– Page 3 W3 consortium – Page 4 Document Object Model (DOM) – Page 5 Introduction For this report I have been asked to cover a rage of topics such as •A description of the W3 consortium and their role in relation to web development •A description of the document object model, exploring issues faced when developing for a range of platform versions and device vendors •An overview of current security issues relevant to delivering dynamic data driven content on the world wide web •An explanation
The Web is composed of many languages, unspoken languages written in code. These languages take a short time to learn, but years to master; and unlike spoken languages they are constantly evolving at a noticeable rate. Changing to accommodate for the webs changing functionality, as it shifted from being only scholarly to include news, entertainment, socializing, and business. In its 28 year life span the web has evolved from the most basic HTML layouts to the high functioning responsive sites people
The emergence of the World Wide Web (WWW) has brought exciting new possibilities in information access and electronic business. The WWW has grown to be the largest distributed repository of information ever created. Current estimates reveal that the Web currently contains about 3 billion static documents and being accessed by over 500 million users from around the world [6]. Web content consists largely of distributed hypertext and hypermedia, accessible via keyword-based search and link navigation
Hundreds of thousands of people surf the internet every day visiting web sites like Facebook and Twitter. Though millions of web sites are all similar in a way, the average person overlooks the similarities. They are oblivious to an entire language that is so complex that it can be used to create the most beautiful and simple creations on the web. This language is used to create Facebook, Twitter, Google, and even your everyday blog. In order to understand this language fully one must spend countless
Review This chapter contains a review of all relevant areas related to the project including Web accessibility, Web accessibility barriers, Web Content Accessibility Guidelines 2.0, Thailand Information and Communication Technology Policy Framework (2011-2020), Thai Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (TWCAG), Works about web accessibility in Thailand and Evaluating Accessibility and Web2Access. 2.1 Web Accessibility Currently the use of multimedia such as sound, still images, moving images are
4.1 Guidelines and Standards for Making Accessible and Usable websites There are different kinds of standards and guidelines available to assist web designers to develop their web to be accessible and usable for all users including blind user. Most Guidelines and standards are vital from a practical standpoint. However, it is also important to be aware of that the guidelines and standards cannot accommodate all users all of the time. The areas where the guidelines or standards are not practical
to the Semantic Web. We should first wait until the Semantic Web is completed before we jump to the next thing on the list. (Aghaei, Nematbakhsh and Farsani) (Frauenfelder) The million dollar question is: what is the Semantic Web? The Semantic Web is not a completely new web that is going to replace the current web, it is simply and extension from the present web. The idea of Web 3.0 is for the information in the web to be understood and recognized by the computer. Today the web is a big global
Web Design is a field that has been around for only thirty years, but has evolved drastically throughout that time. HTML has changed much, and new scripting languages such as CSS and JavaScript to name two, have arisen to help tackle the challenge that web development can be. From basic text pages to fully interactive sites, the world of web development has made significant leaps consistently throughout its short lifetime. In the 1960’s a concept for HTML was created by Ted Nelson, a Harvard graduate
What is the WAI? The WAI, or the Web Accessibility Initiative, is a set of guidelines and recommendations for web designers and developers, laid out by the W3C, or the World Wide Web Consortium, to ensure that websites are designed in a way that makes them accessible and user-friendly to all people, including people with disabilities or special needs. While the primary focus of this initiative is to aid people with disabilities, such as the blind and the deaf, it also aims to establish guidelines
make up the visual landscape of the web as we know it. Like the skeleton, skin and muscles come together to help create a functioning human body, these three languages, when combined in an intentional and planned way, create a website. As front-end Developers, it is our job to utilize these languages creatively and efficiently in order to create the best possible experience for the end users of thunder::tech’s clients. While these languages are fundamental to the web, writing them is a repetitive and