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1 What is the Internet?  a network of networks – an inter-network, or Internet What are Internet protocols?  the rules for transferring information between.

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Presentation on theme: "1 What is the Internet?  a network of networks – an inter-network, or Internet What are Internet protocols?  the rules for transferring information between."— Presentation transcript:

1 1 What is the Internet?  a network of networks – an inter-network, or Internet What are Internet protocols?  the rules for transferring information between programs  HTTP - hypertext transfer protocol  FTP - file transfer protocol  SMTP – simple mail transfer protocol What is the World Wide Web?  a set of HTML pages accessible using the HTTP protocol Internet / Protocols / WWW

2 2 How does a Web Browser (Firefox) fit in this picture? - your browser connects, using the HTTP protocol, to a web server - the web server fetches an HTML web page and sends the HTML to your browser - your browser turns the HTML page into a nice-looking page on your screen How the WWW Works Your computer, Your web browser e.g. Firefox Internet connection Internet Routers Text file containing an HTML web page Their computer, Their web server (an HTTP server) e.g. Apache /mypage.html

3 3 Hyper Text Markup Language - HTML Hyper Text Markup Language (HTML) Basics  HTML is a “mark-up language” You add the mark-up tags to your text document  Now follows a published standard via http://w3c.org/http://w3c.org/  HTML is a language of mark-up “tags” in angle brackets: <> each tag has a name and may have one or more quoted attributes eg.  Tags usually come in pairs (with some exceptions)...,...,...,,  Web pages are free-form input; line breaks can be used most anywhere and don't affect the appearance of the document Yes, your entire page could be a single line of text!

4 4 … (Required!)  Basic tag to identify portion of file that contains HTML  is an opening tag  is a closing tag (note the direction of the slash!)  text between the opening and closing tag is called the “element” … (Required!)  placed at the top of document immediately after the tag  tags information about the document, e.g. author, style, etc.  contains the required document... tag HTML – Required Tags

5 5 … (Required!)  included as an element inside the … section  element of this tag is the title displayed in title bar of the browser  may also be used as title of page when page is bookmarked  should be meaningful and uniquely identify the page … (Required!)  included as the second element inside the … tags.  follows the … portion of the document  contains the information to be displayed in the browser window  any attributes set on this tag will apply to the entire page

6 6 HTML – Required Tags … (Required!)  included as an element inside the … section  Surrounds a paragraph of text DOCTYPE (Required!)  Must be the very first line of your file, before  NOT an HTML tag; it is an instruction to your web browser  Tells the browser what version of HTML to expect  In this course we use only the “strict” HTML version 4.01 type: <!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01//EN" "http://www.w3.org/TR/html4/strict.dtd">

7 7 HTML – Required Tags That's all you need for a basic web page! <!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01//EN" "http://www.w3.org/TR/html4/strict.dtd"> My Title This is my first web page.

8 8 HTML - Basic Tags More useful basic tags: (no closing tag needed)  put a line break in the text (starts a new line) … through...  used to identify text as a Level 1 (major) to Level 6 (minor) heading Comment Tag  notice that the comment is typed as an attribute inside the tag  comments may be one or multiple lines long (HTML is free-form)  text within this tag will not be displayed or processed by your browser  comments do not nest! No comments inside comments! --  The comment may not contain two (or more) adjacent dashes, e.g. --

9 9 HTML - Basic Tags The Anchor Tag – Hyper Linking - making the web a web …  one major attribute – the location of the hyperlink: href=”string”  element is clickable/selectable as a document hyperlink  browser attempts to load the page specified by the href= attribute  the href= string can be a relative URL on the same server: without the leading http://host/ it is in the same directory structure: e.g. Click here to continue e.g. See the box here. e.g. Click here

10 10 HTML - Basic Tags … anchor tag continued  The href= string can be an absolute URL on any server: string can be any HTTP URL (web address) you like: e.g. Free Software http://www.gnu.org/philosophy/  The href= string can be an email address: string can be an email address preceded by “mailto:” e.g. Ian! D. Allen email mailto:idallen@idallen.ca Attempts to open an email client (specified in the web browser's options) and places the specified email address in the To: field of a new email message.

11 11 HTML - Basic Tags (no closing tag needed)  used to display graphics (.jpeg,.png,.gif) in your web pages  you must specify the URL for the image source, and an alt= text  the basic attributes of are: src=”string” - the absolute or relative location of the image file alt=”string” - Alternate Text for people who don't see images height=”string” - image height, percent or absolute pixels (optional) width=”string” - image width, percent or absolute pixels (optional) title=”string” - mouse-over title of the image (optional) Etc….  specifying height= and width= lets your browser reserve space in the document to load the image in the background and avoid redrawing the page after the image is fully loaded

12 12 HTML - Basic Tags (no closing tag needed) – Hard/Horizontal Rule – draw a horizontal line – rule appearance can be changed with styles … – block quotation, indented … – a short, in-line “quotation as part of running text” … – preformatted text (e.g. computer code or output) – fixed-width font (e.g. Courier fixed width ) – preserves spaces and line breaks

13 13 Font-style tags – for more control, use CSS instead … and … – bold and italic text (in-line) … – Teletype Text: fixed-width font (e.g. Courier ) … and … – bigger and smaller text (in-line) HTML - Basic Tags

14 14 HTML - Phrase Tags Phrase tags – often better done using CSS … and... – text to be emphasized and strongly emphasized – browser decides how: usually italicized, made bold Less often used:...,...,... – computer code, sample code, keyboard text – usually rendered in Courier fixed-width font

15 15 The element and the style= attribute The style= attribute can be used on most tags – defines features for a single HTML element, e.g. Center me. The element:... – tag always goes in the section – defines style information for the whole HTML page – requires the type=”text/css” attribute – more details to come in the description of CSS – to link to a separate CSS style sheet, use instead: HTML – Style Element/Attribute

16 Apple Pear Kiwi Big Small Apple Pear Kiwi Big Small HTML - Lists Lists – Unordered List and Ordered List

17 17 HTML - Basic Tags … – List Item: surrounds each list item inside a list – used inside both and list types … – surrounds an unordered list – no numbering –... items each indented and bulleted – use styles (style= attribute) to change type of bullet: – CSS style: list-style-type: string string can be: circle, disc, square e.g.... HTML – Unordered Lists

18 18 HTML – Ordered Lists … – surrounds an ordered list – items are indented and numbered (or alphabetized) – use styles (style=) to change type of numbering: – CSS style: list-style-type: string examples of string: decimal, lower-alpha, upper-roman e.g.... – the start= attribute determines first item's value e.g. - begin numbering at 3 (or c, or iii) but this is deprecated, with no CSS replacement! http://www.w3schools.com/tags/att_ol_start.asp

19 19 HTML – Definition List … – definition list containing and items –... definition title –... definition description Example definition list containing two definitions: Hacker An expert or enthusiast of any kind. Cracker An intruder into computer systems.

20 20 HTML - - Page Attributes (no closing tag needed) – used only inside section of page – gives details about page, e.g. author, keywords – search engines may ignore keywords, since many pages use fake keywords to boost search results CST8281 Course Homepage

21 21 HTML - - continued elements of include: – name=string identifies what type of meta content will follow – content=string details relating to the name can also be used to have your page automatically load another web page after a short delay: – note the attribute name: http-equiv=”refresh” – the content= string begins with number of seconds before next page is loaded, followed by a semicolon, then url= giving the URL of the next page to be loaded

22 22 Use to set the character set for the HTML page – needed to pass W3C validation without warnings also frequently used: charset=iso-8859-1 – iso-8859-1 is “Latin-1” and includes French – Latin-1 common in North America, Western Europe – but UTF-8 includes all languages (preferred) HTML – - charset – Character Set

23 23 Identifying and Grouping elements (e.g. for CSS)... – division or section – groups and identifies one or more block-elements – usually causes a line break before and after... – groups and identifies in-line elements (e.g. words) – no visual change by itself (no line break) – used to apply styles to parts of a text line, e.g. This red apple. HTML – Identify/Group Tags

24 24 HTML Entities – for special characters, accents, foreign – starts with ampersand and ends with semicolon non-breaking-space – acts like a letter – words connected with will not separate across a line break; they stay together as one word – e.g. Mr. Ian! D. Allen < (less than) = " (double quote) = " &apos; (apostrophe) = ' & (ampersand) = & – many, many others! HTML – Entities (Special Characters)


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