| Team-Fly | | | Webmaster in a Nutshell, 3rd Edition By Robert Eckstein, Stephen Spainhour | Table of Contents | | Preface | Contents In the years immediately after the first edition of this book was published in 1996, we watched the Web explode, with new technologies every month scrambling to make last month's technology obsolete. Then we watched the Web settle down, as standards caught up with features, and fiscal realities caught up with IPOs. The land grab was over as quickly as it began , and miraculously, the code you wrote last night still works after downloading the latest browser this morning. The Web has reached maturity. As a result of the Web's maturation , this edition of Webmaster in a Nutshell is fairly stable. There haven't been new chapters introduced or old ones removed; what was relevant when we did the second edition in 1999 is still relevant today. The technology has improved and the feature set has expanded, but the paradigms remain the same. This book is separated into eight distinct subject areas. - Chapter 1
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Introduces the book and the Web in general. Part I: HTML - Chapter 2
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Gives a brief background to HTML syntax and introduces the features of the latest specification, HTML 4.01. - Chapter 3
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Lists the current set of HTML tags and their attributes. - Chapter 4
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Shows how to use HTML frames . - Chapter 5
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Shows how to use HTML tables. - Chapter 6
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Shows how to create HTML forms. - Chapter 7
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Lists the special characters recognized by HTML. - Chapter 8
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Lists the names accepted by HTML and CSS attributes for color values. Part II: CSS - Chapter 9
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Provides an overview and reference to the Cascading Style Sheets specification for HTML documents. Part III: XML - Chapter 10
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Provides an introduction and reference to XML. Part IV: JavaScript - Chapter 11
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Provides a reference for the JavaScript language, Version 1.5. Part V: CGI and Perl - Chapter 12
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Gives a general overview to the Common Gateway Interface, or CGI. - Chapter 13
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Describes SSI, listing directives and environment variables and demonstrating their use. - Chapter 14
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Provides a reference to the Perl module CGI.pm, which simplifies CGI programming. - Chapter 15
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Provides a reference to mod_perl, an Apache module that can significantly enhance CGI performance. Part VI: PHP - Chapter 16
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Lists the syntax and functions of PHP 4, a server-side, HTML-embedded scripting language. Part VII: HTTP - Chapter 17
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Provides an overview and reference to the Hypertext Transfer Protocol, Version 1.1. Part VIII: Server Configuration - Chapter 18
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Lists the configuration directives used by the Apache 2.0 server. - Chapter 19
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Lists the modules that you can use with Apache. - Chapter 20
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Gives specific suggestions for improving the performance of the Web. |