Sams Teach Yourself CSS 3 in 24 Hours, 3rd Edition
- Length: 450 pages
- Edition: 3
- Language: English
- Publisher: Sams Publishing
- Publication Date: 2014-02-25
- ISBN-10: 0672331020
- ISBN-13: 9780672331022
- Sales Rank: #8032655 (See Top 100 Books)
Sams Teach Yourself CSS 3 in 24 Hours: Including CSS3 Coverage (3rd Edition)
CSS3 (Cascading Style Sheets 3) is the next major revision of the style sheet language that is used to describe the presentation (the appearance and formatting) of web pages written in HTML. CSS is designed primarily to enable the separation of document content (written in HTML or a similar markup language) from document presentation, including elements such as the colors, fonts, and layout. The CSS specification is developed and maintained by the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C). Different types and versions of web browsers, however, implement parts of the CSS specification incompletely and with varying levels of consistency. Although CSS 3 is still far from final, some parts of the specification have reached Candidate Recommendation stage, which has allowed the most recent versions of major browsers to begin to support these parts of the specification. Sams Teach Yourself CSS in 24 Hours is a carefully organized, well-written tutorial that teaches the beginning web page designer how to use CSS to specify how their web page will appear when displayed within a web browser. Learning to effectively use CSS is a critical developmental step for anyone aspiring to professional-level web page design skills. In 24 straightforward one-hour lessons, the reader learns by accomplishing hands-on tasks that can be applied to your own site.
- Teaches CSS in a straightforward and clear language that any beginner can understand
- Complete details on using CSS with all modern browsers
Most Helpful Customer Reviews
“This one has absolutely no pictures, I further browsed through the book looking for hidden gems. ” – coffee_fan
“This is a sound book that will either get you up to speed or refresh your knowledge of CSS in a very short time. ” – Charles Ashbacher
“The author sometimes confuses me by repeating a couple of words in the samesentence. ” – A. Craig