So surf to these places, download or print the info and put up a site on the 'net.......and come back and let me know where it is so I can link to it. I hope this helps....
This is a good one; one of the first places I visited
and one of the best- lots of help including Primers that
walk you through the building of your page and lots of
graphics, too. The site is large, but easy to navigate.
This site is linked there, so you may have come from the
Goodies site.
This is the homepage of the Guild.....members,
like myself, can provide LOTS of help with your site-
building. The Newsletter also has a lot of links to other
helps.
Geocities is a website hosting service- they give members
FREE space to put up a site in one of their "themed
communities". Even better, many of their members (and
there are hundreds of thousands!) are wizards with html
and other skills and are willing to help you get started
with your own site. If you register for a free homepage
you will be led to a page that lists some of the help
sites. Once you can navigate the site well, there is a
search function that will lead you to many more. Won't you be my neighbor?
HTML Author is a
WYSIWYG (What You See Is What You Get) Editor. It is
a downloadable shareware program that helps you edit HTML
without knowing much HTML- of course, you have to learn
to use it......I never did, being comfortable with learning
the HTML itself. If you need an editor to help you get
going, this is one place to start- inexpensive and with
a helpful site that explains a lot.
This site is a gold mine of resources for the
site-builder; graphics, Java, cgi scripts, clip-art, etc.
etc, etc. Really for the designer that has some skills,
but a good 2nd stop after you are on your way.
This one deserves special mention- a very quick, bare bones primer that can get you on-line in an hour. I printed this one out on my 1st visit to GeoCities. I still have the pages. This site also has some good links to other resources.
The NCSA at the University of Illinois, Champaign-
Urbana are THE source for HTML knowledge- they set the
standards and keep the Sacred Scrolls. At the bottom
of the page linked here you will find a link to their
HTML Primer, a wonderfiul tool for beginners. They also
have a lnk down there to a "forms" tutorial, which I haven't
tried, as I learned forms from.........
The HTML Sourcebook by Ian S. Graham, published by John Wiley & Sons, sits on my computer desk and grows no dust. I've learned a lot from this book- it has source code and examples of screens from various browsers to show what your HTML will look like on the computer screen.......I wish this book
was on-line; of course, then I'd have to print it out to have
it handy, LOL.
Stars.com......haven't had a lot of time to check this one out, but my brief visits have shown it to be a rich environment for the page-builder in search of help- easy to navigate, with an alphabetical index and search function.
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