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Solve : HTML "Open in New Window" code?? |
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Answer» Quote from: hope2u on March 09, 2011, 07:17:42 AM Would others agree that Dreamweaver is a good choice to START out on simple web design? I looked at Xara. Sure didn't seem very intuitive. Dreamweaver is fine too. But if you really want to make webpages, then find one that works, and get on with it. W3C schools[/url[ HTML page has HTML tutorials. And W3C is the official HTML guys so it's a good place to visit to get all your HTML learning.I should have mentioned that I was really hoping to make up my webpage without learning any HTML or very little. Is this realistic considering what modern website creation software can now do?Yes, you can GO that route and avoid getting into the nitty-gritty of coding. When I edit html files from my computer, they keep opening in the same browser that I have opened. How do I fix it so that html files will open in their own windows? I'm not looking to make a new window APPEAR with HTML. I'm trying to edit HTML files and would prefer them to open in a fresh window instead of 'hijacking' my current opened browser. Quote from: Mellie94 on November 01, 2011, 04:41:43 AM When I edit html files from my computer, they keep opening in the same browser that I have opened. How do I fix it so that html files will open in their own windows?Please do not post questions in existing threads. Just start a new thread for your problem & question. Thank you. Quote from: 2x3i5x on March 10, 2011, 11:05:19 AM W3C schools HTML page has HTML tutorials. And W3C is the official HTML guys so it's a good place to visit to get all your HTML learning. I know this is a old thread, but this is a common misconception. W3schools is not affiliated with the W3C in any way at all. they are a separate entity, and not official in any way. Members of the W3C have tried to get w3schools to DISAVOW any affiliation with the W3C but they have refused to do so. Other resources: http://dev.opera.com/articles/view/1-introduction-to-the-web-standards-cur/#toc Google's HTML, CSS, and Javascript from the Ground Up sitepoint Also, the w3c itself has some information pages. It has a Learn page, as well as a HTML element reference. Also, the Mozilla Doc center starts at intermediate CSS and COVERS JavaScript better than anyone. |
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