web pages that present information,
graphics, and provide hypertext links to other documents on
the Internet.
And maybe you will have some fun! |
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PUT MOST SIMPLY, HTML,
is a format that tells a computer how to display a web page.
The documents themselves are plain text files (ASCII) with
special "tags" or codes that a web browser knows how to
interpret and display on your screen.
This tutorial teaches you how to create web pages the
old-fashioned way -- by hand. There are software "tools" that
allow you to spin web pages without touching any HTML. But if
you are serious about doing more than a page or two, we
believe a grounding in the basics will greatly accelerate what
you can do.
Everything you create in this tutorial is designed to run
from any desktop computer; it does not depend on access to a
web server or specialized computer programming. |
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YOU WILL ALSO NEED A TEXT EDITOR PROGRAM
capable of creating plain text files e.g. SimpleText for the
Macintosh or NotePad for Windows. We strongly urge
that you use the most basic text editor while you learn HTML
and then later you can explore HTML "editors" If
you use a word processor program then you
must save your files as plain ASCII text
format. You should also be familiar with switching between
multiple applications as well as using the mouse to copy and
paste selections of text.
If you download
the tutorial files, you can do nearly all of the lessons
off-line.
We suggest that you proceed through the lessons in order,
but at any time you can return to the index to jump to a
different lesson. Within each lesson you can compare your work
to a sample file for that lesson. Each lesson page has a link
to a concise summary of the tags
as well as links to other reference
sites.
For convention, all menu names and items will be shown in
bold text. All text that you should enter
from the keyboard will appear in typewriter style.
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- Use the Favorites or
Bookmark feature of your web browser to
mark the lesson index page so you can easily navigate to
other lessons.
- We've aimed to write instructions generic to (almost)
any web browser; sometimes the menu names
or features may not match the web browser you are using.
- This tutorial will show you how to
create web pages that can see outward to the world. It
will not tell you how to let the world see
them; to do this you need to locate an Internet Service
Provider that provides web server space. Try The List, ISPGuide, SearchAnISP or c|net
Internet Services. Also, you can search for a free web
page hosting service from Freewebspace.net
- Creating pages is one thing, designing web sites is
another. We cannot highly enough recommend the Yale C/aIM WWW
Style Manual. Sun Microsystem's Guide to Web
Style, and the Sevloid
Guide to Web Design.
- When you are ready for the big time, see web pages like
you have never seen web pages at Dave Siegel's Casbah and High Five sites. Trudge
on over to his Web Wonk
to get the details. It will amaze you.
- Refer to the HTML tag
summary page as a reference. You can get to it by
following the hypertext link at the top of every lesson
page.
- If you are having trouble, see the Writing HTML FAQ
(Frequently Asked Questions) before writing us for help. We
get lots and lots of e-mail. Too much.
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THIS IS A PROJECT of the Maricopa Center for
Learning and Instruction (MCLI). Writing HTML was
developed by Alan
Levine, instructional technologist at the Maricopa Community
Colleges. Our former intern, Tom Super, provided
invaluable instructional design support. Many others have
given helpful suggestions, corrected typos, and expressed
their thanks!
Once your web pages become available on the Internet,
please list them on our Writing
HTML Alumni page using our registration
form.
Thanks to some great volunteer efforts, Writing HTML is
also available in other languages:
Or you can try the online translation tools from AltaVista's
Babelfish:
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IF YOU ARE READY, go to the index
of lessons or go directly to the first
lesson.
h a p p y w e b b i n g
And have fun.
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