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Creating a Well-Formed Valid Document

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1 Creating a Well-Formed Valid Document
Tutorial 9 Working with XHTML Creating a Well-Formed Valid Document Tutorial 9 New Perspectives on HTML, XHTML, and DHTML, Comprehensive

2 New Perspectives on HTML, XHTML, and DHTML, Comprehensive
Objectives Introducing XHTML Creating a Well-Formed Document Creating a Valid Document Creating an XHTML Document Testing an XHTML Document Using Style Sheets and XHTML Tutorial 9 New Perspectives on HTML, XHTML, and DHTML, Comprehensive

3 New Perspectives on HTML, XHTML, and DHTML, Comprehensive
Introducing XHTML SGML (Standard Generalized Markup Language) can be used with almost any type of document stored in almost any format Introduced in the 1980s Metalanguage– used to created other languages HTML standards get confusing among browsers can be applied inconsistently Tutorial 9 New Perspectives on HTML, XHTML, and DHTML, Comprehensive

4 New Perspectives on HTML, XHTML, and DHTML, Comprehensive
Introducing XHTML XML (Extensible Markup Language) used to design markup languages XML documents must be evaluated with an XML parser An XML document with correct syntax is a well-formed document A well-formed document with correct content and structure is a valid document DTD specifies correct content and structure Tutorial 9 New Perspectives on HTML, XHTML, and DHTML, Comprehensive

5 New Perspectives on HTML, XHTML, and DHTML, Comprehensive
Introducing XHTML XHTML is a reformulation of HTML, written in XML Versions of XHTML Tutorial 9 New Perspectives on HTML, XHTML, and DHTML, Comprehensive

6 DTDs associated with XHTML 1.0
- transitional: supports many of the presentational features of HTML, including the deprecated elements and attributes Best used for older documents that contain deprecated features Tutorial 9 New Perspectives on HTML, XHTML, and DHTML, Comprehensive

7 DTDs associated with XHTML 1.0
- frameset: used for documents containing frames, and also supports deprecated elements and attributes Tutorial 9 New Perspectives on HTML, XHTML, and DHTML, Comprehensive

8 DTDs associated with XHTML 1.0
- strict: does not allow any presentational features or deprecated HTML elements and attributes. Does not support frames or inline frames. It is best used for documents that need to strictly conform to the latest standards. Tutorial 9 New Perspectives on HTML, XHTML, and DHTML, Comprehensive

9 Creating a Well-Formed Document
Rules for well-formed XHTML documents Tutorial 9 New Perspectives on HTML, XHTML, and DHTML, Comprehensive

10 Creating a Well-Formed Document
XHTML documents must also include a single root element that contains all other elements For XHTML, that root element is the html element Attribute minimization is when some attributes lack attribute values XHTML doesn’t allow attribute minimization Tutorial 9 New Perspectives on HTML, XHTML, and DHTML, Comprehensive

11 Attribute minimization in HTML and XHTML
Tutorial 9 New Perspectives on HTML, XHTML, and DHTML, Comprehensive

12 Creating a Valid Document
The DTD used depends on the content of the document and the needs of your users To support old browsers, use the transitional DTD To support old browsers in a framed Web site, use the frameset DTD To support more current browsers and want to weed out any use of deprecated features, use the strict DTD Tutorial 9 New Perspectives on HTML, XHTML, and DHTML, Comprehensive

13 Creating a Valid Document
Elements not allowed under the strict DTD: applet - isindex basefont - menu center - s dir - strike font - u iframe Tutorial 9 New Perspectives on HTML, XHTML, and DHTML, Comprehensive

14 Creating a Valid Document
Some attributes are restricted, while others are required in XHTML Tutorial 9 New Perspectives on HTML, XHTML, and DHTML, Comprehensive

15 Attributes prohibited in the strict DTD
Tutorial 9 New Perspectives on HTML, XHTML, and DHTML, Comprehensive

16 Required XHTML attributes
Tutorial 9 New Perspectives on HTML, XHTML, and DHTML, Comprehensive

17 Creating an XHTML Document
The first line of an XTHML document should contain a declaration indicating that the document adheres to the rules and syntax of XML XML (and thus XHTML) documents are based on a character set A character set is a set of abstract symbols matched to code numbers Tutorial 9 New Perspectives on HTML, XHTML, and DHTML, Comprehensive

18 New Perspectives on HTML, XHTML, and DHTML, Comprehensive
Character Sets Universal Character Set (UCS) Unicode Character encoding is the process in which bytes are translated back into characters (when a document is sent across the Internet) Tutorial 9 New Perspectives on HTML, XHTML, and DHTML, Comprehensive

19 Adding an xml Declaration
To declare that a document is written in XML, enter the following as the first line of the file: <?xml version=“value” encoding=“type” standalone=“type” ?> Where the version attribute indicates the XML version of the document, the encoding attribute specifies the character encoding, and the standalone attribute indicates whether the document contains references to an external DTD. Tutorial 9 New Perspectives on HTML, XHTML, and DHTML, Comprehensive

20 Adding an xml Declaration
For XHTML documents, use the declaration: <?xml version=“1.0” encoding=“UTF-8” standalone=“no” ?> Tutorial 9 New Perspectives on HTML, XHTML, and DHTML, Comprehensive

21 New Perspectives on HTML, XHTML, and DHTML, Comprehensive
The XML Declaration You can also add the DOCTYPE declaration, which tells XML parsers what DTD is associated with the document <!DOCTYPE root type “id” “url”> Tutorial 9 New Perspectives on HTML, XHTML, and DHTML, Comprehensive

22 New Perspectives on HTML, XHTML, and DHTML, Comprehensive
The xml Namespace A namespace is a unique identifier for elements and attributes originating from a particular document type (like XHTML or MathML) Two types of namespaces: default: applied to a root element and any element within it <root xmlns=“namespace”> Tutorial 9 New Perspectives on HTML, XHTML, and DHTML, Comprehensive

23 New Perspectives on HTML, XHTML, and DHTML, Comprehensive
The xml Namespace local: applies to only select elements - Each element in the local namespace is marked by a prefix attached to the element name xmlns: prefix=“namespace” Identify any element belonging to that namespace by modifying the element name in the tag: prefix:element Tutorial 9 New Perspectives on HTML, XHTML, and DHTML, Comprehensive

24 Setting the XHTML Namespace
To set XHTML as the default namespace for a document, add the xmlns attribute to the html element with the following value: <html xmlns= Tutorial 9 New Perspectives on HTML, XHTML, and DHTML, Comprehensive

25 Testing an XHTML Document
To test your document, you need to send the file to an XML parser or an XHTML validator Sometimes the same mistake results in several errors are noted in the report - fixing one mistake can solve several errors Tutorial 9 New Perspectives on HTML, XHTML, and DHTML, Comprehensive

26 Fixing the errors in the paragraph elements
Tutorial 9 New Perspectives on HTML, XHTML, and DHTML, Comprehensive

27 Report showing a successful validation under XHTML 1.0 transitional
Tutorial 9 New Perspectives on HTML, XHTML, and DHTML, Comprehensive

28 Testing an XHTML Document
To test under another DTD, you’ll need to change the DOCTYPE declaration Changing the DOCTYPE declaration to XHTML 1.0 strict Tutorial 9 New Perspectives on HTML, XHTML, and DHTML, Comprehensive

29 Using Style Sheets and XHTML
Parsed character data (PCDATA) is text parsed by a browser or parser Unparsed character data (CDATA) is text not processed by the browser or parser Tutorial 9 New Perspectives on HTML, XHTML, and DHTML, Comprehensive

30 Using Style Sheets and XHTML
A CDATA section marks a block of text as CDATA so that parsers ignore any text within it Tutorial 9 New Perspectives on HTML, XHTML, and DHTML, Comprehensive

31 Tips for Converting old HTML Code to XHTML
Include an xml declaration in the first line of your file so that your document can be accessed by XML parsers Add a DOCTYPE declaration for one of the XHTML DTDs and check your document for well-formedness and validity whenever you make a change to the code Add the XHTML default namespace to the html element of your document Tutorial 9 New Perspectives on HTML, XHTML, and DHTML, Comprehensive

32 Tips for Converting old HTML Code to XHTML
Make sure that all element and attribute names are in lowercase letters and that all attribute values are placed in quotes Make sure that all empty elements are entered as one-sided tags. Look especially for improper syntax in the img, hr, and br elements Make sure that all two-sided tags are properly closed. Old HTML code often does not have closing tags for the p element Tutorial 9 New Perspectives on HTML, XHTML, and DHTML, Comprehensive

33 Tips for Converting old HTML Code to XHTML
Make sure that all inline images contain the alt attribute Look for deprecated attributes such as align, bgcolor, and background, and replace them with the float (or text-align), background-color, and background-image styles Replace the name attribute with the id attribute Fix all instances of attribute minimization Tutorial 9 New Perspectives on HTML, XHTML, and DHTML, Comprehensive

34 Tips for Converting old HTML Code to XHTML
Replace the use of the font element with either the span element or with a style that applies the same formatting specified by the font element Replace the use of the width attribute in the td or th element with the width style Tutorial 9 New Perspectives on HTML, XHTML, and DHTML, Comprehensive


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