"There is no time for cut-and-dried monotony. There is time for work. And time for love. That leaves no other time!"Coco Chanel
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Create and deploy a website from start to finish! Create and deploy a website from start to finish!Need a website for small business, church, sports team, or community but don't know where to start? Don't have the time or maybe even the knowledge on how to build and or publish a website? Well let me say ...
More Subscribers Through Pop-Up Windows And Joint Ventures Pop-up windows are small windows which automatically appear whenyou visit or leave a website. You've probably seen one at somepoint as they are not very uncommon, and for a good reason.Pop-up windows are effective! They get in your face, grab ...
Search Engine Strategies for Mini-Sites Search Engine Strategies for Mini-Sites by Dan ThiesOne of the most popular marketing concepts today is the "mini-site." A mini-site is essentially a one-page sales letter, linked to an order form, specifically designed to sell a single product or ...
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HTML is a relatively simple language, but that doesn't stop people from having problems with it. Why is that? It's mainly because, while the HTML tags themselves are easy, creating an HTML document that works as intended on a web server requires you to know a few extra things that aren't often explained. Here, then, is a guide to understanding those parts of HTML that they just don't tell you about in the books. Step 1: Understand Doctypes. It isn't often noted that valid HMTL documents don't actually start with the tag – they have one extra tag before it. This is the doctype, and it must be present right at the top of your document for it to be valid HTML. There are only really two doctypes that you really need to know about. The HTML4 doctype looks like this: The XHTML one looks like this: These versions of the doctypes that are a little more forgiving – if you're a purist, you can use the strict ones instead by changing the words 'transitional' and 'loose' to 'strict'. But what is the doctype for? Well, its purpose is simple enough: it tells web browsers exactly what version of HTML your page was written in, to help them to interpret it correctly. Step 2: Understand HTTP Errors. A truly shocking number of people writing HTML pages don't know how HTTP works – and they quickly run into trouble because of it. HTTP is the way a web browser communicates with a web server, and this communication includes information about your pages, such as cookies. You don't need to worry too much about the internals of HTTP, but it's worth knowing that it works by the browser sending a request to the server for a certain page, and the server then responding with a code. Your website should be set up to handle error codes well. For example, a 404 (page not found) error should show a page with links to the most useful parts of your site. Other common error codes include: 200 - OK 301 - Page moved. 403 - Forbidden (no authorisation to access). 500 - Internal server error. For more information, visit www.w3.org/protocols. Step 3: Understand MIME Types. MIME types are another part of the HTML header – an important one. Also known as the content-type header, they tell the browser what kind of file they are about to send. Browsers don't rely on HTML files ending in .html, JPEG images ending in .jpeg, and so on: they rely on the content-type header. If you don't know about this, you can have problems if you need to configure your server to send anything unusual. Here are some common MIME types: text/html - HTML. text/css - CSS text/plain - plain text. image/gif - GIF image. image/jpeg - JPEG image. image/png - PNG image. audio/mpeg - MP3 audio file. application/x-shockwave-flash - Flash movie. Step 4: Understand Link Paths. One of the hardest things to understand about HTML is all the different things that you can put in an 'href' property. Abbreviated URLs are created using the rules of old text-based operating systems, and there are plenty of people writing HTML today who are completely unfamiliar with these rules. Here are some examples. For each one, the assumption is that the link is on a page at http://www.example.com/example1/example1.html. - links to http://www.example.com/example1/example2.html - links to http://www.example.com/example1/example2.html - links to http://www.example.com/example2.html - links to http://www.example.com/example2.html - links to http://www.example.com/ - links to http://www.example.com/example1 To put it simply, one dot means "in the folder we're in now", while two dots means "in the folder above the one we're in now". This can get confusing fast – just look at the difference one dot can make! Be careful with it. Step 5: Understand How to Insert Things That Aren't HTML. One of the most common HTML questions is how to insert things like Javascript and CSS into an HTML document. This is one of the easiest questions to answer: you simply use the link and script tags, like this: About The Author John Bradford is a Premier Web Designer, With more then 10 years of experience. Currently maintaining www.netking.info/webdesign Website With Free Web Design Articles.
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Warning: Call-time pass-by-reference has been deprecated - argument passed by value; If you would like to pass it by reference, modify the declaration of xml_set_object(). If you would like to enable call-time pass-by-reference, you can set allow_call_time_pass_reference to true in your INI file. However, future versions may not support this any longer. in /mnt/web7/31/89/51742389/htdocs/javascript/rss1.php on line 36

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US election at-a-glance: 7 OctBBC News, UK - 53 minutes agoPlease turn on JavaScript. Media requires JavaScript to play. "For my mother to die of cancer at the age of 53 and have to spend the last months of her life ... |
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