Basic HTML
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Figure 7.1: Sample of semantic based style
types (part a).
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Figure 7.2: Sample of semantic based style
types (part b).
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Figure 7.3: Samples of syntactic based style
types.
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Figure 7.4: A sample header.
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Figure 7.5: Illustration of a
tapered-looking graphic, created by using all the attributes of the
<HR> tag.
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Figure 7.6: A sample footer.
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Figure 7.7: Hyperlinks separated by
vertical bars in a footer.
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Figure 7.8: An example of an ordered
list that describes the process of walking a dog.
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Figure 7.9: An example of an
unordered list that describes some house sitting chores.
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Figure 7.10: An example of a definition
list used to describe common running races.
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Figure 7.11: An example of a definition
list that uses custom bullets.
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Figure 7.12: An example of nested
ordered lists.
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Figure 7.13: Example of nested
unordered lists.
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Figure 7.14: A simple version of Table
7.1.
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Figure 7.15: The table from Figure
7.14 shown with a 3-pixel-width border.
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Figure 7.16: The table from Figure
7.14 shown with a 3-pixel-width border and a CELLSPACING
attribute of 6.
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Figure 7.17: The table from Figure 7.14
shown with a 3-pixel-width border and a CELLPADDING attribute
of 12.
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Figure 7.18: The effect of a CELLPADDING attribute of
12 on the widest cell of a column.
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Figure 7.19: The table from Figure
7.14 shown with a 3-pixel-width border, a CELLSPACING
attribute of 6, and a CELLPADDING attribute of
12.
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Figure 7.20: The final version of
Table 7.14 rendered in HTML.
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Figure 7.21: The final version of Table
7.2 rendered in HTML.
© McGraw-Hill 1997.
All rights reserved.
This presentation accompanies the book "In-line/On-line:
Fundamentals of the Internet and World Wide Web" (ISBN 0-072-90685-5)
written by Raymond Greenlaw and Ellen Hepp.