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Creating a Website: The Missing Manual
Download Creating a Website: The Missing Manual
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About the Author
Matthew MacDonald is a developer, author, and educator in all things Visual Basic and .NET. He's worked with Visual Basic and ASP since their initial versions, and has written over a dozen books on the subject, including The Book of VB .NET (No Starch Press) and Visual Basic 2005: A Developer's Notebook (O'Reilly). He has also written a number of Missing Manual titles on Excel 2007 and Access 2007 (O’Reilly).
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Product details
Series: Missing Manual
Paperback: 584 pages
Publisher: O'Reilly Media; Third edition (May 13, 2011)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 144930172X
ISBN-13: 978-1449301729
Product Dimensions:
7 x 1.3 x 9.2 inches
Shipping Weight: 2 pounds
Average Customer Review:
4.3 out of 5 stars
72 customer reviews
Amazon Best Sellers Rank:
#996,787 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
I'm a guy who was one of the early-birds in the late 90's, hand coding my own html pages and creating a personal website. Then rode the wave of Dreamweaver, and Flash, and Actionscript, and now find myself behind the times with all the new tools and methodologies. So I thought I'd give this book a try, seeing as I have my own domain, and a embarrassingly bad website right now. What I was really hoping from this book was some "recipes" to assemble together useful websites using popular tools, to do things like blog, host videos, connect with social media, and do some simple e-commerce.As such, I'm pretty disappointed with this book. Really, at the end of the day, what this book does for you is talk quite a bit about hand-coding html and css, and then glosses over really quickly a lot of other topics like html editors, social media, advertising, blogging, and interactive websites, paypal, and a few other things. But it really doesn't tie any of these things together, nor in most cases does it even give you enough info to actually utilize these technologies (aside from the html and css that is). The book is neither a good reference, nor a good tutorial for actually building a useful website. I guess if I were naming the book truthfully, it would be called something like "Introduction To Websites" or "Websites 101", or "Websites, a 20,000 ft view". So I dunno, I'm not actually sure who this book would be useful for to be honest. It's kind of funny, because the author included a "Who Shouldn't Read This Book" paragraph, hidden away inside the book, and after reading the list of people who *shouldn't* read the book, that seems like just about everybody to me. Perhaps he should have given a little more thought to who actually *would* benefit from this book, rather than who wouldn't.
I ordered and received this book, in about four days. I and my daughter want to create our own websites and sell our products. We have a lot to learn at this time, as I have not created a web page since I used Microsoft Publisher in years past. This book is about 600 pages, counting the index in the back which is helpful and includes HTML Semantic Elements & Character Entities in the Appendix. The 4 parts of the book and from creating a webpage in Part 1, the chapters flow from a basic introduction and then the HTML language is inserted so you can create that first page on your computer, that will be the beginning of your website and included therein. There is a lot to start learning, but if that 20 year old with all the facial hair and tattoos can learn it, so can I. Good luck to me and if I find this book as helpful as it seems with my first reading, I will come back and give it another star. I like it so far and have learned a lot in my beginnings of developing my own website.
I have been designing web sites for four years and I have collected over a dozen books on website design. Only one other comes close to being this clear and comprehensive as an introductory manual. It is much improved over the 2011 version too.It covers the entire process of website design, selecting a development tool, finding a provider, an introduction to html programming, and finally, dealing with AJAX and JavaScript interaction with the website.There is a goodly amount of material concerning the details of successfully completing each step in the process. I learned several things that I hadn't seen in reading website design books for four years. Even at this late date it has made me a better website programmer and I recommend it for all beginning website designers.
You are quite likely to get more than you bargained for in this book, and for once, that's a good thing.We all know Web sites, or think we do. I picked up this book just looking for enough HTML and CSS to let me build a basic Web site, which it did. But it also places the site you're building in the much more global context of the Internet, covering not just coding but buying your own domain names and selecting hosting vendors; interacting with search engines and publicizing your site; where to get free site analytics and track how it is being followed; how your site fits in (or not) with blogs and Facebook, and how to work with active content and media.Yes, you know these things or at least know their names; so did I. But I haven't found a book that even attempts to pull all the topics into one volume you could lift without getting a hernia. So if you're proud that you're Web savvy...buy the book anyway and just hide it when company comes over.Quibbles: Each of the topics covered deserves a book of its own, and there are multiple out there for any given topic; so "Creating a Web Site" is the survey course...you'll want to deep dive with a more detailed book on the topics that interest you. As a corollary, if you're already a certified code jockey, this isn't your book and you know that already. (But while developing the code, you may not be thinking about marketing and monetizing the site, and this book can help you there.) And there are point, particularly in describing blogging and site analytics, where the author ties his discussion very closely to Google and that company's offerings. He does try to be vendor-independent in other chapters, however, and in fairness, the Google services he describes are free (my favorite price) and the discussion gives you an idea why Google is such a big player, beyond just its search engine offering.Hidden gem: The author mentions a Microsoft product, Expression Web, as an alternative to Dreamweaver for building Web sites. When he wrote the book, Expressions Web was a product you had to buy. Subsequently, Microsoft has made it a free download. It's unclear how long they will continue to support this free product, so my strong advice is to head over to Microsoft's web site, search on "Expression Web 4" and download it while it's still free. That alone will save you a few hundred bucks and makes the book pay for itself.Great book, even if you know the Web. And oh, yeah...I even got my Web site built using this volume alone. Highly recommended.
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