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Absolute Beginner's Guide to Creating Web Pages





vBulletin Book Store > vBulletin books beginning with A

More details of book titled: Absolute Beginner's Guide to Creating Web Pages

Absolute Beginner's Guide to Creating Web Pages

Author: Todd Stauffer
Published: 2002-03-27
List price: $24.95
Our price: $21.07

As of: November 20th, 2008 09:36:12 PM
Customer comments on this selection.

vBulletin Misleading packaging
Long story short: after getting this book I am still an absolute beginner. I bought MS Frontpage a few months ago and needed something to help me to get my first web site going without having to become an expert in web design or rocket science. I suppose you could call me an absolute beginner. br /The problem is: this book is about authoring web sites using CODE. Text editors. Like programmers do. I am not a programmer or an engineer or anything like that. I am an absolute beginner. Let me tell you this - absolute beginners DO NOT USE code. They use wysiwig programmes. That is what defines us - we cannot use code (yet) because we are absolute beginners. That is what defines us. If we were at the level of graduating to code, we would not be absolute beginners anymore. br / br /This is possibly a brilliant book, but I will never know it because I cannot even understand the introduction. br / br /I feel that I have been misled. This book is not what it claims. It is NOT an "Absolute beginner's guide". The cover further states "No prior web publishing experience necessary!" This is bull. (Luckily, I also bought David Karlins' EXCELLENT book Build Your Own Web Site which helped me tremendously and thanks to which I now have a very nice web site, thank you very much). Karlins' book also makes no outrageous claims on the cover, but gives simple tips and instructions which even a fool - sorry, I meant to say absolute beginner - like me has no problems following. br / br /I object to misleading advertising and packaging. I fell for this one. They could easily have indicated on the cover that this book is NOT for beginners and covers only code, but they chose not to. This book is not what it claims to be. Stay away. br /

vBulletin this is a really good book
After skimming a sad stack of "learn how to create web pages" books I found this. It isn't so basic as to be close to useless, nor an impenetrable tome of code. It is an excellent introduction which provides the big picture--it is easier to learn how to do something when you understand how it works--and step by step details for those new to xhtml. Don't be fooled by the cheesy design of the cover. This is a well-written book for intelligent beginners and the best choice in this category.

vBulletin Not For Absolute Beginners is a better title
I am a true beginner, wondering how the heck to get a simple website started. I read the first 5 chapters, and I still don't know. Some very basic information seems to be missing, such as "How do I get the info from my computer to my web page? Can I preview what I'm doing? etc."

vBulletin Best book for learning html code
I read this book three times then coded my first site. I knew nothing about html prior to reading the book. br / br /It was fantastic to read a book that not only explained in fairly plain English what each tag is and how it works, it showed easy examples and lessons to follow. br / br /Highly recommend this book to those who want to create their own website! br / br /Heather br /Owner, www.AssistantForYou.com

vBulletin The title is misleading..
Sounds like a 'for dummies' book but is very far from it. Saying 'web pages' is simplified. This book covers site design from scratch minus the details and makes simple work of a convoluted subject. It doesn't show you simple web page stuff but is a complete outline of the entire web site design/development field. Incredible. From this, I can choose what complexities I wish to delve into further without chasing after marginally useful technologies. Being in the computer field since before PC's, I prefer simple straightforward explanations and find techspeak boring. For a book written in latter 2003, I find it far more current than some 2004 books I've seen. the future of the web is moving to simplified (thank you!) and being versed in structured computer development, this is the first time I've been able to garner any excitement for web design. brI've read all the IBM manauals I care to. This book does not talk down to you but it does cover from the basics. Not for the AOL user but more for a Compuserve sort. I'm so glad I chose this as my intro. My only gripe is the additional 'online' chapters located on the publisher's website were to be download files so I expected a pdf or something but instead found viewable pages sans the 'figures' (pictures) accompanying the text. Also, the author refers FAQs and things to his personal website which no longer exists. not kool. But the book's merits (including the price) still warrant 5 stars in my book.

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