HTML/CSS or HTML 5/CSS3

by tom804
18 replies
  • WEB DESIGN
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Would it be best to learn current HTML/CSS or HTML5/CSS3?.
#5 or css3 #html #html or css
  • Profile picture of the author Istvan Horvath
    Without the basics you will not understand the advanced stuff... Just saying.
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  • Tom804,

    You should learn about whatever you are going to be using. HTML and CSS are still heavily supported. There are some very cool features in the new languages but it doesn’t make sense to learn it if you aren’t going to use it.

    Best,

    Shawn
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  • Profile picture of the author dinga
    Originally Posted by tom804 View Post

    Would it be best to learn current HTML/CSS or HTML5/CSS3?.
    HTML and CSS are the building blocks of Website Design. I would suggest you start by learning them. The new HTML5 and CSS3 standards simply build on top of the original standards.

    Here are some excellent resources for learning HTML and CSS. I highly recommend using W3Schools. You will be able to learn with documentation, examples, quizzes, references and more. The website even has a "Try it yourself" page that allows you to submit HTML and CSS code. The code is parsed and a preview box shows the result of your code.

    Learn HTML
    HTML Tutorial

    Learn CSS
    CSS Tutorial

    Best of luck!
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  • Profile picture of the author Andrew H
    HTML/CSS or HTML5/CSS3

    1995 Nissan Sentra or 2013 BMW

    You choose.
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    "You shouldn't come here and set yourself up as the resident wizard of oz."
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    • Profile picture of the author tom804
      Originally Posted by Andrew H View Post

      HTML/CSS or HTML5/CSS3

      1995 Nissan Sentra or 2013 BMW

      You choose.
      LOL funny thing is I actually owned a 95 Nissan Sentra.
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  • Profile picture of the author MrMonetize
    You learn the latest standards, but you will understand HTML anyway when learning HTML5 and likewise with CSS and CSS3. They just add extra functionality on top of the existing standards, whilst HTML5 is strong on semantics which can only be a good thing for your design career. Remember to learn about fallbacks when coding for some of the older browsers which don't support the latest code, namely the IE family.

    Here's a good one - Modernizr: the feature detection library for HTML5/CSS3
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  • Profile picture of the author Michael71
    First of all...

    HTML5 and CSS3 are still NOT standard...

    Second: HTM5 is still HTML, CSS3 is still CSS... nothing more, nothing less

    If you have no clue about the box model or HTML at all... start with the basics.

    Or do you jump in a F1 car without knowing how to drive on racetracks at all?
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  • Profile picture of the author Andrew H
    Or do you jump in a F1 car without knowing how to drive on racetracks at all?
    Buckle up and hit the accelerator. Best way to learn is trial and error.
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    "You shouldn't come here and set yourself up as the resident wizard of oz."
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    • Profile picture of the author Istvan Horvath
      Originally Posted by Andrew H View Post

      Buckle up and hit the accelerator. Best way to learn is trial and error.
      And kill everybody on the road... that's a quite stupid approach
      (yep, I see that daily here in Canada on the highways) :rolleyes:
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  • Profile picture of the author xtrapunch
    If you use HTML5/CSS3, be ready to handle the browsers that do not understand the latest tags. IE will also give you lots of headache (it does with HTML as well). There are some HTML5

    You can use scripts like html5shiv - HTML5 IE enabling script - Google Project Hosting to make old browsers understand HTML5.
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    • Profile picture of the author domhost3
      I strongly feel that first you must learn the basic like HTML and CSS.. Once you are master in these you will easily understand the updated version of it..It is the same only with the added features..
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  • Profile picture of the author Andrew H
    I'm confused as to what 'the experts' are saying here. If he is learning HTML and CSS why would he not learn the newest standards at the same time? it seems idiotic not to.

    tom804, I learnt HTML(5), CSS(3), JS, PHP(5.4), MySQL all in the last 3 years while finishing my BA (In a completely unrelated discipline). If you are going to look at 'how-to' resources, don't get the book that's titled 'HTML' - get the book that's titled 'HTML5' (same goes for CSS). You need to learn the newest technologies to remain competitive.

    Buckle up, hit the accelerator. Preferably in a newer car with air bags.
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    "You shouldn't come here and set yourself up as the resident wizard of oz."
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  • Profile picture of the author crescendo
    HTML and CSS also known as HyperText Markup Language and Cascading Style Sheet respectively are languages used to create and enhance websites. HTML is a markup language that uses tags and codes to create a website. CSS is used to format the website and to enhance its appearance of websites created in markup languages. Both HTML and CSS make the basic supplements of websites and are supported by all web browsers.

    HTML5 and CSS3 are advanced and upgraded versions of basic HTML and CSS. They offer additional features, tags and attributes that not only add to the website's appearance and performance but also make it easier for the programmer to add features to the website. However, HTML5 and CSS3 are not supported by older versions of browsers that may still be used by several users.

    It is recommended to learn HTML and CSS before one step into the advanced versions. Not only will you gain better understanding of the languages but you will also be able to tackle every problem you may come across while making the design compatible with all browsers.
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  • Profile picture of the author ChrisMoon
    HTML5 and CSS3 are still HTML and CSS, you need to know the principles and how they work.
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    GreyGable

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  • Profile picture of the author annaharris
    Hey, For learning HTML5 and CSS3, first you need to understand HTML/CSS because it is the main base of that and without that you can't learn next version. So, Both are necessary.
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  • Profile picture of the author webcosmo
    You can`t learn HTML5 and miss HTML, just because HTML5 is plain HTML and then some more So yes, learn HTML5 and CSS3 But be aware that those aren't standards yet.
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  • Profile picture of the author JohnMorg
    HTML5 it's only a marketing definition. It is still simple HTML with some new features and tags.
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  • Profile picture of the author tom804
    Okay so i've been using Learn to code | Codecademy to learn HTML and CSS. I highly recommend that site for anybody that's trying to learn HTML and CSS.
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