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G4G0-1/Semester 1/Web Development and HCI/Week 5/Week 5 Web Development.md
2024-01-16 13:48:46 +00:00

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Lecture 1 (13:00) - HTML5 and Layout

  • XHTML (2000) succeeded HTML4, allowing XML integration such as SVG, MathML and CML.

HTML5

  • Flexible parsing and compatibility
  • Moved towards platform combining HTML5, CSS and JS
  • Improved semantic elements
  • New input attributes ex. date, time, email, url
  • Global attributes ex. id, tabindex, style

Doctypes

<!DOCTYPE html>
<?xml version="1.0" ?>

Comments

<!-- This is a comment -->

ID Attribute

  • Global attribute.
  • Must be unique between elements.
  • Must start with a letter or underscore.
  • Can be used by CSS or JS to identify elements.

Class Attribute

  • Any HTML element can also carry a class attribute.
  • Identifies collections of elements to manipulate as a group.
  • Element can have multiple classes, separated with spaces.
  • Class name should describe the class it belongs to.

Block Elements

  • Some elements will always appear to start in new lines.
  • Examples include <h1>, <p>, <ul>, <li>.

Inline Elements

  • Some elements will always appear to continue on the same line.
  • Examples include <a>, <b>, <em>, <img>.

Grouping Elements

Block

  • <div> Element allows for a group of elements to be grouped together within a single block element.
  • Without styling each div, they will start on new lines.
  • HTML5 introduced alternatives for semantic reasons.
    • <article> <section> <header> <aside> <nav>
  • Good practice to break a page into smaller sections.

Span

  • <span> element is the inline equivalent of <div>
  • Most commonly used in order to be able to controlthe appearance with CSS.

Lecture 2 (15:00)

Page Information

  • <meta> contained in <head>, contains information about the page.
  • Not visible to user, but used in search engine rankings and info.
  • Common attributes are defined in pairs.

Name, Value <meta>

Description
  • Description of page
  • Used & Displayed by search engines
  • max. 155 characters.
Keywords
  • Comma separated list of search terms
  • Not used by search engines anymore
Robots
  • Indicated whether search engines should include page
    • noindex - Don't include this page.
    • nofollow - Include this page but not linked pages.

Special Characters

  • Some characters reserved by HTML
  • To display them, they must be escaped.
    • ex. &lt;, &gt;
  • Or by using ASCII / Unicode Values
    • ex. &#60;, &#62;

Traditional HTML Layout vs. HTML5

HTML5 Elements

  • <header>, <footer>. Used as either header or footer at the top or bottom of a page, respectively. Can also be used for an individual <section> or <article> within the page.
  • <nav>. Contains major navigational blocks ex. Primary site navigation.
  • <article>. Container for syndicated or singular sections ex. news or blog article.
  • <aside>. Contained within <article> and contains relevant but not necessary information.
  • <section>. Groups related items together ex. Grouping <article> elements, or splitting them up.
  • <hgroup>. Groups heading elements ( h1, h2, etc.. ) into one header.
  • <figure>. Contains information referenced by the main flow of the document. Can be used for Images, Videos,Graphs, Diagrams, Code Samples, Text etc. Can use a <figcaption> element to define a caption.

Sectioning Elements

  • HTML5 elements must strictly be used as designed.
  • Where no element is valid, <div> is still used.
  • Any content outside of <header>, <footer> and <aside> is considered content, hence there is no "<content>" tag.
  • <main> element is used to specify content however, but can only be used once and cannot be nested inside <section> or any similar element.