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A Custom Icon For Your Web Site
WHAT IS FAVICON (Or the Icon in general) It is the little thing you see on your Location bar (History/Address bar) when you visit a web site, on the left of http://. For example, if you view a site through Internet Explorer, you see an e...

Color Psychology for webpages
Colour is an aspect of a website that is often picked haphazardly and without any thought from a beginner web designer. The lesser known quality of the colour of a website is that it can greatly affect the mood of your visitors. It is because of...

Get Linked - Part Two
Swap In last week's article: " The Secret Behind the Internet " I discussed the vital role that linking has to play in your Internet marketing campaign. This week I'm continuing the linkage theme, concentrating on outbound links and reciprocation....

Taking Your Website Mobile
You might have tested your website on every computer browser you can find, but nowadays that's just not enough. Nowadays the web is getting more and more mobile - it's being used on mobile phones, PDAs, and all sorts of other small devices that...

The Secrets to Building a Successful Web Site
If you're doing business on the Internet, one of the most important aspects of your success is your web site. If your web site doesn't look professional, no matter what product you're offering, your chance of success will be minimal. Before you...

 
CLEAN UP THAT CODE!

How do you write your code so that it shows up on all or
most browsers the way you want it to look? By understanding
which browsers support which tags, and using a validation
service to check your code.

There are different tags that sometimes do the same thing.
The problem here, is that some browers read some tags and
not others. If the browser can't read your tags, it will
cause your page to appear in some way other than what you
intended. The trick is to write your code in such a way
that all, or at least most browsers can read and display
it the way it is supposed to be.

You will find an HTML Tag List at:
http://www.ncdesign.org/html/list.htm You can use this
as you are writing your code and avoid some pitfalls. It
only covers Netscape and Internet Explorer. These are the
most used browsers, and probably includes about 80 percent
or more of the online crowd.

You can check your html code by going to a validation
service like Net Mechanic. You will find a link to this
and other validation services at:
http://marketing-resources.com/utilities.html This can
be a humbling experience. It checks your code and gives
you all the errors and warnings.

Do your corrections, and check it again. You may have to
do this a couple of times to end up with no errors.

There is no reason not to have perfectly clean HTML code.
Learn the tags and which browers support them, and you
are almost home. Then just run it through a validator.
Now the world sees your page the way it really is.



About the Author
windsong is the webmaster/publisher Marketing Resources
where you will find marketing and promotional resources.
http://marketing-resources.com/ Subscribe to windsong's free
e-zine: All About Web Design!(tm) Send a blank email to:
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