General Instructions for your Website:
During Week 1 through Week 7 of this course, you will be building a personal website on a topic of your choice. Choose a topic about which you are both knowledgeable and enthusiastic, so that you will be able to easily write about the topic and share your knowledge of the topic through your website. During Week 1, you will create the home page of your website. Make sure that you write the content (the paragraphs of information about your topic) yourself. Do not copy content from other web pages. Your website should contain at least 4-6 paragraphs of information, arranged in a logical manner (using headings and sub-headings appropriately). During Week 2, you will add an external style sheet to your website. During Week 3 through Week 7, you will either add additional pages to your website or you will add new functionality to your home page, as directed in the instructions for each assignment.
You must write the code files by hand for all assignments in this class. A simple text editor, such as Notepad or Notepad++ will suffice (or TextEdit on the Mac). DO NOT use GUI editors, such as FrontPage, Dreamweaver, etc. You must write the code for your web pages yourself. If you are using a PC, it is strongly recommended that you download the free Notepad++ text editor because it contains extra features which assist with debugging, such as line numbering and color coding of different elements of syntax. Mac users should use the TextEdit text editor that comes with the Mac OS. However, if you are a Mac user, make sure you set TextEdit to use Plain Text by default. You can find instructions for this here.
Make sure all of your web pages comply with the HTML 5 standards and CSS standards. DO NOT use obsolete HTML elements and attributes from previous versions of HTML. By including the HTML 5 DOCTYPE declaration in your webpages, and validating all of your HTML files here, you can be sure that your code complies with HTML 5. Starting Week 2, your external style sheet (.css file) must pass validation at the W3C CSS Validation Service. Make sure you use the “Validate by File Upload” option (and NOT the “Validate by Direct Input” option), on both of these validators since this is the way your instructor will check your pages when grading your assignments.
The home page of your website must be named “LastFirstHomePage.html” where “Last” is your last name and “First” is your first name. For example, if your name is John Smith, you would name your home page file SmithJohnHomePage.html Starting with Week 2, you will also have a CSS file linked into every HTML page on your website. Name your CSS file “LastFirstStyleSheet.css” where “Last” is your last name and “First” is your first name. Your website must only have 1 CSS file and that file should be linked into all HTML pages on your website. Additional HTML pages created for your website (During Week 3 through Week 5) should be hyperlinked together through a navigation menu that appears on all pages of your website. Naming conventions for each additional page on your website will be included in each assignment description that requires a new HTML page.
Specific Instructions for Assignment 4:
For this assignment, you will add a third page to your website named “table.html” and code a table on that page. You will also add code to your CSS file to format your table.
1) Create a new HTML file in your text editor and name the file “table.html”. Just like last week, your new file should contain all of the same basic code that is in the head section of your home page. The body section will contain your new table, which you will create by following the remaining steps of this assignment. After coding all of the basic required HTML tags in your new file, save your new file and validate it using the HTML validator. Debug and fix any errors identified by the validator until your file passes validation.
2) Make sure the external CSS style sheet you created in Assignment 2 is linked into your new “table.html” file with the tag in the head section of the file. Your website should only have 1 CSS file, and that same file should be linked into all HTML pages of your website.
3) Modify your navigation menu on your home page and your “about.html” page by adding a link to this new page. Then add your navigation menu to your new “table.html” file, so that users can navigate to your other pages from this new page.
4) In your table.html file, add the following code:
Create a table using the
, and | tags appropriately. You can see examples of the code for HTML tables here. 5) In your HTML file, give your table a caption, using the Open your CSS file in your text editor and complete the following steps: 6) In your CSS file, set the “width” property for the
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