The Web Development Glossary 3k
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Author | : Jens Oliver Meiert |
Publisher | : Frontend Dogma |
Total Pages | : 840 |
Release | : 2023-07-27 |
Genre | : Computers |
ISBN | : |
The Web Development Glossary is the largest of its kind. With more than 3,000 terms and explanations (“3K”), it is the book to try and extend your web development and web platform knowledge. The glossary covers key terms and concepts of the Web, beginning with HTML, CSS, JavaScript, accessibility, security, performance, code quality and testing, internationalization, localization, frameworks and editors and tooling. The glossary then includes other disciplines of interest and relevance to the modern developer, like computer science, design, typography, usability and user experience, information and project management and more. It goes beyond web development to feed all your curiosity, about the Web and the technologies and processes used to build it. And still it is a glossary, of several thousand terms for developers, based on careful research as well as established sources, like Wikipedia, but also MDN Web Docs. This new edition of The Web Development Glossary includes almost a thousand additional terms as well as major usability updates, like improved source and cross-reference navigation.
Author | : Jens Oliver Meiert |
Publisher | : Frontend Dogma |
Total Pages | : 59 |
Release | : 2018-04-12 |
Genre | : Computers |
ISBN | : |
Are you unsure about your style sheets’ quality, or whether you’ve maxed out your options? CSS Optimization Basics covers the necessary mindsets, discusses the main optimization methods, and presents useful resources to write higher-quality CSS. → This is the book if you care about the craft of writing CSS, and enjoy optimizing style sheets.
Author | : Jens Oliver Meiert |
Publisher | : Frontend Dogma |
Total Pages | : 55 |
Release | : 2020-11-17 |
Genre | : Computers |
ISBN | : |
Upgrade Your HTML is the book series for HTML craftspeople and minimalists. In Upgrade Your HTML II, HTML and CSS optimizer Jens Oliver Meiert takes 10 additional HTML examples from real websites to review and condense the respective markup. Keep document structures simpler, use semantically more appropriate markup, write less HTML, question certain techniques, deal more intelligently with third-party code—there are many ways to improve HTML code. “While his approach is radical in some cases, the message counts: analyze, scrutinize, optimize.”—Manuel Matuzović (HTMHell) → This is the book if you enjoy the intricacies of working with HTML.
Author | : Jens Oliver Meiert |
Publisher | : Frontend Dogma |
Total Pages | : 43 |
Release | : 2019-10-27 |
Genre | : Computers |
ISBN | : |
HTML is super-popular. Everyone can write HTML. Or can they? In the spirit that everything can be tweaked and optimized, Upgrade Your HTML is a first light book in a playful series to review and improve real-life examples of HTML. Not shyly but always constructively does Jens Oliver Meiert, someone who has written a lot of HTML and who makes his own life difficult so that he can write even more HTML, go through ten samples to ponder and upgrade the respective markup. If you’re a web developer, you know HTML. Check out and follow Upgrade Your HTML to nod (or shake your head) exploring old and new problems surrounding uses of the beloved HyperText Markup Language. → This is the book if you enjoy the intricacies of working with HTML.
Author | : Jens Oliver Meiert |
Publisher | : Frontend Dogma |
Total Pages | : 102 |
Release | : 2024-08-14 |
Genre | : Computers |
ISBN | : |
This is a supplementary—and not beginner-friendly—book about HTML and CSS, and one of the most boring books you’ll ever read. It contains long lists of HTML elements and attributes and CSS selectors and properties. Why bother? Why read this book? Because it provides you with a unique opportunity to learn HTML and CSS, one that isn’t available in this form elsewhere. Its goal is to show you the rough and raw skeleton of HTML and CSS, so that you can focus on that. Elements, attributes, selectors, properties. No explanations, no examples, no context. The raw material. The idea is that even when you only review this book once, you will already notice things about HTML and CSS that you weren’t aware of and couldn’t have noticed otherwise. And still, this is one of the most boring books you’ll ever read. Enjoy.
Author | : Jens Oliver Meiert |
Publisher | : np |
Total Pages | : 115 |
Release | : 2021-11-09 |
Genre | : Computers |
ISBN | : |
The Little Book of Little Books consists of three booklets, originally released in 2015 and 2016. They have been lightly updated and edited (with permission and release by the former publisher, O’Reilly). The Little Book of HTML/CSS Frameworks provides guidance for the development and use of web frameworks. It was written during a time when frameworks were used by linking to their style sheets. While times have changed, it’s the author’s conviction that the principles outlined in the book still hold, and that it provides unique views to the advantage of everyone working with frameworks. The Little Book of HTML/CSS Coding Guidelines outlines the benefits of coding standards and discusses them on the basis of the Google HTML/CSS Style Guide. It was written during a time when there was little tooling to format code automatically. Back in 2012, the author had revised and published the Google guidelines; many years later, he maintains that the modern frontend developer and their craft still benefit from such standards. The Little Book of Website Quality Control reviews quality assurance and control and offers a comprehensive collection of tools. It was written during a time when there were few automated testing options, with a focus on web-based manual testing. The author believes this has been one of his weakest books, ponders why he didn’t do better, but likes the idea that, over time, he can make updates that make it a little less shallow. → This is the book if you want to travel back in time for a complementary perspective on frameworks, coding guidelines, quality control—and the craft of web development.
Author | : Jens Oliver Meiert |
Publisher | : Frontend Dogma |
Total Pages | : 44 |
Release | : 2024-05-08 |
Genre | : Computers |
ISBN | : |
Upgrade Your HTML is the book series for HTML craftspeople and minimalists. In Upgrade Your HTML V, HTML and CSS optimizer Jens Oliver Meiert takes more examples of HTML to analyze, explain, and improve the respective markup. In this edition, find tables from the past; new HTML elements; (not) being managed by code; law and order in scripts; “hidden” and seek; preload requests; intermissions; mysterious chapter names; keyboard shortcuts; microdata; and plenty of appreciation for the craft of HTML. “There are ways to improve performance by showing extra care about what you add to your HTML document, and anticipating the content. Going beyond the basics and into the nuances of HTML syntax and semantics is the value you’ll find in these pages, knowledge shared with you by Jens.”—Stephanie Eckles → This is the book if you enjoy the intricacies of working with HTML.
Author | : Jens Oliver Meiert |
Publisher | : Frontend Dogma |
Total Pages | : 55 |
Release | : 2022-11-27 |
Genre | : Computers |
ISBN | : |
Upgrade Your HTML is the book series for HTML craftspeople and minimalists. In Upgrade Your HTML IV, HTML and CSS optimizer Jens Oliver Meiert takes 10 more examples of HTML from actual websites in order to analyze, explain, and improve the respective markup. Apart from discussing the appropriate use and the subtleties of HTML elements, this edition covers general topics like conformance, maintainability, and the balancing of optimization vectors. It also covers topics like attribute minimization, void elements, metadata, table buttons and button links, and even CSS art. “Optimizing and minimizing HTML and checking if there are more appropriate elements or attributes to use is a helpful exercise, because it can improve accessibility while you learn about new features.”—Simon Pieters → This is the book if you enjoy the intricacies of working with HTML.
Author | : Jens Oliver Meiert |
Publisher | : Jens Oliver Meiert |
Total Pages | : 105 |
Release | : 2023-07-11 |
Genre | : Philosophy |
ISBN | : |
Here are two observations that you’ve likely made in your life: One, you’ve noticed how easy it is to find fault. If you haven’t found fault yourself, then you know others who find this wrong and that wrong and that other thing wrong as well. Two, you’ve learned about things generally deemed desirable and good, things not connected with fault, whether these are states of being or possessions or activities. Now, if you put the first observation to the test (looking for fault), would the second still hold (that there are things without fault)? Would there be nothing to complain about; would there be nothing wrong with all those things desirable and good? This question is what this little book is exploring, by interviewing OpenAI’s ChatGPT about the problems, with many good things.
Author | : Jens Oliver Meiert |
Publisher | : np |
Total Pages | : 57 |
Release | : 2016-06-02 |
Genre | : Self-Help |
ISBN | : |
How can we learn more effectively? How can we best work on ourselves? How do we grow? That is the subject of this brief book, this short sketch by interim philosopher and world traveler, Jens Oliver Meiert. A light treatise on personal growth, he goes over 20 paths to get to know ourselves, for “we are okay as we are, but we can always improve.” → This is the book if you opt to explore different ways of driving yourself a little crazy.