Why You Shouldn’t Be Using XHTML
By DanielA lot of people these days are using XHTML. Why? Do they actually need it or are they just following a trend?
A lot of people these days are using XHTML. Why? Do they actually need it or are they just following a trend?
So you’ve made a beautiful Wordpress Theme, and you want to make some cash off of it.
Upon the release of Google Chrome, which made waves around the internet, the seemingly long list of things using webkit got a little bit longer. With Google’s entry to the market, Webkit is going to gain even more marketshare, possibly lighting a fire under Mozilla.
Sometimes I am browsing a website with a gorgeous design, it has everything: Gorgeous colors, a beautiful header, Excellent articles… but wait, where’s the favicon? I tab over to something else I am reading and have to search around my tab bar for that website again. Bleh. Favicons can be the most often overlooked element of a good site design.
These days you hear a lot about web standards and semantics. What do semantics mean? Is it really important to know and use in web design?
You’ve got your fancy form all styled up and pretty, the only thing left is the submit button. Feverishly you get to work in Photoshop creating a gorgeous submit button for your form. But when you implement it you encounter some issues.
Today I’d like to talk about an often overlooked element in html, the Definition List.