slovo | definícia |
html (encz) | HTML,Hyper Text Markup Language [zkr.] |
html (wn) | HTML
n 1: a set of tags and rules (conforming to SGML) for using them
in developing hypertext documents [syn: {hypertext markup
language}, hypertext mark-up language, HTML] |
html (foldoc) | Hypertext Markup Language
HTML
(HTML) A hypertext
document format used on the web. HTML is built
on top of SGML. "Tags" are embedded in the text. A tag
consists of a "". Matched pairs of directives, like
"" and "" are used to delimit text which is to
appear in a special place or style.
Links to other documents are in the form
foo
where "" and "" delimit an "anchor", "href" introduces
a hypertext reference, which is most often a {Uniform Resource
Locator} (URL) (the string in double quotes in the example
above). The link will be represented in the browser by the
text "foo" (typically shown underlined and in a different
colour).
A certain place within an HTML document can be marked with a
named anchor, e.g.:
The "fragment identifier", "baz", can be used in an href by
appending "#baz" to the document name.
Other common tags include for a new paragraph, ..
for bold text, for an unnumbered list, for
preformated text, , .. for headings.
HTML supports some standard SGML national characters and
other non-ASCII characters through special {escape
sequences}, e.g. "é" for a lower case 'e' with an acute
accent. You can sometimes get away without the terminating
semicolon but it's bad style.
Most systems will ignore the case of tags and attributes but
lower case should be used for compatibility with XHTML.
The World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) is the international
standards body for HTML.
(http://w3.org/MarkUp/).
{Character escape sequences
(http://w3.org/hypertext/WWW/MarkUp/ISOlat1.html)}.
See also weblint.
(2006-01-19)
|
html (vera) | HTML
HyperText Markup Language (Internet, WWW, SGML, RFC 1866/1942,
HTML)
|
| podobné slovo | definícia |
xhtml (encz) | XHTML,EXtensible HyperText Markup Language [zkr.] [it.] hypertextový
značkovací jazyk, aplikace XML, náhrada za HTML, podobnost s HTML
4.01 mamm |
compiled html (foldoc) | Compiled HTML
chm
A Microsoft file format for
distributing a collection of HTML files, along with their
associated images, sounds, etc., as a single compressed
archive file.
Microsoft use this format for Windows HTML Help files.
Most chms include a project (.hhp) file listing the included
files and basic settings, a contents (.hhc) file, an index
(.hhk) file, html files, and, optionally, image files.
Users view chms with hh.exe, the HTML Help viewer installed
with Internet Explorer.
Filename extension: .chm.
(http://msdn.microsoft.com/library/en-us/htmlhelp/html/vsconHH1Start.asp).
(2003-05-17)
|
dhtml (foldoc) | Dynamic HTML
DHTML
(DHTML) The addition of
JavaScript to HTML to allow web pages to change and
interact with the user without having to communicate with the
server. JavaScript allows the behaviour of the page to be
controlled by code that is downloaded with the HTML. It does
this by manipulating the Document Object Model (DOM).
The term DHTML is often also taken to include the use of
"style" information to give finer control of HTML layout. The
style information can be supplied as Cascading Style Sheets
(CSS) or as "style" attributes (which can be manipulated by
JavaScript). Layers are often also used with DHTML.
Both the JavaScript and style data can be included in the HTML
file or in a separate file referred to from the HTML. Some
web browsers allow other languages (e.g. VBScript or Perl)
to be used instead of JavaScript but this is less common.
DHTML can be viewed in Internet Explorer 4+, Firefox and
Netscape Communicator 4+ but, as usual, Microsoft disagree
on how DHTML should be implemented. The {Document Object
Model} Group of the World Wide Web Consortium is developing
standards for DHTML.
(http://w3c.org/DOM/).
(2005-10-17)
|
dynamic html (foldoc) | Dynamic HTML
DHTML
(DHTML) The addition of
JavaScript to HTML to allow web pages to change and
interact with the user without having to communicate with the
server. JavaScript allows the behaviour of the page to be
controlled by code that is downloaded with the HTML. It does
this by manipulating the Document Object Model (DOM).
The term DHTML is often also taken to include the use of
"style" information to give finer control of HTML layout. The
style information can be supplied as Cascading Style Sheets
(CSS) or as "style" attributes (which can be manipulated by
JavaScript). Layers are often also used with DHTML.
Both the JavaScript and style data can be included in the HTML
file or in a separate file referred to from the HTML. Some
web browsers allow other languages (e.g. VBScript or Perl)
to be used instead of JavaScript but this is less common.
DHTML can be viewed in Internet Explorer 4+, Firefox and
Netscape Communicator 4+ but, as usual, Microsoft disagree
on how DHTML should be implemented. The {Document Object
Model} Group of the World Wide Web Consortium is developing
standards for DHTML.
(http://w3c.org/DOM/).
(2005-10-17)
|
html+ (foldoc) | HTML+
A proposed successor to HTML. HTML+
was a superset of HTML designed to extend the capabilities of
the language to incorporate better support for multimedia
objects in documents.
(1994-10-27)
|
htmlcommentbox.com (foldoc) | htmlcommentbox.com
A service for adding a comment box to any web
page, allowing visitors to leave comments and the site owner to
review them.
(http://htmlcommentbox.com/)
(2013-03-20)
|
index.html (foldoc) | index.html
default.htm
index.htm
The default HTML page served by most {web
servers} in response to a request for a directory. The name
suggests that the page will contain some kind of index of the
contents of the requested directory.
For example, if the content for website example.com is stored
in the file system in directory /var/www/example.com, then a
request for http://example.com/products would return the contents
of file /var/www/example.com/products/index.html.
A website's home page follows the same logic. For the above
example, a request for http://example.com/ would return the
contents of /var/www/example.com/index.html.
It is often possible, and occasionally necessary, to specify
index.html explicitly in the URL, as in
http://example.com/index.html, though modern practice is to omit
it.
If you're looking for FOLDOC's home page (/) at
http://foldoc.org/index.html, then you followed an out-of-date
link. Please update your bookmark to http://foldoc.org/ or inform
the owner of the site you came from.
Microsoft, of course, has to be different and uses default.htm
instead of index.html. The variant index.htm is a throw-back to
the days when some file systems only allowed three-character file
name extensions.
(2014-06-22)
|
manager/html (foldoc) | Tomcat
manager/html
The Apache Software Foundation's web server for running
Java, {Java
Servlets}, JavaServer Pages (JSP), Java Expression Language and
WebSockets.
Tomcat includes a manager application that is typically accessible on
URL /manager/html.
(https://tomcat.apache.org/)
(2021-08-28)
|
server-parsed html (foldoc) | server-parsed HTML
sht
shtml
SPML
(SPML, SHTML) A kind of HTML
file containing server-specific, non-standard commands which
are interpreted by the HTTP server and replaced by standard
HTML or text before the data is returned to the client.
Different servers use different command syntax and support
different sets of commands. The most common example is a
server-side include command which simply expands to the
contents of some given file and allows bits of HTML or text to
be shared between pages for ease of updating. Other commands
insert the value of an environment variable or the output of
a shell command. These allow pages to be different each
time they are served without requiring a CGI script.
Some servers distinguish SPML from HTML with a different
filename extension, others use the execute bit of the file's
permissions.
(1996-09-29)
|
shtml (foldoc) | server-parsed HTML
sht
shtml
SPML
(SPML, SHTML) A kind of HTML
file containing server-specific, non-standard commands which
are interpreted by the HTTP server and replaced by standard
HTML or text before the data is returned to the client.
Different servers use different command syntax and support
different sets of commands. The most common example is a
server-side include command which simply expands to the
contents of some given file and allows bits of HTML or text to
be shared between pages for ease of updating. Other commands
insert the value of an environment variable or the output of
a shell command. These allow pages to be different each
time they are served without requiring a CGI script.
Some servers distinguish SPML from HTML with a different
filename extension, others use the execute bit of the file's
permissions.
(1996-09-29)
|
xhtml (foldoc) | Extensible HyperText Markup Language
XHTML
(XHTML) A reformulation
of HTML 4.01 in XML. Being XML means that XHTML can be
viewed, edited, and validated with standard XML tools. At the
same time, it operates as well as or better than HTML 4 in
existing HTML 4 conforming user agents.
The most important change is that all elements must be
terminated, either with a closing tag or using the
shorthand. So, instead of
you would write
The space before the "/" is required by some older browsers.
Other differences are that tag and attribute names should be
lower case and all attributes should be quoted.
XHTML Home (http://w3.org/TR/xhtml1/).
{Quick Summary
(http://technorealm.co.uk/design/html-to-xhtml-conversions.html)}
(2006-01-19)
|
dhtml (vera) | DHTML
Dynamic HyperText Markup Language (HTML)
|
mhtml (vera) | MHTML
Messaging HyperText Markup Language (HTML)
MHTML
MIME [e-mail encapsulation of aggregate documents, such as] HTML
(MIME, HTML, RFC 2110)
|
xhtml (vera) | XHTML
eXtended HyperText Markup Language (HTML, WWW, XML)
|
|