is a tag in hyper text markup language (html). You type the "code" in a text program like this:
Web page headline.
Now my web page has a one-line paragraph.
save the text as myWebPageFile.html
use a broswer to see the words above without the tags.
2006-10-30 06:16:52
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answer #1
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answered by Anonymous
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The body of a web page is essentially the content that you see shown. The other major part of the web page is the header which contains information about the page, such as the title or links to other stylesheets.
The body is basically everything you can see.
2006-10-30 14:25:11
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answer #2
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answered by Clint P 2
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No Information
THIS IS THE BODY
2006-10-30 19:07:27
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answer #3
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answered by catfacts3192 1
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is one of the two major sections that goes inside (the other is ). is the section that holds everything that is actually displayed. All the text, headers, tables, etc are in the section.
2006-10-30 14:17:40
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answer #4
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answered by DanE 7
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Where all your information that will be displayed on the website goes (content).
2006-10-30 14:11:30
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answer #5
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answered by scott p 3
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everything you see displayed on a page is the body. this includes the title header and everything below it. are you trying to learn html?
â
â
LEARN HTML/XHTML/CSS â
â
â Here are examples that you can experiment with right on the web site. Even though you can experiment here you cannot save the results to your computer unless you copy and paste the code into windows notepad and click on FILE/SAVE AS. In the save as box where it says file name type in the name you want to five the file. Now type .html on to the end of that name. Find the place you want to save it to then click on the SAVE button.
â HTML Examples
â http://www.w3schools.com/html/html_examples.asp
â Cascading Style Sheets Examples
â http://www.w3schools.com/css/css_examples.asp
â These pages will help you understand what HTML tags(commands) and their attributes you can use in your pages.
â http://www.w3schools.com/tags/default.asp
â These pages will help you understand what Cascading Style Sheets Rules and their attributes you can use in your pages.
â http://www.w3schools.com/css/css_reference.asp
â Don't be surprised if you don't learn HTML/CSS very fast. Most of us took years to learn to use it proficiently. Even now after 10 years I still don't know it all since it keeps changing all the time. Now instead of HTML we have XHTML and XML. If they keep making it more difficult none of use will be able to write our own code by hand anymore. We will have to use a WYSIWYG HTML editor that writes the coding for you while you drag and drop objects around on the page.
â After you have experimented some on that site then do the following.
==============================================
â Learn HTML/XHTML & CSS - Learn to write your own pages by hand it's easy.
â FREE! HTML/XHTML/CSS Editor:
â http://www.chami.com/html-kit/
â FREE! Online Courses:
A) Webmonkey HTML Tutorial http://www.webmonkey.com/
B) W3schools http://www.w3schools.com/
C) Watch it done in a flash movie http://visualtutorials.com/
D) Free Web Design Certification Courses http://certification.about.com/cs/testingresources/a/tutorials.htm
â Reference:
A) The best HTML/XHTML reference http://www.w3schools.com/tags/
B) The best Style Sheet Reference http://www.w3schools.com/css/css_reference.asp
C) HTML Dom http://www.w3schools.com/htmldom/dom_reference.asp'
â Links:
A) HTML Links http://www.websitetips.com/html/
B) Style Sheet Links http://www.websitetips.com/css/
â ALWAYS CHECK THE REFERENCE PAGES TO MAKE CERTAIN YOU ARE WRITING YOUR SOURCE CODE THE CORRECT WAY! JUST BECAUSE YOU SAW SOME SOURCE CODE WRITTEN A PARTICULAR WAY IN SOMEONE ELSE'S PAGE DOESN'T MEAN THEY WROTE IT CORRECTLY. MORE OFTEN THAN NOT YOU'LL FIND THAT THEY DIDN'T WRITE IT CORRECTLY. BUT LOOKING AT OTHER PEOPLE'S SOURCE CODE IS STILL A GOOD WAY TO LEARN. IF SOURCE CODE ISN'T WRITTEN THE CORRECT WAY IT CAN CAUSE OBJECTS TO BE DISPLAYED IN PLACES YOU DON'T WANT THEM IN OR EVEN CRASH SOMEONE'S BROWSER. NETSCAPOE 4.X USERS ARE THE MOST VULNERABLE TO CRASHING. MOST OF THE TIME BROWSERS ARE VERY FORGIVING WHEN IT COMES TO BAD SOURCE CODE. BUT WHY TAKE CHANCES. THE MORE CORRECTLY YOU WRITE YOUR PAGES THE MORE BROWSERS THEY WILL WORK WITH.
â Paid Online Web Design Certification Courses - For beginners and professionals.
â http://www.hwg.org/
â FREE! HTML/XHTML Editor:
â http://www.chami.com/html-kit/
â FREE! FTP Clients (applications):
â http://www.trustmeher.net/freeware/cute.htm
â You'll find hundreds of free online web tools here http://dwight.clickthesky.com/webtools/ Use them to generate HTML/CSS/JavaScript source code for you then simply paste it into your pages. There are also Banner makers, site maintenance utilities and many many more.
â NOTE: Free web-based FTP for people that aren't using their own computer or don't want to install a ftp client on their computer. I use this wonderful utility nearly everyday. You can do everything with this client that you can do with an installed one. There are two modes, secure server and non-secure server. I prefer the secure server. This is a Java Applet so you'll need Java installed on your computer to use it. Most PCs come with it pre-installed.
â Unlimited FTP https://www.unlimitedftp.ca/myftp/
â When FTPing files from your computer to your online account send text files, HTML/XHTML files, CSS files in the ascii mode. Send image files, movie files, music files in the binary mode. There is an automatic mode that is supposed to detect the type of file you are sending. But it isn't always reliable.
*** HERE IS HOW I LEARNED HTML/XHTML/CSS ***
â When you come to a page on the web click "VIEW" at the top of your browser and click on "SOURCE". If you are using Internet Explorer browser the HTML source code will open up in Windows Notepad. In Notepad click on "FILE/SAVE AS" to save the page's source code to your hard drive. In Internet Explorer click on "FILE/OPEN" to open the source code in the browser. Go back to notepad and remove some of the code and click "SAVE". Then in Internet Explorer hold down the "SHIFT" key and click on the "REFRESH" button on the browser's toolbar to see what effect the removed source code had on the page. You will learn a hundred times faster this way.
â Something to think about later is.......After you have gotten a little experience with HTML try DOCTYPE, XHTML, and CSS. Then try to validate your pages. Validating checks your source code for coding errors. validating will not work unless you are using the correct doctype and the correct document encoding. Validating is not something a newcomer should bother with. Being new you will make lots of mistakes and won't know how to fix them yet. http://validator.w3.org/
â Many libraries world-wide have books related to the Internet, Web and computers in general. They also have CDs and DVDs. Go to your local public library and get the username and password for http://www.firstsearch.org/ You have to get them at your library because that is where you will pick up and return the books after reading them. You can look up the book yourself but they will have to order it for you. Sometimes this can take awhile if the book is checked out by someone else. After reading the books and making copies of certain pages with a photo copier simply return it to them.
â By using Firstsearch you can search for any book in the world. Some libraries might charge a small fee but most are free. Even if they charge a fee it will be less than the cost of the book or other item you are ordering. Every Web Design book I have read was acquired in this fashion. :)
2006-10-30 14:25:07
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answer #6
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answered by Anonymous
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