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HTML & XHTML: The Definitive Guide (Definitive Guides) by Chuck Musciano
£22.99
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JavaScript: The Definitive Guide by David Flanagan
£22.99
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Programming PHP by Rasmus Lerdorf
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CSS Pocket Reference (Pocket Reference (O'Reilly)) by Eric Meyer
£5.05
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CSS Cookbook (Cookbooks (O'Reilly)) by Christopher Schmitt
£22.39
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The book is very upfront about the spotty early browser support for CSS and the sluggish adoption of CSS2. However, enthusiasm for the technology spills out of the pages, convincing even the most sceptical reader to give CSS a whirl and count on its future. CSS1 is covered in impressive depth, not only the syntactical conventions but also more general concepts such as specificity and inheritance. Frequent warnings and tips alert the reader to browser compatibility pitfalls.
Entire chapters are devoted to topics such as units and values; visual formatting and positioning; and the usual text, fonts and colours. This attention to both detail and architecture helps readers build a well-rounded knowledge of CSS and equips them for a future of real-world debugging. Cascading Style Sheets honestly states its reasons for avoiding an in-depth discussion of the still immature CSS2, but covers the general changes over CSS1 in a brief chapter near the end of the book.
When successfully implemented, Cascading Style Sheets result in more elegant HTML that separates form from function. This fine guide delivers on its promise as an indispensable tool for CSS coders. --Stephen W. Plain, Amazon.com
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