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Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Lesson 1: Introduction to Web Site Development Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Lesson 1 Objectives • Develop a business Web site • Distinguish between using a text editor and using a GUI markup language editor • Identify Web page front-end design issues • Identify Web page back-end resource issues Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Developing a Business Web Site • Web sites can serve as a business's primary means of advertising and marketing • Brand – a concept or collection of symbols associated with a product, service or person – Should be simple – Should be different – Should be safe – Should make a promise – Should reflect the company's attributes – Should reflect the company's personality – Should appeal to the intended audience Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Creating Web Pages • Web page authoring is becoming a standard skill set for many careers • You must know at least the following markup languages: – Hypertext Markup Language (HTML) – Extensible HTML (XHTML) Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Additional Web Page Elements • Web pages use more than HTML or XHTML -additional technologies include: – Flash – Java – ActiveX – Microsoft Silverlight • You must also understand how Web pages use: – Databases – Common Gateway Interface (CGI) Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Databases and Web Pages • Databases can store information about company inventory • Databases can store customer information Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Web Pages and CGI • CGI is used for many purposes: – To help Web pages pass information to and from databases – To provide active content (e.g., hit counters) – To provide dynamic content • Examples of CGI technology include: – Perl – PHP Hypertext Preprocessor (PHP) – Active Server Pages (ASP) and .NET – JavaServer Pages (JSP) – ColdFusion – Python – Django – Ajax – Ruby Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Text Editors and Markup Languages • You do not need to use a special editor application to create markup – You can use a simple text editor (e.g., Notepad or Vi) • When creating HTML or XHTML files, you must: – Save the text as plaintext – Save the file using either the .html or .htm file name extension Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Graphical User Interface (GUI) Editors • GUI HTML editors: – Create HTML/XHTML code for you • You type page text as you would with a standard word processor • You point and click with a mouse • Popular GUI HTML editors include: – Adobe Dreamweaver – Microsoft Expression Web – Mozilla SeaMonkey – Adobe GoLive – KompoZer Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Why Learn Markup Languages? • GUI HTML editors do not keep pace with the latest improvements in markup language • You can add features to pages not supported by the editor • You will not be limited by the GUI editor’s capabilities Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Front-End Issues A Web page is an interface that should: – Be accessible by all users – Incorporate appealing images and graphical elements – Include constantly updated hyperlinks – Use tables wisely – Present carefully designed Web forms – Connect pages to databases securely – Use the most current technologies appropriate – Use images sparingly – Be easily navigable and without dead ends – Include alternative navigation Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Web Page Accessibility • An accessible Web page has: – A user-friendly and accessible front end – Back-end server resources that process and store user input • The WC3 estimates that up to 10 percent of people have disabilities that, if not accommodated by Web sites, can cause companies to lose significant amounts of revenue • Why adhere to accessibility standards? – It makes your site available to all users – You can be penalized for failing to provide accessibility, either by losing customers or through governmentimposed fines Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Disabilities Acts • Americans with Disabilities Act (ADA) – Enforced by the U.S. Justice Department – Requires Web designers to create "reasonable accommodations" for disabled users: • Ensuring that all images have text-based descriptions • Providing text-based alternatives to all non-text content (e.g., Java applets and Flash presentations) • Providing easy-to-read forms • Additional disabilities acts and initiatives: – Canada’s Common Look and Feel Standards for the Internet – The Australian Government’s Guide to Minimum Web Site Standards – Accessibility – India’s Maharashtra Right to Information Act Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Disabilities Acts (cont'd) • Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG) – Provided by the W3C Web Accessibility Initiative (WAI) – A product of worldwide cooperation – 14 WAI guidelines • Rehabilitation Act: Electronic and Information Technology Accessibility Standards, Section 508 – Known simply as Section 508 – All federal agencies must ensure that all electronic and information technology developed, procured, maintained or used by federal agencies be comparably accessible to users with disabilities – Based on the WCAG Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Child Online Protection Act (COPA) • Designed to protect minors from harmful material – U.S. government law – Penalties specified – You can learn more about COPA at: • The COPA Commission Home Page www.copacommission.org • The COPA original statute www.copacommission.org/commission/ original.shtml Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Verifying Web Page Accessibility • Many tools available, including: – W3C Page Validator – Total Validator – Cynthia Says – STEP508 – Vischeck – MAGpie • One way you can help improve accessibility is by adhering to the XHTML 1.0 standard when you write Web page code Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved General Web Page Accessibility Considerations • Visual challenges – Text readability – Text support for images – Screen reader support • Audio challenges – Alternative audio support – Alternative speech input – Text support for audio elements • Cognitive and technical challenges • Site maps can improve accessibility • Change documentation can improve accessibility Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Creative Design and Branding Standards • A Web page is often part of a larger marketing and sales strategy – Creating and ensuring brand recognition (name recognition) – Presenting a strong message • A Web page allows you to develop: – A market – Mind share – A brand Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Creative Design and Branding Standards (cont'd) • Design and branding standards – topics for meetings include: – Target markets – Market messages – Media choices – Color combinations – Sales strategies – Technologies to use Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Creative Design and Branding Standards (cont'd) • Audience development techniques include: – Flash, Java – Company logos – Strategies developed by sales and marketing – Push and pull technologies – Visitor tracking Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Portals • A Web site that acts as a centralized access point for additional Web sites – Portal types: • Vertical • Horizontal • Portal benefits: – Directs users to the best sites – Attracts users to products – Improves brand name Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Wiki Site • A Web site that allows all visitors to collaborate in its construction – Wiki software is installed on a Web server – You can lock down certain pages and leave others open to editing • Wiki examples – Wikipedia (www.wikipedia.org) – LinuxQuestions.org (http://wiki.linuxquestions.org/wiki/Main_Page) – MemoryAlpha (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Memory_Alpha) • Wiki software purveyors – WikiBase (http://c2.com/cgi/wiki?WikiBase) – JSPWiki (www.jspwiki.org) Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved File Formats and Active Content • Your pages will include various content formats, including PDF documents, images and media files • Common file formats and MIME types – HTML: text/html – JPEG: image/jpeg – Cascading Style Sheets (CSS): text/css – MPEG: audio/mpeg – MP3: audio/mp3 • Evaluating proprietary formats – Difficulty/inconvenience – Cost – Audience limitation Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Back-End Issues • Database connectivity – Types of databases – Web servers use relational databases to store data • Relational databases – Creating relational databases – Relational database vendors – Databases, Web servers and SQL Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Relational Database Manipulation Terminology • Join – combining two database tables to create a new table • Table – a database topic that contains rows (records) and columns (attributes or fields) • Record – one row of a relational database table • Field – one column of a relational database table • Entity (i.e., record) – a person, place or thing represented in a database table row Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Relational Database Manipulation Terminology (cont’d) • Attribute – a category of information related to an entity • Linking attribute – common attribute between tables that allows a join to occur • Relation – a link generated between two entities • Tuple – two or more entities currently linked by a relation • Query – searching a database Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Types of Database Table Joins • Inner join – Results in a new table in which the information in one column of the first table is combined with a column of the second table – The most common type of join • Outer join – Used to combine tables when one column of a table contains an empty, or null, value – Less common Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved SQL Commands • SELECT – requests data from a particular table or table row • FROM – delimits the beginning search point in a table or table row • WHERE – delimits the ending search point in a table or table row • JOIN – creates a new table from selected data • GROUP – organizes results by a parameter • SUM – adds numerical information within records Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Accessing and Updating Databases • Ways to access databases include: – Locally – Over the LAN from a share you establish – Via the Web through a Web application • Database connectivity methods – Open Database Connectivity (ODBC) – Java Database Connectivity (JDBC) • Indexing and cataloging Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Bandwidth and Download Time • Download time – Factor in all files – Consider typical connection speeds • Calculate download time for a Web page – Check the size of the HTML file and all associated images, files or programs – Determine the speed of your network connection – Convert the connection speed and file size to common units of measure (e.g., bytes or bits) – Divide file size by connection speed Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Naming Web Page Files • Web servers search for default page names • Default page names include: – index.html – index.htm – default.htm – default.asp • Default page names can change from server to server – Apache Server – usually index.html – IIS – usually default.htm, default.html or index.html Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved HTTP 404 – File Not Found Error • Indicates that a user has requested a file that does not exist on the specified Web server – Generated by the server – Can be customized Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Habitat For Humanity Web Site • A not-for-profit, volunteer-driven organization that builds and sells homes for families worldwide • Has built more than 150,000 homes worldwide • A Web site example in this course • Like any Web site, it targets an audience – The site is part of a concerted effort to bring in volunteers – People with technical expertise must run the site – More than technical expertise is required – the Web design team must also understand the business goals Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Lesson 1 Summary Develop a business Web site Distinguish between using a text editor and using a GUI markup language editor Identify Web page front-end design issues Identify Web page back-end resource issues Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Lesson 2: Markup Language and Site Development Essentials Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Lesson 2 Objectives • • • • • Discuss the history of markup languages Distinguish between HTML and XHTML Identify HTML and XHTML flavors Explain the value of universal markup Demonstrate knowledge of Web site development principles • Plan Web site development Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved History of Markup Languages • Standard Generalized Markup Language (SGML) – Originally created by IBM in 1986 – A metalanguage, meaning it is used to create other languages – The basis for HTML, XHTML and XML – You create your own document rules using a Document Type Definition (DTD) Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved History of Markup Languages (cont'd) • Hypertext Markup Language (HTML) – Based on SGML, invented by Tim Berners-Lee – Allows hyperlinks – HTML vs. SGML • HTML versions include: – HTML 3.2 – HTML 4.01 (the most popular version of HTML) • HTML 4.01 flavors include: – 4.01 Transitional – allows deprecated tags, not as strict – 4.01 Strict – requires all container tags and does not allow deprecated tags – 4.01 Frameset – for use with frames Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved History of Markup Languages (cont'd) • Extensible Markup Language (XML) – A subset of SGML, also a metalanguage – XML describes data instead of formatting – HTML or XHTML provides formatting and document structure • XML documents have a tree structure • XML documents must be well-formed • XML and valid documents: the DTD • XML and style sheets • From HTML to XML Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved History of Markup Languages (cont'd) • Extensible Hypertext Markup Language (XHTML) – Combines HTML with XML • XHTML 1.0 flavors include: – Transitional – allows deprecated tags, not as strict – Strict – requires the exclusive use of CSS for all formatting elements and does not allow deprecated tags – Frameset – for use with frames Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Universal Markup Creation • Follow W3C standards • Benefits of following standards include: – Code will render as expected in more browsers – Pages will be more scalable (as you add more sophisticated content, you will not run into problems) – Pages are more likely to be available to disabled users Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Web Site Development Principles • Project management and the Web development project cycle – Create and document an initial Web site plan – Obtain relevant input from stakeholders – Communicate the Web site plan – Consider technical and non-technical concerns – Develop the site – Publish the site – Manage the site Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Creating and Documenting an Initial Web Site Plan • Site plan is a rough outline of planned development – Site diagram – Storyboard • Eventually becomes a site map for completed site • Determining audience and message • Validating design issues – Consider issues such as central message, fonts, images, colors, ethnic and cultural diversity, and common color schemes Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Obtaining Relevant Input from Stakeholders • Stakeholders are relevant organization employees or contributors who can provide or help determine: – The purpose of the Web site – The services that the audience requires from the site – Development timelines • As you work with stakeholders: – Remember that non-technical people may be asked to approve your project – You must translate technical issues into non-technical language • Team members can include representatives from marketing, IT, sales and other areas of your organization Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Documenting and Communicating the Plan • Create a storyboard • Document decisions in meetings and follow up • Communicate the plan in various ways: – Calling relevant parties to ensure that everyone is satisfied – Sending e-mail messages – Sending postal ("snail mail") messages if necessary – Sending fax messages – Telephone calls Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Communicating the Plan • Use oral presentations and presentation aids, including: – Presentation software – Overhead projection – Whiteboards – Easel and poster paper – Charts – Published handouts Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Leading Discussions • Strategies leaders use to manage a meeting: – Make introductions – Recall past business – Create a list of action items, including timelines – Monitor time – Ensure proper discussion focus – Handle heated discussions – Distribute minutes Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Considering Technical and Non-Technical Concerns • Leaders can ensure communication by: – Regularly asking if anyone has questions – Asking team members to summarize their understanding of decisions – Asking a third party to deliver a summary of progress – Writing regular updates about the project Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Developing the Site • As your team develops the site, you will be engaged in various activities: – Creating markup code – Testing functionality – Approving the site – Publishing the site Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Testing Pages in Multiple Browsers • As you develop Web pages, test them using multiple Web browsers • Different generations of the same browser may interpret HTML somewhat differently • Browser vendors also implement standards differently • Browser types include: – Microsoft Internet Explorer – Mozilla Firefox – Google Chrome – Opera – Lynx Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Publishing the Site • To publish a site, you need to know: – The IP address and/or DNS name of the site – User name and authentication information – The destination directory (i.e., folder) on the Web server – Space requirements – The protocol you will use to upload the site • Working with service providers – Internet Service Providers (ISPs) – Application Service Providers (ASPs) Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Managing the Site • When managing a site, you must be prepared to: – Create new content – Update dead links – Remove old sites – Remove unused pages – Ensure connectivity – Report access troubles – Process feedback from customers and stakeholders Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Obtaining Feedback • Your Web team must process various types of feedback • Feedback can come from various sources • Ways to obtain quality feedback – Providing Web forms on the site that ask for customer input – Conducting surveys in person – Conducting surveys via e-mail Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Intellectual Property • A unique product or idea created by an individual or organization – Generally has commercial value • Never "borrow" content without express, written consent • Review copyright and trademark issues (e.g., trade secrets, licensing, infringement, plagiarism) • Understand copyright scope, reach and time limits • Consider ethical issues of copyright and plagiarism • Avoid copyright infringement, trademark infringement and plagiarism by: – Reviewing content – Obtaining express, written consent – Creating reasonable deadlines Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Outsourcing • Increasingly, Web development work (including site design) is being outsourced to workers in remote locations – May save the company money – May require you to work with remote workers • As you use and work with remote teams, you may have to obtain: – Non-Disclosure Agreements (NDAs) – Legal consultation Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Lesson 2 Summary Discuss the history of markup languages Distinguish between HTML and XHTML Identify HTML and XHTML flavors Explain the value of universal markup Demonstrate knowledge of Web site development principles Plan Web site development Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Lesson 3: XHTML Coding Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Lesson 3 Objectives • • • • • Define markup tags Identify XHTML document structure tags Prepare your development environment Define and use style sheets Use paragraph formatting and block-level elements • Use text-level elements • Use ordered and unordered lists • Use comments and good coding practices Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Markup Tags • Markup tags are element names enclosed in angle brackets, or wickets < > – Tags are key to markup files – Tags embed the markup element information in the document so that a user agent (e.g., browser) will render text as instructed by the associated element – The combination of markup tags and standard text is loosely referred to as either "code" or "markup" Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Container Tags • Two types of tags: container and empty • Container tags contain page text between an opening and a closing tag, as shown • Container tags are also known as non-empty tags • XHTML requires the use of container or non-empty tags Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Empty Tags • An empty tag does not use a closing tag • Used in HTML only, Transitional or Frameset flavor • Never used in XHTML; code will not validate if you use empty tags Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Alternative Non-Empty Tag • HTML and XHTML allow alternative notation for stand-alone non-empty tags • Place the slash ( / ) after the element name (before the closing wicket), rather than before the element name like in a standard closing tag: <title/> My Home Page • All XHTML tags must be closed (using either a pair of container tags or the stand-alone non-empty tag) Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved What Constitutes a Tag? • An element • An attribute • A value Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Document Structure Tags • Every XHTML document must have the following document structure components to render as expected and validate: – A <!DOCTYPE> tag – The <html> </html> tag – The <head> </head> tag – Any <meta/> tags – A <link/> tag reference to a style sheet (recommended) – The <title> </title> tag – The <body> </body> tag Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Document Structure Tags (cont'd) Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Are XHTML Tags Case-Sensitive? • XHTML tags are case-sensitive and should always be typed in lowercase letters • By contrast, HTML tags are not case-sensitive Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Document Type Declaration (DOCTYPE) • An SGML statement that describes the nature of your code • Placed at the top of the document using the <!DOCTYPE> tag • If you do not specify a DOCTYPE, then two problems may arise: – You will not be able to control how your code renders in the future – You will not be able to use a markup validator • Each version and flavor of HTML/XHTML has its own DOCTYPE Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved The <html> and <head> Tags • The <html> </html> tags encompass all other HTML or XHTML elements in the document – Takes various attributes • The <head> </head> tags encompass several document elements, including: – The <meta/> tag – The <link/> tag that references a CSS file, if present – The <title> </title> tags Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved The <body> tag • All content to be displayed on the page through the user agent must be enclosed between the <body> </body> tags – The <body> tag takes many attributes, including: • bgcolor • background • link – Values accompany attributes, and must be enclosed in quotation marks in XHTML Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Web Site File Structure • When creating a Web page, you must consider the site’s file structure • Your XHTML/HTML and image files will be uploaded to a server eventually, so it is always good practice to organize your files Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Preparing Your Development Environment • Obtain a text editor • Install multiple browsers • Set file preferences Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Style Sheets • A technology that adds formatting and structure to your pages • A style sheet is simple text file that contains instructions • If all pages on your site are linked to the same style sheet, then one simple change to the style sheet will change all specified elements across the site • Strict flavors of HTML and XHTML require that you use style sheets Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved CSS Terminology • • • • • Proper CSS structure Inheritance CSS and XHTML Benefits of using CSS Style sheets and compatibility Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Paragraph Formatting and Block-Level Elements • Block-level markup elements – Affect entire paragraphs or multiple paragraphs • The <p> tag • The <br/> tag • Text-level markup elements – Elements that can affect as little as a single character or word • <bold> or <strong> • <i> or <em> Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Heading Levels • Block-level element • Heading levels 1 through 6 – <h1> </h1> – <h2> </h2> – <h3> </h3> – <h4> </h4> – <h5> </h5> – <h6> </h6> Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Tag Nesting in Markup • Placing one pair of tags between another – Proper: <h1> <i> ... </i> </h1> – Improper: <h1> <i> ... </h1> </i> • Improper: The <i> tag is opened within the <h1> tags, but closed after the </h1> tag • If you fail to properly nest code, your pages may still render in some user agents, but they will not validate and may fail to render in the future Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Primitive Formatting with the <pre> Tag • The <pre> tag retains formatting on preformatted text • Can be used to retain tabular format, spacing • All text between <pre> </pre> tags will render as formatted in the HTML file Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Indenting and Centering Text • The <div> tag • Alternatively, use <p align= "center"> </p> • The <blockquote> tag can also be used to indent (but not center) text Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Text-Level Elements • Bold, italic and underlined text • Bold: – <b> and <strong> • Italic: – <i> and <em> • Underlined text: – <u> Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Font Style Elements vs. Phrase Elements • The <b> element is a font style element, <strong> is a phrase element; both create boldface text • The same is true of <i> and <em>, respectively, which both create italic or emphasized text • The difference is that <b> specifically means apply the bold font style, whereas <strong> indicates that the text is to be given a strong appearance • In short, <b> represents a font appearance instruction, whereas <strong> represents the weighting of the phrase relative to surrounding text Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved The <code>, <kbd> and <samp> Tags • All make text appear in a fixed-width font in an HTML 4.0-compliant browser window • Available to both HTML 4.0 and XHTML Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Lists • Two types of lists: • Ordered – A numbered list – Uses the <ol> element and requires a closing tag </ol> • Unordered – A bulleted list – Uses the <ul> element and requires a closing tag </ul> Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Lists (cont'd) • Ordered list code: <h2> Ordered List </h2> <ol> <li> This is the first numbered item </li> <li> This is the second numbered item </li> <li> This is the last numbered item </li> </ol> • Unordered list code: <h2> Unordered List </h2> <ul> <li/> This is the first bulleted item <li/> This is the second bulleted item <li/> This is the last bulleted item </ul> Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Good Coding Practice • Create code that can be easily read by others • Exceptions: – Some code might encounter problems if it includes random spaces – Always test your code in multiple browsers and validate it • Adding hidden comments: <!-- Text inside these brackets will not appear --> • Use comments to annotate code or document changes Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Lesson 3 Summary Define markup tags Identify XHTML document structure tags Prepare your development environment Define and use style sheets Use paragraph formatting and block-level elements Use text-level elements Use ordered and unordered lists Use comments and good coding practices Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Lesson 4: Horizontal Rules and Graphical Elements Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Lesson 4 Objectives • Add horizontal rules to your pages • Incorporate image files as stand-alone graphics • Add special characters to XHTML pages • Use the browser-safe color palette • Use colors and tiled images for page backgrounds • Use the <font> tag to specify font information • Consider Web design issues, including color combinations and page layout Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Horizontal Rules in XHTML • Create a horizontal rule using the <hr> tag: – <h1> Horizontal Rules </h1> <hr/> Horizontal rules: Lines used to make visual divisions in your document. • Horizontal rule attributes: align, size, width and noshade Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Images in Web Pages • Use the <img> tag to insert an image file using either of two formats to close the tag: – <img src="imagefile.gif"> </img> – <img src="imagefile.gif"/> • Image file formats – Graphics Interchange Format (GIF) – Joint Photographic Experts Group (JPEG) – Portable Network Graphics (PNG) Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Comparing Image File Formats Format Transparency Interlacing Compression Animation GIF 89a Yes Yes Yes Yes JPEG (standard) No No Yes No PNG Yes Yes Yes Yes Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Images and the alt Attribute • In XHTML, every image must follow good coding practice by including the alt attribute with a corresponding value • Code will not validate as XHTML without this attribute • Browsers and screen-reader technology can read alt description and render it in audio for disabled users – <img src="image.gif" alt="Alternative text"/> Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Combining Background Images and Colors • The bgcolor attribute: – Specifies background colors • The background attribute: – Inserts an image as a background • If you use both the bgcolor and background attributes in a <body> tag, then only the attribute specified last in the tag will render Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Aligning Images Relative to Text • The align attribute positions images relative to text <img src="imagefile.gif" align="alignment value"> • Values include: – "bottom" – "middle" – "top" – "left" – "right" • The align attribute has been deprecated in favor of style sheets, but can still be used; code will still validate as XHTML 1.0 Transitional Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Resizing Images • Specify image size using the following attributes: – height – width • The syntax for these attributes is: <img src="imagename.gif" height="NumberOfPixels" width="NumberOfPixels"/> • Specifying both height and width can distort an image; be sure to use proper proportions Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Special Characters • Uses code with ampersand (&) and semicolon (;) • Special characters include: – The "less than" symbol < • Code: < – The "greater than" symbol > • Code: > – The copyright sign © • Code: © or © – The registered trademark sign ® • Code: ® or ® – The United Kingdom pound sterling sign: £ • Code: £ • Non-breaking space: Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Specifying Colors • Colors can be specified by name or by Hexadecimal "Red Green Blue (RGB)" value Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Browser-Safe Color Palette • A set of 216 colors guaranteed to render properly • Ensures that colors in pages render as expected – If you specify a color not supported by the monitor or operating system, the system will approximate the color, a process called dithering – Unexpected results may occur as the result of dithering Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Page Colors and Backgrounds • Specifying page colors: <body bgcolor="colorNameOrCode"> • Specifying text color on the page: – <body text="colorNameOrCode"> • Specifying color of unvisited links: – <body link="colorNameOrCode"> • Specifying color of visited links: – <body vlink="colorNameOrCode"> • Providing a background image: – <body background="image.png"> Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Specifying Font Information • You can use the <font> tag – The size attribute: specify value "1" through "7" – The face attribute: specify font type (e.g., Arial, Times New Roman) <font size="7" color="#993399" face="arial"> • The <font> tag is deprecated • The W3C recommends to use style sheets instead Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Web Design Issues • Color combinations – Popular color combinations • Consider existing sites – W3Schools (www.w3schools.com) – Habitat for Humanity (www.habitat.org) – Linux (www.linux.org) • Cultural and audience concerns – Page layout • Layout guidelines • Document structure, the <div> tag and style sheets • Relative path names • White space, the <img> tag and XHTML Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Lesson 4 Summary Add horizontal rules to your pages Incorporate image files as stand-alone graphics Add special characters to XHTML pages Use the browser-safe color palette Use colors and tiled images for page backgrounds Use the <font> tag to specify font information Consider Web design issues, including color combinations and page layout Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Lesson 5: Hyperlinks Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Lesson 5 Objectives • • • • • • • Define and use the anchor tag Reference full and partial URLs Create local hyperlinks Create external hyperlinks Use images as hyperlinks Create internal hyperlinks Manage hyperlinks Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved The Anchor Tag • The <a> tag creates a hyperlink • A container tag that encompasses the text or image (or both) to be used as a link • The syntax for using the anchor tag to create a link is as follows: <a href="URL"> linked text or image (or both) </a> Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved The Anchor Tag (cont'd) • A fully qualified URL specifies an entire path • A partial URL assumes a path relative to the file's current location Type of Reference Description Examples Fully qualified URL (also called absolute URL) A URL (i.e., URI) that contains a full path to a resource, including the protocol indicator. Also known as a hard link. http://www.someserver.com/somepage.html or http://someserver.com/pub/~james/somefile.ext or c:\inetpub\wwwroot\ccyp\syb\syb.html Partial URL (also called relative URL) A URL that assumes the current document's path. All references are made from the document's current directory. syb.html: Specifies a file in the current directory ../css/stylesheet.css: Specifies a file one directory up from the current page pub/images/mybullet.gif: Specifies a file in a subdirectory Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved The Anchor Tag (cont'd) • You can specify various protocols Protocol Hyperlink HTML Example HTTP Visit the <a href="http://www.CIWcertified.com">CIW<a/> site. HTTPS (Secure HTTP) Visit our <a href="https://www.CIWcertified.com">secure CIW<a/> site. FTP Download the file from our <a href="ftp://ftp.server.com">FTP server.</a> E-mail You can send e-mail to us at <a href="mailto:[email protected]"> [email protected]</a>. Telnet Please visit our <a href="telnet:cals.evergreen.edu">Telnet server.</a> Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved The Anchor Tag (cont'd) • Make sure that you: – Use a closing anchor tag </a> – Place quotation marks around the value – Include the closing bracket at the end of the opening <a> tag • Various issues to troubleshoot with hyperlinks – Text and images disappear – All successive Web page text is a hyperlink – Garbled code appears on screen – Code will not validate due to a problem <a> tag Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved The Anchor Tag (cont'd) • • • • Creating local hyperlinks Creating external hyperlinks Using images as hyperlinks Creating internal links – On a long page, a link to another point lower on the page – Internal links require internal bookmarks • Example: <a name="targetArea1"> target anchor text or image (or both) </a> … other page content here … <a href="#targetArea1"> text/images linking to targetArea1 </a> Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Accessing an External File's Internal Link • Link to a specific point in another page without first accessing the top of that page • To link to an internal anchor inside of another file, use the following syntax: <a ref="URL/filename.ext#AnchorName"> link text/image </a> Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Managing Hyperlinks • All hyperlinks need to be verified – Verify that the URL or other reference is valid – Verify that the target page or location is accessed • Hyperlinks also need to be managed – Over time, URLs (and content) change – "Dead" links frustrate users • Manually check links • Automatic link-checking software: – Linklint (www.linklint.org) – Link Controller (http://freshmeat.net/projects/linkcont) – Checkbot (http://degraaff.org/checkbot) • Link should still be reviewed manually to verify relevance of linked content Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Lesson 5 Summary Define and use the anchor tag Reference full and partial URLs Create local hyperlinks Create external hyperlinks Use images as hyperlinks Create internal hyperlinks Manage hyperlinks Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Lesson 6: HTML Tables Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Lesson 6 Objectives • Describe HTML table tags and attributes • Use table and data alignment options • Change the height and width of table elements • Specify column and row spanning • Format content in tables Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Introduction to HTML Tables • Present data that lends itself to tabular format • In XHTML, do not use to structure entire pages • Offers many formatting options Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Table Element Tags Element Tag Description Table <table>…</table> Required to create a table; contains all other table elements. Table caption <caption>…</caption> Optional; adds a caption or title, which appear above the table by default. Table row <tr>…</tr> Required; contains all data for a table row. Table header <th>…</th> Table data <td>…</td> Optional; typically designates the top row or left column. By default, text in a header cell will appear bold and centered. Required, unless <th> is being used; designates table cell contents. Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved The <table> Tag • Table tag creates the table structure • <table> </table> encloses all other table elements • Attributes include: – align – border – cellpadding – cellspacing – width – summary Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved The <tr> Tag • Table row tag creates a row within a table • Attributes include: – align – valign – bgcolor – style Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved The <td> Tag • Table data tag designates table cell contents • Attributes include: – align – valign – colspan – rowspan – bgcolor – height – width Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Differences between HTML and XHTML Tables • The align and bgcolor attributes for the <table> tag are deprecated in HTML 4.01 • Both attributes for the <table> tag can be used in XHTML 1.0 Transitional, but not in XHTML 1.0 Strict Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Table and Data Alignment Options • Defaults for table data: – Content in table header cells is aligned both horizontally and vertically to the center of the cell – Content in table data cells is aligned horizontally to the left and vertically to the center • You can customize these defaults by using: valign="top" This will make text appear in the top of a cell or row Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Working with Table Data • Changing height and width of table elements • Configuring table cells to span multiple columns or rows • Formatting content in tables Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Lesson 6 Summary Describe HTML table tags and attributes Use table and data alignment options Change the height and width of table elements Specify column and row spanning Format content in tables Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Lesson 7: Web Forms Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Lesson 7 Objectives • Discuss the importance of CGI to Web forms • Identify basic Web form tags • Identify Web form elements for HTML and XHTML • Construct a Web form • Test Web forms using a public test engine Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Introduction to Web Forms • Forms are used to obtain information from users – Input can include the user’s name, address or credit card number, for example – The information that a user submits in the form is sent to a server, where it is stored and/or processed • Forms are essential for e-commerce, as well as for gathering information Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Web Forms and CGI • To be truly functional, a form requires the use of a Common Gateway Interface (CGI) program to process and organize the user input • A CGI script residing on a server performs two important functions: – Receives data from a Web browser – Processes and formats the data • CGI scripts can also be used to forward data to the proper destination, where it can be processed or stored Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Diagramming a CGI Session Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Parsing Data • A Web form receives submitted user input • CGI scripting (or an alternative) parses the data • The browser sends user-submitted information to the Web server as a raw text string • The basic element of a raw text string is a name=value pair • This raw text string consists of name=value pairs, delimited by ampersands (&) • After the server receives this information, a CGI script can parse and format the raw text string into a human-readable format, or enter the data into a database Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Applied Example: FormMail • FormMail details: – Written by Matt Wright – Extremely popular – Used to e-mail information gathered from forms to a destination you specify – You install the script onto a Web server and refer to it in your forms • Security concerns • Other versions of FormMail Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Basic Tags for Creating Web Forms • The <form> tag creates a user-input Web form • Attributes include: – method • "get": not as secure, sends unencrypted text • "post": encrypts, but can be easily broken – action • Specifies the name and location of the CGI script used to process the form • Place the <input>, <select> and <textarea> tags between <form> </form> tags to create form fields Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Web Form Fields • User-input form fields include: – Text box – Radio button – Check box – Single-option select list – Multiple-option select list – Scrolling text area box – Password field – File upload button – Submit and Reset buttons Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Forms and the name Attribute • All form field elements share one attribute: name – Identifies information you receive from a user and associates it with a value you specify – Helps organize user input Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Text Boxes • Used to collect a single line of data from the user, such as name, e-mail or address information • Syntax: <input type="text" name="FieldName"/> • You can enter default text to appear in the form: <input type="text" name="FieldName" value="DefaultText"/> In this example, "DefaultText" would appear in the user’s window Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved File Upload • Provides a Browse button and accompanying text box • Users click the Browse button and navigate to the file they want to upload • The path to the file chosen by the user will appear in the text box Choose your file here: <input type="file" name="File"/> Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Submit and Reset Buttons • Submit button – Sends completed user information from Web form to server • Reset button – Clears all information entered into form fields, instead of submitting information to server • Every form needs a means to submit data <input type="submit"/> <input type="reset"/> Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Radio Buttons • A group of two or more mutually exclusive options • Never used as stand-alone items • Example: Do you know carpentry? <input type="radio" name="Carpentry" value="yes"/> • To present a preselected radio button, add the following attribute and value: checked="checked" Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Check Boxes • A group of non-exclusive choices • Syntax: <input type="checkbox" name="groupName"/> Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Select Lists • Drop-down lists of predetermined options • Created with the <select> tag • Two types: – Single-option select list Multiple-option select list • To allow the user to select multiple options, add the multiple attribute in the <select> tag Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Scrolling Text Area Box • Created by the <textarea> element • Provides a scrolling text box into which a user can enter a few sentences, an address, a letter, etc. • Used to gather more than one line of text from the user • Attributes include: – cols – rows – wrap • Text between <textarea> tags will appear to users as default text within the box Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Web Forms, CAPTCHA and SEO • Use CAPTCHA to reduce spam submissions sent to your forms • Consider search engine optimization (SEO) issues when developing Web forms Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Lesson 7 Summary Discuss the importance of CGI to Web forms Identify basic Web form tags Identify Web form elements for HTML and XHTML Construct a Web form Test Web forms using a public test engine Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Lesson 8: Image Techniques Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Lesson 8 Objectives • Create client-side image maps • Define rectangle, circle and polygon areas as hot spots in an image • Define image transparency • Define image interlacing • Use Web-based technologies to create animation • Create and manage images Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Graphic Types • Vector – Graphics that use mathematical coordinates with lines, curves and shapes to create desired images and specify colors • Bitmap – Graphics that use small dots (usually thousands) to create an image and specify color – Also known as raster graphics Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Image Maps • An image that contains hyperlinked, clickable regions, sometimes called "hot spots" • Each hot spot is defined by a set of coordinates (indicating its position on the image) and a URL reference • Two types of image maps: – Client-side (the most common) – Server-side (rarely used) Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Defining a Client-Side Image Map • Define a map, assign it a name, and provide hot-spot coordinates • Coordinates can be determined using an imageediting application such as Paint Shop Pro • Refer to the image map by map name: <map name="mapname" id="mapname"> <area shape="shape" coords="coordinates" href="url"/> <area shape="shape" coords="coordinates" href="url"/> <area shape="shape" coords="coordinates" href="url"/> </map> • Associate the image file with the map: <img src="imagemap.gif" usemap="#mapname"/> Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved XHTML and the id Attribute • In XHTML, the id attribute is required in the <map> tag • Serves same purpose as the name attribute • If the id attribute is omitted, code will not validate Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Defining Hot Spots • Three shapes for hot spots: – Rectangle – Circle – Polygon Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Rectangle Hot Spot • Any two points can define a rectangle • Each point is represented by a horizontal (x) coordinate and a vertical (y) coordinate • Rectangles are defined by four coordinates representing the upper-left and bottom-right corners of the rectangle – Code: <area shape="rect" coords="1,52,33,96" href="hand.htm" /> Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Circle Hot Spot • Circles are defined by two coordinates and a radius – Code: <area shape="circle" coords="x1,y1,radius" href="url"/> • The pair of coordinates specifies the circle's center • A third number specifies the desired radius, or half-width, of the circle Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Polygon • Defines an irregular area (neither a circle nor a rectangle) • Specify coordinates for each point that defines the polygon, from three to 100 pairs of coordinates – Code: <area shape="polygon" coords="x1,y1,x2,y2,...xn,yn" href="url" /> Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Image Transparency • Provides the visual effect of blending in to the background of the Web page • Most developers use image transparency to remove the blank image background so it appears to float on the page • Web-ready formats that support transparency: – GIF 89a – PNG Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Image with No Transparency Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Transparent PNG Image Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Image Interlacing • Allows an image to progressively display in a browser while downloading • The image appears in stages during download (from top to bottom) • The top of a non-interlaced image will appear after the browser has read 50 percent of the image Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Image Interlacing (cont'd) Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Animation • Several images in a sequence, rendered in rapid succession to simulate motion • Made possible in several ways: – Animated GIFs and PNGs • The animated image is actually a group of separate, sequenced images – Flash • Scripts, called macros, that manipulate vector images • Popular, but proprietary technology (Adobe) • Requires a browser plug-in to view – Silverlight – Microsoft's answer to Flash Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Animation (cont'd) • Java – The user agent must have Java plug-in installed – May not appear as quickly as Flash • Scalable Vector Graphics (SVG) – Developed by various vendors, including Adobe, Microsoft and Sun – An open standard adopted by the W3C – Supports: • Animation • Compression • Searchable text • Zooming – Requires a plug-in to view Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Animation (cont'd) • Identifying animation techniques – Right-click the animation in the browser and identify its properties – View the Web page source code • Issues with animation – Frequently overused – Can limit accessibility – Often proprietary, requiring a browser plug-in • Using non-standard images Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Creating and Managing Images • There are several options you can use to obtain and manage images for use on your Web pages: – Create original images using imagecreation software – Scan hard-copy images – Use stock photographs – Obtain photos from photo-sharing Web sites – Use photo management software to organize, edit and share your images • Consider search engine optimization (SEO) issues when creating and using images Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Lesson 8 Summary Create client-side image maps Define rectangle, circle and polygon areas as hot spots in an image Define image transparency Define image interlacing Use Web-based technologies to create animation Create and manage images Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Lesson 9: HTML Frames Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Lesson 9 Objectives • Define frames and the purpose of the frameset document • Use the <frameset> and <frame> tags • Create a frameset document • Identify the purpose of the <noframes> tag • Target links from one frame to another • Specify default targets using the <base> tag • Create borderless frames, and control margins and scrolling in frames • Identify the purpose of inline frames • Discuss the appropriate use of frames • Consider search engine optimization (SEO) issues when using frames Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved The <frameset> Tag • A container tag, requires a closing </frameset> tag • Determines the frame types and sizes on the page • Two frame types: – Columns – Rows Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Columns Example • This frameset was created by the following code: <frameset cols="35%,65%"> </frameset> Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Rows Example • This frameset was created by the following code: <frameset rows="180,*"> </frameset> Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved The <frame> Tag • Defines the content in each frame • Placed between the <frameset> </frameset> tags • The src attribute specifies the file that will appear in the frame • In example, the page that will appear in the top frame is the file fl-toc.html, and the page that will appear in the lower frame is fl-second.html: <frameset rows="180,*"> <frame src="fl-toc.html"/> <frame src="fl-second.html"/> </frameset> Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved The Frameset Document • Contains the the <frameset>, <frame> and <noframes> elements • The <frameset> and <frame> tags will create frames only if they are placed correctly into this document – In the frameset document, the <frameset> element takes the place of the <body> element – The opening <frameset> tag follows the closing </head> tag – The <frameset> tag must contain either the rows attribute or the cols attribute, or both Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Viewing Source with Framesets • Click on the frame you want to view • Take the necessary steps to view the source code • The same instructions apply to printing from a frame Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved The <noframes> Tag • For user agents that cannot render frames • Displays alternative text or images – In some ways, similar to the alt attribute for the <img> tag • Code: <noframes> <body> If you had a frames-capable browser, you would see frames here </body> </noframes> Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Targeting Frames with Hyperlinks • Use the name attribute to name a frame, then target the frame name with hyperlinks • The syntax for naming a frame is as follows: <frame src="url" name="framename"/> • The following code names a frame: <frame src="james.html" name="authors"/> • The following code targets this frame: <a href="james.html" target= "authors"> Visit James </a> • If a user clicks the Visit James link, the James page will open in the Authors frame Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Specifying a Base Target • A base target automatically sets a default target frame for all links in a page • Created using the <base> tag • Code: <base target="main" href="page.html"/> • This code will cause all linked pages to open in the frame named “main” • The href attribute is optional Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Borders, Margins and Scrolling • To create borderless frames, add the frameborder attribute to the <frame> tag – frameborder= "1" causes borders to display (the default) – frameborder= "0" hides borders • Example: <frame src="home.html" name="main" frameborder="0"/> Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Borders, Margins and Scrolling (cont'd) • Frame margin width and height – The marginheight attribute designates the space, in pixels, between the top and bottom margins – The marginwidth attribute designates the space, in pixels, between the left and right margins Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Borders, Margins and Scrolling (cont'd) • Scrolling frames – The scrolling attribute to the <frame> tag controls whether the scrollbar appears – The scrolling attribute values: • "yes" — enables scrolling (the default) • "no" — disables scrolling • "auto" — allows the browser to decide • Example: <frame src= "ex.html" name= "ex" frameborder="0" scrolling="no"/> Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Inline Frames • Inserts an HTML or XHTML document inside another • Also called "floating frames" • Created with the <iframe> tag • The browser reads the <iframe> tag from the file, then makes a separate request to the server for the embedded file Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Inline Frames (cont'd) • Simple XHTML page with inline frame: <h1>iFrame Example</h1> <p><strong>This text is found in iframe.html </strong><p/> <iframe src="embedded.html" scrolling= "yes"> Your browser does not support frames </iframe> <p><strong>This text is also found in iframe.html. </strong></p> • The next slide shows the results of this code… Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Inline Frames (cont'd) Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Inline Frames (cont'd) • Inline frames are useful for: – Web documents in which all content will remain static, except for one section (e.g., a weekly special) – the frequently changed section can be an inline frame, which can be quickly modified when necessary without editing the entire page – Documents that you prefer to embed in a page instead of placing on a separate page or providing as a download (such as text or a PDF) Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Appropriate Use of Frames • Frames are useful only in specific situations • Consider the following issues: – Function – Appeal – Development challenges – Accessibility limitations – Usability with the browser Back button Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Frames and Search Engine Optimization • In general, using frames will lower your page's rank in a search engine • Many search engine spiders do not follow the frame sources from the frameset page Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Lesson 9 Summary Define frames and the purpose of the frameset document Use the <frameset> and <frame> tags Create a frameset document Identify the purpose of the <noframes> tag Target links from one frame to another Specify default targets using the <base> tag Create borderless frames, and control margins and scrolling in frames Identify the purpose of inline frames Discuss the appropriate use of frames Consider search engine optimization (SEO) issues when using frames Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Lesson 10: GUI HTML Editors Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Lesson 10 Objectives • Identify types of GUI editors that automatically create HTML and XHTML code • Identify specific features of GUI editors • Create a Web page using a GUI editor • Compare HTML text editors with GUI editors • Preview and validate code for pages created with a GUI editor • Identify requirements for publishing a Web site to a Web server Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Introduction to GUI HTML Editors • Graphical user interface (GUI) HTML editor • Automatically generates HTML (or XHTML) code • Developer inputs content as in a standard word processor • Also known as WYSIWYG (What You See Is What You Get) editors Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Types of GUI Editors • Page editors – Simpler – For smaller sites or non-collaborative work • KompoZer • Mozilla SeaMonkey Composer • Site management editors – Tools to manage pages and sites – Integrates with related applications – Designers and developers can collaborate to design, build and manage Web site and Internet applications • Adobe Dreamweaver • Adobe GoLive • Microsoft Expression Web Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved GUI HTML Editor Functionality • Features of GUI editors: – Templates and wizards – Text style options – Icon bars – Images – Hypertext links – HTML importing – Table creation – Spelling check – Publishing Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved W3C Authoring Tool Accessibility Guidelines • The guidelines mandate: – The ability of the GUI editor to generate proper code – The usability of the GUI editor by a disabled person creating a Web page • Seven specific points Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Creating Web Pages with a GUI Editor • Coursebook labs use the toolbar, menus and functions of a GUI Web page editor Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Text Editors vs. GUI HTML Editors • HTML text editors (e.g., Notepad, WordPad, Vi, Emacs) – Easily include other code (e.g., JavaScript) – Readily modify code – Apply your HTML/XHTML knowledge and skills • Drawbacks: – Typing code is time-consuming – People with disabilities may find manual entry difficult or impossible – Requires a higher degree of effort to create even a simple page Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Text Editors vs. GUI HTML Editors (cont’d) • GUI HTML editors – Quick code creation – Facilitate collaboration – Spelling checker – Automatic publishing • Drawbacks: – Rarely keep pace with the evolution of HTML/XHTML standards – Code you enter manually may be ignored Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Previewing Pages and Validating Code • Most GUI editors make it easy to: – Preview pages in a browser – View source code – Validate code • Validating HTML code – Specify the correct <!DOCTYPE> before validating; the GUI HTML editor may not do this – Many tools provide useful validation tools – Some editors provide tools for disabled users Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Web Site Publishing • GUI HTML editors usually provide a publishing feature • FTP is the standard protocol for Web page publishing – Stand-alone FTP clients – FTP client provided by GUI HTML editor Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Publishing to a Test Web Server • Before publishing pages to a public site, post them to a test server – Often called a staging server – Verify that pages work and render as expected – Verify that CGI script works as expected – Locate and repair dead links – Allow stakeholders to preview the site • Test server configuration – Test server must be identical to production server – Use the same Web server software and CGI solution Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Web Site Publishing (cont'd) • Example settings for publishing with KompoZer Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Lesson 10 Summary Identify types of GUI editors that automatically create HTML and XHTML code Identify specific features of GUI editors Create a Web page using a GUI editor Compare HTML text editors with GUI editors Preview and validate code for pages created with a GUI editor Identify requirements for publishing a Web site to a Web server Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Lesson 11: Advanced Web Technologies Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Lesson 11 Objectives • • • • • • • • • • Identify client-side and server-side scripting technologies Connect Web pages to databases Use CSS to apply formatting to Web pages Identify the benefits of Dynamic HTML (DHTML) Define the function of the Document Object Model (DOM) and its relationship to browsers Discuss how to develop Web pages for PDAs and smart clients Define Web application frameworks Create aliases with TinyURL Use advanced "Web 2.0" technologies to create Web pages Compare the use of a service provider to hosting your own Web site Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Extending HTML • Client-side and server-side scripting • Additional ways to apply Cascading Style Sheets (CSS) • Dynamic HTML (DHTML) • Web pages for PDAs and smart clients • Web application frameworks • Aliases with TinyURL • Advanced Web technologies made possible through Web 2.0 and Ajax Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Server-Side and Client-Side Languages • Programming concepts – Not required knowledge, but essential terminology is useful to understand • Programming statements – if/then – if/then/else – do while – do until – break Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Server-Side Languages • Attributes of server-side language: – Code is executed by the Web server, not the Web browser – Code executes because an interpreter has been installed and activated on the Web server • Server-side scripts are used for various purposes: – Browser detection – Database connectivity – Cookie creation and identification – Logon scripts – Hit counters – File uploading and downloading Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved PHP Hypertext Preprocessor (PHP) • An interpreted server-side scripting language for creating dynamic Web pages • Embedded in HTML pages but usually executed on a Web server • Example of PHP code: <?php $envVars = array("HTTP_USER_AGENT"); foreach($envVars as $var) { print " <html><head><title>PHP CGI Example</title></head><body> <h1>Hello, World!</h1> Your user agent is:<strong>${$var}.</strong> <br/> </body></html> "; } ?> Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Practical Extraction and Report Language (Perl) • Another server-interpreted language • Older, but very popular • Example of Perl code: #!/usr/bin/perl use CGI qw/:all/; $cgi_object = CGI::new(); print "Content-type: text/html\n\n"; print "<html>\n<head>\n<title>\nPerl CGI Example\n</title>\n<body>\n<h1>Hello, World!</h1>\nYour user agent is: <b>\n"; print $cgi_object->user_agent(); print "</b>.</html>\n"; Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Active Server Pages (ASP) using VBScript • Microsoft’s original server-side scripting solution • Example of ASP code using VBScript: <%@ LANGUAGE=vbscript %> <html> <head> <title>ASP CGI Example</title> </head> <body> <h1>Hello, World!</h1> <% path = Request.ServerVariables("PATH_INFO") pagename = Request.ServerVariables("HTTP_HOST") method = Request.ServerVariables("REQUEST_METHOD") browser = Request.ServerVariables("HTTP_USER_AGENT") user = Request.ServerVariables("REMOTE_ADDR") Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved The C Language • A procedural programming language (relies upon subprograms to accomplish a task in an application) • C is a time-honored language, usually used to create standalone applications and operating systems (e.g., Linux/UNIX) • Can also be used for CGI • Example of C code: #include <stdio.h> int main() { printf("Hello, World!\n"); return 0; } • Note this code includes a reference to a library called stdio.h Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved C++ • Object-oriented programming language – A style of programming that links data to the processes that manipulate it – May include procedural elements, but instead of using subprograms to accomplish a task, will create an object that can then be manipulated throughout the program – Once an object is created, it can be reused • Platform dependent: – Must be compiled to a specific architecture (e.g, IBM-compatible, PowerPC) Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Java • Object-oriented programming language • Compiled • Platform-independent – Marketing: Write once, run anywhere – Reality: Write once, test everywhere • Java can be used to write: – Stand-alone applications – Servlets – JavaServer Pages (JSP) Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Visual Basic • A compiled programming language developed by Microsoft Corporation • Used for stand-alone applications and serverside Web applications • Once only procedural, now has object-based elements Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved C# • • • • Object-oriented programming language Compiled Platform-dependent Used for Microsoft .NET program Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Server Side Includes (SSIs) • An instruction inside of an XHTML/HTML page that directs the Web server to perform an action • An alternative to CGI • SSI instructions are in SGML • Can be used to: – Place the results of a database query into a page – Execute other programs – Indicate the last time a document was modified – Insert footer text at the bottom of a page – Add the current date as a timestamp to a page Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Server Side Includes (SSIs) (cont'd) • Standard SSI file name extensions: – .shtml – .shtm • SSI support in Web servers – Most Web servers include code that enables SSI – However, the SSI feature may be disabled • You may have to activate the feature • You may also have to define a MIME type Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Client-Side Languages • Issues with client-side languages – Some clients do not support JavaScript or any other such scripting language – Users can deactivate script execution in browsers that normally support it Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved JavaScript • Object-based scripting language • Adds interactivity to Web pages • Can also be used on the server side (Server-Side JavaScript [SSJS]) • On the client side, can be used to: – Detect browsers – Create cookies – Create mouse rollovers • JavaScript advantages – Platform-independent – Vendor-neutral – Relatively simple Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved JavaScript (cont'd) • Can be placed in an HTML/XHTML document – Use the <script> tag • Browser detection (using JavaScript or any other scripting technology) is useful for: – Presenting different versions of a site to different browsers – Informing users in a corporate intranet to upgrade their browsers to a supported version – Ensuring accessibility to disabled users Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved JavaScript (cont'd) • JavaScript and cookies – Cookies are stored on the hard drive – Cookies can be used to: • Store passwords • Store user preferences • Choose which Web pages will be displayed based on browser version Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved VBScript • Microsoft’s answer to JavaScript • Can be used on the client side or the server side • If used on the client side, only Internet Explorer can render the script Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Connecting to a Database • For a database to work, you must: – Provide a way for the Web server and database to recognize each other • Microsoft systems can use ODBC • Other methods include PHP scripts – Provide permissions to the database so it can be read and/or written to • You must also supply SQL scripts Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved CGI and Permissions • Aside from improper coding, CGI scripts usually fail to execute because: – The Web server does not have the permissions to execute files and scripts – The file or script used has incorrect permissions, which prohibits the server from executing the file Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved ISPs and CGI • If working with an Internet Service Provider (ISP), you generally need to: – Request CGI services – Request that the ISP: • Enables execute permissions on your scripts • Creates a directory that contains available CGI scripts • Provides user name and passwords with enough permissions to work the system Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved N-Tier Applications • When discussing databases, three elements are generally involved: – Data • The database file or multiple database files – Business logic • The SQL coding necessary to create relationships with the data stored in the database – Presentation • The way that data and business logic are presented on the user screen Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved N-Tier Applications (cont'd) • In n-tier, all three database elements are separated Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Styling Techniques with CSS • Types of CSS include: – Linked style sheet • The <style> and <font> tags in the HTML/XHTML file will override style sheets – Inline style – Embedded style – Imported style sheet Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Declaring an Inline Style • The <span> tag – Can span multiple elements: <span style="background: red"> CIW Web Foundations Associate </span> • The style attribute – Used inside a tag: <h1 style="color: magenta; font-family: arial"> CIW Web Foundations Associate </h1> Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Embedded Styles • An embedded style sheet uses the <style> tag within the <head> section: <head> <title> CIW Web Foundations Associate </title> <style> h1 {color: magenta; font-family: arial; font-size: 20pt} </style> </head> • The style will remain in force until overridden (e.g., by an inline style) Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Imported Style Sheets • Like a linked style sheet, refers to a separate file • Created using the @import statement with the following syntax: @import url(filename.css) <head> <title> CIW Web Foundations Associate </title> <style type="text/css"> @import url(import.css); </style> Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Style Sheets and Browser Compatibility • Styles can cause problems with older browsers – Imported styles can especially cause problems – Test your code in multiple browsers • Most modern browsers are designed to support style sheets Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Dynamic HTML (DHTML) • An enhancement that provides animation, interactivity and dynamic updates in pages • DHTML capabilities include: – Automatic adjustment of font sizes and colors – Absolute positioning – New document content – Granular control over animation, audio and video • Requires XHTML 1.0 or HTML 4.01, CSS, and a way to access the Document Object Model (DOM) Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Document Object Model (DOM) • A vendor-neutral, cross-platform application programming interface (API) • Specifies how objects in a document can be referred to and manipulated through scripting languages • Describes the elements, or objects, within a document rendered by a user agent (e.g., Web browser) • A W3C standard Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Document Object Model (DOM) (cont'd) • Accessing a browser's DOM – Use a scripting language • JavaScript • VBScript – DOM compliance • At one time, several DOMs, depending upon browser manufacturers • W3C standardization • Choosing a DOM-compliant browser • Undefined object error and the DOM • XHTML, the DOM and browser compatibility Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Developing Web Pages for PDAs and Smart Clients • When you develop a Web site for viewing on mobile devices: – Keep your Web pages simple and uncluttered – Prioritize your content – Optimize your site to a smaller screen size Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Web Application Frameworks • Web application framework – a set of software tools or code that is commonly used in the creation and management of online applications • Popular Web application frameworks: – Django – Ruby on Rails Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Creating Aliases with TinyURL • TinyURL – a free Web service that generates short aliases for long URLs • Short URL aliases are useful because they are easier to remember and type • Short URL aliases are subject to linkrot Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Working with Advanced Web Technologies • Web 2.0 – changing trends in the use of WWW technology and Web design that have led to the development of information-sharing and collaboration capabilities • Ajax – enables Web applications to interact with users in much the same way they do with desktop applications Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Browsers as Application Delivery Platforms • Access to hosted applications and services on Web sites that enable you to perform computing tasks without the need to download and install any software • Cloud computing – a computing paradigm in which users are able to access software and services over the Internet instead of from their desktops • Software as a Service (SaaS): – Another term for cloud computing – The software cannot be downloaded or owned by the end user – The software becomes available as a service either for free or for a fee Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Browsers as Application Delivery Platforms (cont'd) • Advantages – Flexibility – Scalability – Cost reduction • Disadvantages – Connectivity – Speed – Lockout Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Personalizing a Web Page with Third-Party Applications • The functionality and usability of your Web page can dramatically increase without the need for you to create programs • Adding such applications may slow page rendering speeds and can easily be overused • Example: iGoogle Gadgets Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Web Feeds • Web feed – a data format for delivering Web content that is updated frequently • Content syndication – RSS (Really Simple Syndication, RDF Site Summary or Rich Site Summary) – Atom Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Podcasts • Podcast – the use of audio or video digitalmedia files that are distributed through Web feeds to subscribed users – Similar to an RSS feed – Podcast files can be syndicated, subscribed to and downloaded automatically Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Typosquatting • Typosquatting – an unethical practice in which a typosquatter capitalizes on typing mistakes that users make when entering the URL of a Web site • Also known as URL hijacking • Typosquatters frequently use their alternative sites to distribute adware, spyware, viruses or other types of malware Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Hosting and Web Service Providers • Internet Service Provider (ISP) – Provides basic services • Internet connectivity • Web server – You need your own experts • Application Service Provider (ASP) – Provides more advanced services • Messaging (i.e., e-mail) • Databases • Spam filtering • Telephony services Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Comparing Options • Configuring your own hosting solution – Benefits – Drawbacks • Using an ISP – Benefits – Drawbacks • Using an ASP – Benefits – Drawbacks Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Co-Location, Dedicated Hosting and Virtual Servers • Co-location • Dedicated hosting (co-hosting) • Virtual server Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Costs of Using an ASP • Often based on: – Amount of traffic – Amount of support you require • Database connectivity • Per-service costs • Bandwidth • Customer support • Security • Application development Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Negotiating Web Services and Communicating Needs • Be prepared to detail your needs • Negotiate prices by providing information: – Potential amount of traffic – Hard drive space needed – Database and CGI needs – Additional services (e.g., custom applications) • As you work with ISP and ASP sales representatives: – Communicate your needs – Talk to the sales representative manager – Have your manager talk to the ISP/ASP manager Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Information You Need from Your Service Provider • • • • • Account information IP addresses and DNS names of the server Instructions about file and directory locations Service provider's contact information Additional information: – ISP/ASP security policies – ISP/ASP support procedures – Procedures for reporting problems – Average timelines for resolving problems Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Lesson 11 Summary Identify client-side and server-side scripting technologies Connect Web pages to databases Use CSS to apply formatting to Web pages Identify the benefits of Dynamic HTML (DHTML) Define the function of the Document Object Model (DOM) and its relationship to browsers Discuss how to develop Web pages for PDAs and smart clients Define Web application frameworks Create aliases with TinyURL Use advanced "Web 2.0" technologies to create Web pages Compare the use of a service provider to hosting your own Web site Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Lesson 12: E-Commerce Practices Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Lesson 12 Objectives • Compare e-commerce to traditional commerce • Discuss the three e-commerce models • Discuss common business operations that use Web technologies • Identify the relationship between Internet marketing and search engine optimization (SEO) • Discuss e-commerce information-formatting technologies • Identify payment models used in e-commerce • Identify ways to protect private transactions • Identify issues related to working in a global environment • Identify ways to build e-commerce relationships using Web-based technology Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Traditional Commerce vs. E-Commerce • Similarities – Both aim to deliver a valued product or service – Both want to serve a large audience – Both strive to quickly deliver products and services • Differences – E-commerce customers expect shorter fulfillment time – E-commerce customers must understand Webbased technologies – E-commerce provides a global audience – E-commerce orders are processed without human interaction or travel to a store location – E-commerce relies upon encryption for security Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved E-Commerce Models • Business to consumer (B2C) – Targets consumers or end users, and sells products and/or services • Amazon.com, small business sites • Business to business (B2B) – Helps organizations to manage relationships and transactions with other businesses • B2Bxchange • Consumer to consumer (C2C) – Consumers buy and sell products or services to other consumers • eBay, Craigslist Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Business and Internet Technologies • Traditional businesses also use e-commerce – Not an either/or proposition – Web technologies make traditional business more efficient • E-commerce concepts: – Supply chain management – Enterprise resource planning (ERP) – B2B information sharing Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Supply Chain Management (SCM) • The ability to manage the process that generates a product and distributes it to customers – You must manage the process that begins with raw materials and ends with a product delivered to a consumer – Customer can be: • An end user • Another business that resells your product after adding value to it, known as a Value Added Reseller (VAR) Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Supply Chain Management (SCM) (cont'd) • Traditional supply chain management model • Professionals running e-commerce sites increasingly need to understand this model Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Supply Chain Management (SCM) (cont'd) • Supply chain management involves the following business aspects: – Product demand – Information flow – Finance management • Essential supply chain management terms – Upstream and downstream – Capacity requirements plan – Additional terms found in coursebook Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) • Use of software to create an automated plan for company operations • ERP goal – enhance communication among all company departments and divisions through software automation • Accomplished through automation of tasks and reporting • All company/organization departments involved • Common terms: – Bolt-on system – Application programming interface (API) – Library Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved B2B Information Sharing with XML • XML allows information to be indexed once, then used in many different applications and companies • DTD limitations • XML schema Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Internet Marketing and Search Engine Optimization (SEO) • Marketing terms • Internet marketing consists of: – Search engine optimization (SEO) – Pay per click (PPC) – Web analytics Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Search Engine Optimization (SEO) • SEO improves the volume and quality of traffic to a Web site by structuring content to improve search engine ranking • An SEO expert must: – Learn about and consider the factors that search engines take into account as they rank sites – Try to create and edit Web pages accordingly • Common SEO tactics • Writing quality Web copy Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Pay Per Click (PPC) • PPC – list your site high in search engine rankings by advertising on keywords that describe your product or service • You simply pay to have your page listed as highly as possible • Most Internet marketing campaigns combine SEO and PPC strategies Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Web Analytics • Web analytic types: – On-site analytics • Use trend analysis software to analyze server logs • Tag pages – Off-site analytics • Identify the size of your market • Identify competitors • Determine your market penetration • Conduct surveys • Consult market research sources Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Complete Internet Marketing • A successful marketing campaign involves: – A competent leader – A team effort – Continued effort – Follow-up Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved E-Commerce Information-Formatting Technologies • When businesses need to exchange information, they must agree upon universal information-formatting methods • The two most common ways to format information are: – Electronic Data Interchange (EDI) – Open Buying on the Internet (OBI) Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Electronic Data Interchange (EDI) • A universal method for formatting information so it can be transferred among organizations • In place for over 20 years • Useful for exchanging: – Invoices – Bills – Purchase orders – Inventory lists – Supply chain information • EDI implementation and drawbacks • EDI and XML Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Open Buying on the Internet (OBI) • Designed as an alternative to EDI • Developed to target high-volume, low-cost transactions – These account for almost 80 percent of most companies' purchasing activities • OBI components • OBI transactions • OBI and EDI Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved E-Commerce Payment Technologies • Payment technologies include: – Electronic Funds Transfer (EFT) – Payment gateways – Secure Electronic Transactions (SET) – Open Trading Protocol (OTP) – Secure Sockets Layer (SSL) / Transport Layer Security (TLS) Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Electronic Funds Transfer (EFT) • A generic term that describes the ability to transfer funds using computers rather than paper • Also known as wire transfer • EFT systems must ensure: – Confidentiality of payment information – Integrity of payment information – Merchant authentication – Interoperability • Automated Clearing House (ACH) – Governed in the United States by the National Automated Clearing House Association – Used in EFT Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Payment Gateway • Mediates between a merchant and a merchant bank • Once the merchant receives payment from a customer, the merchant uses the payment gateway to transmit credit card information to the bank • Responsibilities: – Forwarding information – Authenticating participants – Ensuring confidentiality – Ensuring data integrity • Payment gateway companies Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Secure Electronic Transactions (SET) • Uses digital certificates to secure financial transactions • Public and private keys ensure encryption, data confidentiality and non-repudiation • Designed to allow both simple and complex transactions • History of SET • SET example • SET vs. conventional transactions Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Open Trading Protocol (OTP) • Alternative to SET – An open standard (RFC 2802) – Used for both B2C and B2B – Often used with XML • OTP features: – Provides trading protocol options to control the way that the trade occurs – Provides a record of a particular trade – Supports real and virtual delivery of goods and services (payment tracking) Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Secure Sockets Layer (SSL) / Transport Layer Security (TLS) • Not transaction methods • Used to secure transactions • Services provided: – Authentication – Data confidentiality – Data integrity Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved SSL/TLS and Public Key Infrastructure (PKI) • You need a certificate to enable host authentication before you can begin an SSL session • Public Key Infrastructure (PKI) – A collection of individuals, networks and machines that comprise the ability to authoritatively confirm the identity of a person, host or organization Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved PKI Elements • PKI elements include: – Digital certificate – Certificate authority (CA) – Registration authority (RA) – Certificate server – Certification chain Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Digital Certificates and X.509 • Digital certificates used in PKI conform to the ITU X.509 standard • X.509 describes how to format digital certificates Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved PKCS Standards • Public-Key Cryptography Standards (PKCS) – Used to store and transport certificates • PKCS #7 – Used to secure e-mail certificates • PKCS #10 – Used to generate a certificate request to a certificate authority (CA) Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Certificate Life Cycle • Certificates usually have a limited life (e.g., 1 month, 2 years, 6 years) • Life cycle helps reduce the likelihood of fraud • Terms include: – Certificate policy – Certificate Practice Statement (CPS) – Certificate expiration – Certificate revocation – Certificate suspension – Certificate renewal – Certificate destruction – Certificate revocation list (CRL) – Online Certificate Status Protocol (OCSP) Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Additional SSL/TLS Concepts • The SSL/TLS handshake • Common applications • Beginning an SSL/TLS session – Encryption begins after authentication – Issues: • Different host name • Certificate expired • Certificate date not yet valid • Invalid certificate format • Certificate presented by the server not signed by a recognized CA • Incompatible encryption settings Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Working in a Global Environment • By placing your business on the Web, you expand your audience to include anyone in the world with a browser and Internet access • Consider the level to which you will accommodate potential customers from countries outside yours – Issues to consider include: • Currency differences • International shipping • Language concerns • Relationship management Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Currency and Trade • Each country (e.g., China) and economic block (e.g., European Union) uses its own currency • Businesses and organizations must be able to: – Automatically calculate exchange rates for the day of the transaction – Calculate taxes and tariffs on goods • Taxes, tariffs and trade Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved International Shipping • Consider the following issues: – Customs searches – Costs incurred by customs – Delays caused by customs – All tariffs • Legal and regulatory issues: – A product you sell legally in one country may be illegal in another – A product you sell may be heavily regulated Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Language Concerns • As you develop an e-commerce site, consider the following issues: – The language(s) used by the target audience – The characters necessary (e.g., alphanumeric, mathematical or currency symbols) • Character sets and languages – Computers can use different character sets – Unicode Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Relationship Management • Building trust – Quality customer service – Frequent contact • Customer self-service – Automatic order tracking – Unattended choice – Order customization Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Lesson 12 Summary Compare e-commerce to traditional commerce Discuss the three e-commerce models Discuss common business operations that use Web technologies Identify the relationship between Internet marketing and search engine optimization (SEO) Discuss e-commerce information-formatting technologies Identify payment models used in e-commerce Identify ways to protect private transactions Identify issues related to working in a global environment Identify ways to build e-commerce relationships using Web-based technology Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved Site Development Associate Introduction to Web Site Development Markup Language and Site Development Essentials XHTML Coding Horizontal Rules and Graphical Elements Hyperlinks HTML Tables Web Forms Image Techniques HTML Frames GUI HTML Editors Advanced Web Technologies E-Commerce Practices Site Development Associate Copyright © 2010 Certification Partners, LLC -- All Rights Reserved