Learn Enough Html, Css and Layout to Be Dangerous: An Introduction to Modern Website Creation and Templating Systems
- Length: 672 pages
- Edition: 1
- Language: English
- Publisher: Addison-Wesley Professional
- Publication Date: 2022-08-02
- ISBN-10: 0137843100
- ISBN-13: 9780137843107
- Sales Rank: #0 (See Top 100 Books)
All You Need to Know, and Nothing You Don’t, to Start Creating and Deploying Web Sites
To design, build, and deploy modern websites, you need three core skills: the ability to write and edit HTML, wield CSS to control page design, and create efficient web layouts that serve users well. But you don’t need to learn everything about HTML, CSS and web layout, just how to use them efficiently to solve real problems. In Learn Enough HTML, CSS and Layout to Be Dangerous, expert developer Lee Donahoe and renowned instructor Michael Hartl teach the specific concepts, skills, and approaches you need to get the job done.
Even if you’ve never created a web page, the authors help you quickly build technical sophistication and master the lore you need to succeed. Focused exercises help you internalize what matters, without wasting time on details pros don’t care about. Soon, it’ll be like you were born knowing this stuff–and you’ll be suddenly, seriously dangerous.
Learn enough about . . .
- Deploying a simple but real website to the live Web right away
- Adding advanced styling to websites, including CSS Flexbox and CSS Grid
- Installing and configuring Jekyll, a static site generator
- Getting started with templating systems and programming languages
- Mastering key layout principles for web design
- Registering and configuring custom domains, with custom URLs and email addresses
- Receiving email at your domain with Google’s G Suite
- Setting up analytics to better understand your site’s visitors
- Making all these technologies work well together
Michael Hartl’s Learn Enough series includes books and video courses that focus on the most important parts of each subject, so you don’t have to learn everything to get started–you just have to learn enough to be dangerous and solve technical problems yourself.
Cover Page Title Page Contents Table of Contents Preface HyperText Markup Language Cascading Style Sheets and PageLayout Custom Domains Additional Features Final Thoughts Learn Enough Scholarships Part I: Hypertext Markup Language Chapter 1. Basic HTML 1.1 Introduction 1.2 HTML Tags 1.3 Starting the Project 1.4 The First Tag 1.5 An HTML Skeleton Chapter 2. Filling in the Index Page 2.1 Headings 2.2 Text Formatting 2.3 Links 2.4 Adding Images Chapter 3. More Pages, More Tags 3.1 An HTML Page About HTML 3.2 Tables 3.3 Divs and Spans 3.4 Lists 3.5 A Navigation Menu Chapter 4. Inline Styling 4.1 Text Styling 4.2 Floats 4.3 Applying a Margin 4.4 More Margin Tricks 4.5 Box Styling 4.6 Navigation Styling 4.7 A Taste of CSS 4.8 Conclusion Part II: Cascading Style Sheets and Page Layout Chapter 5. Introduction to CSS 5.1 You’re a Front-End Developer 5.2 CSS Overview and History 5.3 Sample Site Setup 5.4 Start Stylin’ 5.5 CSS Selectors Chapter 6. The Style of Style 6.1 Naming Things 6.2 When and Why 6.3 Priority and Specificity 6.4 How to Be a Good Styling Citizen Chapter 7. CSS Values: Color and Sizing 7.1 CSS Color 7.2 Introduction to Sizing 7.3 Pixels (and Their Less-Used Cousin, the Point) 7.4 Percentages 7.5 em 7.6 rem Isn’t Just for Dreaming 7.7 vh, vw: The New(er) Kids on the Block 7.8 Pleasing Fonts Chapter 8. The Box Model 8.1 Inline vs. Block 8.2 Margins, Padding, and Borders 8.3 Floats 8.4 A Little More About the overflow Style 8.5 Inline Block 8.6 Margins for Boxes 8.7 Padding… Not Just for Chairs 8.8 Fun with Borders Chapter 9. Laying It All Out 9.1 Layout Basics 9.2 Jekyll 9.3 Layouts, Includes, and Pages (Oh My!) 9.4 The Layout File 9.5 CSS File and Reset 9.6 Includes Intro: Head and Header 9.7 Advanced Selectors 9.8 Positioning 9.9 Fixed Header 9.10 A Footer, and Includes in Includes Chapter 10. Page Templates and Frontmatter 10.1 Template Content 10.2 There’s No Place Like Home 10.3 More Advanced Selectors 10.4 Other Pages, Other Folders Chapter 11. Specialty Page Layouts with Flexbox 11.1 Having Content Fill a Container 11.2 Vertical Flex Centering 11.3 Flexbox Style Options and Shorthand 11.4 Three-Column Page Layout 11.5 A Gallery Stub Chapter 12. Adding a Blog 12.1 Adding Blog Posts 12.2 Blog Index Content Loop 12.3 A Blog Post Page Chapter 13. Mobile Media Queries 13.1 Getting Started with Mobile Designs 13.2 Mobile Adaptation 13.3 Mobile Viewport 13.4 Dropdown Menu 13.5 Mobile Dropdown Menu Chapter 14. Adding More Little Touches 14.1 Custom Fonts 14.2 Favicons 14.3 Custom Title and Meta Description 14.4 Next Steps Chapter 15. CSS Grid 15.1 CSS Grid at a High Level 15.2 A Simple Grid of Content 15.3 minmax, auto-fit, and auto-fill 15.4 Grid Lines, Areas, and Layouts 15.5 Grid on the Inside 15.6 Conclusion Part III: Custom Domains Chapter 16. A Name of Our Own 16.1 Custom Domain Registration 16.2 Cloudflare Setup 16.3 Custom Domains at GitHub Pages Chapter 17. Custom Email 17.1 Google Mail 17.2 MX Records 17.3 Site Analytics 17.4 Conclusion
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