Features
- Cover Type: Paperback with 416 pages
- Published by: Alpha
- Edition: 6th Edition September 7, 2004
- Written in: English
- ISBN 10 Number: 1592572677
- ISBN 13 Number: 978-1592572670
-
Book Dimensions:
9 x 7.4 x 1 inches
- Weighs: 1.4 pounds
Product Description
Spin your own web! Free CD-ROM included. More people are overcoming their digital fears and producing Internet content rather than just absorbing it. Whether their product is a collection of essays, stories, reviews, jokes, or shopping lists, they want to share it with everyonefrom family and friends to strangers across the globe. How do they do it? By starting right here.
The Complete Idiots Guide® to Creating a Web Page and Blogthe only book of its kind will help anyone build and maintain an Internet website or blog. Coverage includes:
Step-by-step instructions for building a site from the ground up
Important HTML tags
Tips on using fonts, colors, and images
Incorporating tables, forms, style sheets, and JavaScripts
The new blog technology
Plus! A Webmasters Toolkit on a companion CD-ROM, providing files used in this book.
About The Author
Paul McFedries is the author of
The Complete Idiots Guide to Microsoft Windows XP, and the proprietor of Word Spy, a blog devoted to recently coined words and phrases which has been featured in
The New York Times, The Wall Street Journal, and
Time.
Reader ReviewsThe point of this book, as is true in general of the Complete Idiot's Guide series, is to give a gentle, non-intimidating, and often humorous introduction to its topic. It's meant to help people who really know nothing about the web and about blogging create something that looks nice and accomplishes whatever purpose they have in mind for it. And in this, I believe this book succeeds beautifully. Since you can so easily find a listing of book topics in the information Amazon provides, I'll just mention some of the things that particularly caught my attention in this book. One of those was the section on blogs. None of the other HTML books I've read have discussed the issue (probably because this is the most recent of them, put out in 2004). Not only does McFedries get into the how of blogging, but he also gets deeply into the social and historical details. There's plenty of information on formatting, programs, services, etc., but there's also great stuff in here about finding and building your audience, focusing on a topic or two, deciding on your posting frequency, writing interesting entries, getting along with other bloggers, and so on. I read this section with rapt attention. Some CIG and For Dummies books make the mistake of providing what I call "perishable resources." That is, they tell you about a couple of specific hosting providers or whatever. I refer to these as perishable because by the time you read the book those companies have probably shut down, been bought, or changed enough that everything is different. For the most part McFedries doesn't make that mistake. Instead he tries to tell you how to find this sort of information on the web yourself, so you'll be able to figure out who is most currently a good choice. There's a chapter in here on "the elements of web page style." Before I got to this chapter I was a little worried (this is where that intro line about the review score comes in). There are a lot of sites out there on the web that go crazy with wild fonts, bold and italics all over the place, frobbies that only work on one browser type or another, lots of huge images that take forever to load, horrid noises that play without asking first and scare your cats off of your lap (okay, I have some personal pet peeves here), and so on, and it seemed to me like all of McFedries' enthusiasm for the web tools at one's disposal could contribute to that. But then he wrote this wonderful chapter in which he explains things to help you make your web page appeal to visitors, and he covers a lot of these things in there. I think this is a fantastic introduction to web site and blog creation--in particular the wide world of blogging, since there are so few other resources on that subject. I hope that McFedries continues to do revised versions of this book as the need arises, because this is a valuable resource.