|
| One Hour HTML -
Learn the language of the web in just 60 minutes. |
The Many Flavours of HTML
by Anthony Stai
HTML (Hypertext Markup Language) is the language of the web –
every website out there is written in some kind of HTML. Because of the
rapid evolution of the web, though, HTML grew quickly in a very
unplanned way, which can lead to problems if you're not sure what kind
or version of HTML you're using. Here's a quick history of HTML's
flavours so far.
A Long, Long Time Ago...
The first version of HTML was created by the web's inventor, Tim
Berners-Lee, and was loosely based on an existing standard called SGML
(Standardised General Markup Language). This very first version didn't
have an img tag, which meant that no graphics at all could appear on
web pages. Berners-Lee informally extended the language, but didn't
standardise it.
As the web grew, the lack of standardisation started to make it
difficult for web browsers to interact – one web browser might
have a new tag that others didn't support, meaning that people would
see pages completely differently depending on which browser they used.
In 1995, HTML was formalised as a standard named HTML 2, which was the
version that the first mass-market web browsers were based on.
As they extended the standard further, an HTML 3 was introduced in 1997
to keep up-to-date. HTML 4 was introduced later that year as an effort
to clean up the standard, making it clear that some tags should no
longer be used. Apart from a few minor fixes in 1999, this is the
version of HTML that is still in use today.
DHTML.
Parallel to this development, though, other languages were being
developed that could be included in HTML documents: languages like
Javascript (for interactive pages) and CSS (for styling). DHTML
(Dynamic HTML) was the name given to the combination of HTML and these
technologies. To put it simply, HTML is for web pages while DHTML is
for 'web applications'. As people start to do more and more things on
the web that they used to do with separate programs, DHTML techniques
are becoming ever-more popular.
XHTML.
Sometimes considered 'next-generation HTML', XHTML is a stricter
version of HTML that makes it follow XML standards. XML (eXtensible
Markup Language) is a standard for HTML-like languages that is being
used for more and more purposes, including configuration and sharing
data.
Stripped of the technical talk, XHTML can basically be thought of as a
stricter version of HTML. Where HTML is often messy and hard to test,
XHTML is strictly standardised and can be run through automatic
'validators' that will point out any errors you've made. This improves
cross-browser compatibility and makes web pages much easier to
maintain, since it mostly forces information on the style of the page
to be separated from the actual text of the page.
XHTML exists in a few different versions: there is a 'transitional'
version, which lets you keep using some old practices from HTML4, and
there is a 'strict' version, which is the one you need to use to get
most of XHTML's benefits.
The web's standards body, the W3C, runs an HTML validator at validator.w3c.org.
What Does All This Mean to Me?
You might be wondering at this point why exactly you need to know about
the different kinds of HTML. Well, as ever, the answer is that you need
to choose one before you start developing your website. You have to be
aware of which versions your tools support to know whether your tools
can work together, and you should aim to pick the kind of HTML that
will be most suitable for your site.
At the moment, XHTML is recommended for most websites, simply because
it makes the whole process much easier, especially if you use an editor
that saves to XHTML automatically. The only situation in which you
should really keep using HTML4/DHTML is if you're designing a web
application instead of a web page. If your site is, like 99% of the
sites on the web, designed to give information more than it is designed
to do anything else, then you should be using XHTML, preferably the
strict version.
About
The Author:
Anthony Stai invites you to
take your
website to the next level. Get one of the best Search Engine
Optimization (SEO) books on the market for Free! Learn the techniques
that differentiate the amateurs from the pros. Get your book at http://www.makemoneyonline4you.com/seo.html
|
|
|
|