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    HTML5 and CSS3 Training

    Posted By: Sigha
    HTML5 and CSS3 Training

    HTML5 and CSS3 Training
    Video: .mp4 (1280x720, 30 fps(r)) | Audio: aac, 44100 Hz, 2ch | Size: 4.15 GB
    Genre: eLearning Video | Duration: 17 lectures (11 hour, 4 mins) | Language: English

    Become a Web Developer / Web Designer / Front End Engineer /Architect with this comprehensive training on HTML5 and CSS3

    What you'll learn

    Become a Full Stack Web Developer / Designer / Front-end Engineer
    Downloadable booklet on HTML5 and CSS Interview Questions and Answers
    100+ downloadable HTML code files for practice
    Deep knowledge of HTML5 and CSS3 with practical application projects
    Setting up a website environment
    Understand in detail the programming constructs of HTML5 and CSS3
    Create a proper HTML5 scaffolding for the type of application that you’re creating
    Differences on using HTML5 for web and mobile
    How to correctly markup text so that it is sized properly for various screen sizes and densities
    What is HTML, Difference between HTML and HTML5, Doctypes, Headings, Paragraphs, Text Formatting, Anchors and Hyperlinks, Tables, Lists
    Classes and IDs, Data Attributes, Linking Resources, Include JavaScript Code in HTML
    How to create usable, functional forms to gather data from your users
    What is CSS and how is it used? What is CSS3?
    Using HTML with CSS, Images, Image Maps, Input Control Elements
    CSS Rules, Advanced CSS
    Forms, Div Element, Sectioning Elements
    Navigation Bars, Label Elements, Output Elements, Video and Media Elements, Progress Elements, Selection Menu Elements, Embed
    iframes, Content Languages, SVG, Canvas, Meta Information, Marking up computer code, Marking-up Quotes
    How to embed iFrame content from outside sources and make it fit seamlessly into your HTML5 page
    Tabindex, Global Attributes, HTML5 Cache, HTML Event Attributes, Character Entities, ARIA
    Responsive Web Design, Media Query, HTML Symbols, HTML WebWorkers, HTML WebStorage
    Changing CSS with JavaScript, Structure and Formatting of a CSS Rule, Comments, Selectors
    Strategically use HTML5 comments to document your code
    Background Color, Background Gradients, Background Image, Background Shorthand, Background Position, Background Size, Multiple Background Image
    Centering, Using Flexbox, Using CSS transform, Box Model, Box Sizing
    Margin, Padding, Border, Outlines
    Overflow, Floats, Font Size, Text Transform, Flexible Box Layout (Flexbox)
    Cascading and Specificity, Colors, Opacity, Length Units, Pseudo-Elements & Positioning
    Grid, Tables Transitions, & Animation, 2D Transforms & 3D Transforms, Filter Property, Box-shadow
    How to integrate multimedia elements such as audio, video and animations into your HTML5 content
    Shapes for Floats, List Styles, Counters, Functions, Single Element Shapes, Columns, Inline-Block Layout, CSS Image Sprites


    Requirements

    Enthusiasm and determination to make your mark on the world!

    Description

    HTML is a markup language that forms a base for any website on the Internet.

    HTML5 is the latest version of HTML, finalized in 2014.

    HTML 1 was created by a CERN scientist Tim Berners-Lee. His initial goal was an Internet-based hypertext system that allows sharing and using documents in different computers. Introduced in 1991, HTML 1 only had 18 tags, most of them based on the Standard Generalized Markup Language (SGML). HTML 2 was presented in 1995 and had a few more features.

    The draft of HTML 3 was abandoned due to slow implementation of the newly created tags. Therefore, the World Wide Web Consortium set out to standardize HTML. In 1997, HTML 3.2 was released which became a standard at the time.

    HTML 4 was a large step, as it separated styling from coding, leaving the former to CSS. A revised version called HTML 4.01 came out in 1999, correcting minor mistakes found in HTML 4.0 and introducing a few handy features.

    HTML 5 is the HTML as we know it today.

    To create polished and well-functioning websites, you will need CSS and JavaScript. However, to make them work as intended, you need to first understand what is HTML. Just like a house has a foundation, a web page has its base in HTML.


    HTML5 Benefits

    Addressing The Flash Problem

    Richer Websites

    Better Semantic Markup

    HTML5 is highly flexible and supported on all browsers

    User friendly and an open technology.

    Better performance


    Cascading Style Sheets, referred to as CSS, is a simple design language intended to simplify the process of making web pages presentable. It allows you to create great-looking web pages.

    CSS handles the look and feel part of a web page. Using CSS, you can control the color of the text, the style of fonts, the spacing between paragraphs, how columns are sized and laid out, what background images or colors are used, layout designs,variations in display for different devices and screen sizes as well as a variety of other effects.

    CSS is easy to learn and understand but it provides powerful control over the presentation of an HTML document. Most commonly, CSS is combined with the markup languages HTML or XHTML.

    In simple words, CSS is the technology that allows us to create beautiful, maintainable and flexible designs. It controls formatting, presentation and the overall layout of websites. A main reason we use CSS isn't only to create flexible, maintainable website designs, but also to keep content separate from presentation, which is a best practice. It's also much easier for human eyes to read what's happening in the HTML if there aren't styles thrown in too.

    CSS3 is the latest evolution of the Cascading Style Sheets language and aims at extending CSS2. 1. It brings a lot of long-awaited novelties, like rounded corners, shadows, gradients, transitions or animations, as well as new layouts like multi-columns, flexible box or grid layouts.


    Benefits of CSS

    CSS saves time − You can write CSS once and then reuse same sheet in multiple HTML pages. You can define a style for each HTML element and apply it to as many Web pages as you want.

    Pages load faster − If you are using CSS, you do not need to write HTML tag attributes every time. Just write one CSS rule of a tag and apply it to all the occurrences of that tag. So less code means faster download times.

    Easy maintenance − To make a global change, simply change the style, and all elements in all the web pages will be updated automatically.

    Superior styles to HTML − CSS has a much wider array of attributes than HTML, so you can give a far better look to your HTML page in comparison to HTML attributes.

    Multiple Device Compatibility − Style sheets allow content to be optimized for more than one type of device. By using the same HTML document, different versions of a website can be presented for handheld devices such as PDAs and cell phones or for printing.

    Global web standards − Now HTML attributes are being deprecated and it is being recommended to use CSS. So its a good idea to start using CSS in all the HTML pages to make them compatible to future browsers.


    HTML5 and CSS3 course curriculum


    HTML5

    Introduction

    History of HTML

    What you need to do to get going and make your first HTML page

    What are HTML Tags and Attributes?

    HTML Tag vs. Element

    HTML Attributes

    How to differentiate HTML Document Versions

    HTML - Basic Formatting Tag

    HTML Basic Tags

    HTML Formatting Tags

    HTML Color Coding

    HTML - Grouping Using Div Span

    The HTML <div> and <span> element is the generic container for flow content and does not inherently represent anything. Use it to group elements for purposes such as styling (using the class or id attributes), and inline level and block level separation.

    Div and Span Tags for Grouping

    HTML - Lists

    The HTML <li> element is used to represent an item in a list. It must be contained in a parent

    element: an ordered list (<ol>), an unordered list (<ul>), or a menu (<menu>). In menus and unordered lists,

    list items are usually displayed using bullet points, now we are going to check how to use html list.

    Unordered Lists

    Ordered Lists

    Definition list

    HTML - Images

    Creating an image

    Choosing alt text

    Responsive image using the srcset attribute

    Responsive image using picture element

    HTML - Hyperlink & Anchors

    Link to another site

    Link to an anchor link to a page on the same site Link that dials a number

    Open link in new tab/window

    Link that runs JavaScript Link that runs email client

    HTML - Tables

    Simple Table

    Spanning columns or rows

    Column Groups

    Table with thead, tbody, tfoot

    Heading scope

    HTML - iframe

    The HTML <iframe> element represents a nested browsing context, effectively embedding another HTML page into the current page. This module will help you make use of iframe tag.

    Attributes Using

    iframe as the Target

    HTML - Forms

    Submitting

    Target attribute in form tag

    Uploading Files

    Grouping a few input fields

    HTML - Headers

    The HTML <head> element provides general information (metadata) about the document,

    including its title and links to its scripts and style sheets.

    Title

    Base

    Link

    Styles

    Script

    HTML - Miscellaneous

    The HTML <Meta> element represents metadata that cannot be represented by other HTML

    meta-related elements, like <base>, <link>, <script>, <style> or <title>. This module will help you learn Meta

    Tags, xhtml and deprecated tags

    HTML Meta Tag

    XHTML

    HTML Deprecated Tags & Attributes


    CSS3

    CSS Introduction

    CSS Syntax

    CSS Id & Class

    CSS Styling

    Styling Backgrounds

    Styling Text

    Styling Fonts

    Styling Links

    Styling Lists

    Styling Tables

    CSS Box Model

    CSS Border

    CSS Outline

    CSS Margin

    CSS Padding

    CSS Advanced

    CSS Grouping/Nesting

    CSS Dimension

    CSS Display

    CSS Positioning

    CSS Floating

    CSS Align

    CSS Navigation Bar

    CSS Image Gallery

    CSS Image Opacity

    CSS Image Sprites

    CSS Media Types

    Selectors and Pseudo Classes

    Attribute Selectors

    The Target Pseudo-Class

    UI Element States Pseudo-Classes

    Negation Pseudo-Class

    Structural Pseudo-Classes

    Practical Demo and FAQ

    Interview Questions and Answers

    Who this course is for:

    Anyone who wishes to make a career as Web Developer / Designer
    Full Stack Web Developers and Engineers
    Front End Engineers
    Web Developers - JavaScript, jQuery, HTML5, CSS
    UX/UI Developers & Designers
    Solution Architects - JavaScript, HTML5, CSS3
    HTML5 JavaScript / TypeScript Game Developers
    Mobile App Designers & Developers
    Software Developers (C#, ASP dotNET, MVC, HTML, CSS, Javascript)

    HTML5 and CSS3 Training


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