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Tutorial 9 Working with XHTML

Tutorial 9 Working with XHTML. Objectives. Describe the history and theory of XHTML Understand the rules for creating valid XHTML documents Apply a DTD to an XHTML document Understand how to apply the XHTML namespace Explore the relationship between HTML5 and XHTML

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Tutorial 9 Working with XHTML

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  1. Tutorial 9Working with XHTML

  2. Objectives • Describe the history and theory of XHTML • Understand the rules for creating valid XHTML documents • Apply a DTD to an XHTML document • Understand how to apply the XHTML namespace • Explore the relationship between HTML5 and XHTML • Test an XHTML document under the transitional DTD • Test an XHTML document under the strict DTD • Explore the use of character and parsed character data New Perspectives on HTML and CSS, Comprehensive

  3. Structure of an XHTML Document New Perspectives on HTML and CSS, Comprehensive

  4. Introducing XHTML • SGML (Standard Generalized Markup Language) • Device-independent and system-independent • Introduced in the 1980s • Not intended for the World Wide Web • HTML • Standards get confusing among browsers • Can be applied inconsistently New Perspectives on HTML and CSS, Comprehensive

  5. Introducing XHTML New Perspectives on HTML and CSS, Comprehensive

  6. Creating an XHTML Document • The first line of an XHTML file contains a statement called a prolog that indicates the document adheres to the syntax rules of XML. The form of the XML prolog is <?xml version=”value” encoding=”type” ?> New Perspectives on HTML and CSS, Comprehensive

  7. Creating Well-Formed Documents • XML documents must be evaluated with an XML parser • An XML document with correct syntax is a well-formed document New Perspectives on HTML and CSS, Comprehensive

  8. Creating Well-Formed Documents New Perspectives on HTML and CSS, Comprehensive

  9. 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 New Perspectives on HTML and CSS, Comprehensive

  10. Attribute Minimization in HTML and XHTML New Perspectives on HTML and CSS, Comprehensive

  11. Creating Valid XHTML Documents • A valid document is a well-formed document that also contains only those elements, attributes, and other features that have been defined for the XML vocabulary that it uses • To specify the correct content and structure for a document, the developers of an XML-based language can create a collection of rules called the document type definition or DTD New Perspectives on HTML and CSS, Comprehensive

  12. Creating Valid XHTML Documents New Perspectives on HTML and CSS, Comprehensive

  13. DTDs • Transitional: supports many of the presentational features of HTML, including the deprecated elements and attributes. Best used for older documents that contain deprecated features. • Frameset: used for documents containing frames, and also supports deprecated elements and attributes • 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 New Perspectives on HTML and CSS, Comprehensive

  14. Creating Valid XHTML Documents • The DTD used depends on the content of the document and the needs of your users • To support old browsers, use the transitionalDTD • To support old browsers in a framed Web site, use the frameset DTD • To support more current browsers and to weed out any use of deprecated features, use the strict DTD New Perspectives on HTML and CSS, Comprehensive

  15. Creating a Valid Document • Elements not allowed under the strict DTD: • applet • basefont • center • dir • font • isindex • menu • noframes • s • strike • u New Perspectives on HTML and CSS, Comprehensive

  16. Creating a Valid Document • Some attributes are restricted, while others are required in XHTML New Perspectives on HTML and CSS, Comprehensive

  17. Attributes Prohibited in the Strict DTD New Perspectives on HTML and CSS, Comprehensive

  18. Required XHTML Attributes New Perspectives on HTML and CSS, Comprehensive

  19. Inserting the DOCTYPE Declaration • To specify which DTD is used by an XML document, you add a DOCTYPE declaration directly after the XML prolog <!DOCTYPE root type “id” “url”> New Perspectives on HTML and CSS, Comprehensive

  20. Inserting the DOCTYPE Declaration New Perspectives on HTML and CSS, Comprehensive

  21. The XHTML 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 any element or attribute in the document <root xmlns=“namespace”> New Perspectives on HTML and CSS, Comprehensive

  22. The XHTML 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 New Perspectives on HTML and CSS, Comprehensive

  23. 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=http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml> New Perspectives on HTML and CSS, Comprehensive

  24. HTML5 and XHTML • HTML5 was developed to be backward compatible with earlier versions of HTML, and also to support the common application of HTML syntax • The rules for HTML5 are much more open than for XHTML New Perspectives on HTML and CSS, Comprehensive

  25. HTML5 and XHTML New Perspectives on HTML and CSS, Comprehensive

  26. Validating an XHTML Document New Perspectives on HTML and CSS, Comprehensive

  27. Validating Under XHTML Transitional New Perspectives on HTML and CSS, Comprehensive

  28. Testing Under XHTML Strict • To test under another DTD, you’ll need to change the DOCTYPE declaration New Perspectives on HTML and CSS, Comprehensive

  29. Using Embedded Style Sheets in XHTML • Parsed character data (PCDATA)is text processed by a browser or parser • Unparsed character data (CDATA)is text not processed by the browser or parser • A CDATA section marks a block of text as CDATA so that parsers ignore any text within it New Perspectives on HTML and CSS, Comprehensive

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