Many modern websites use XHTML now; although some are still left in the dark, pondering with HTML. Thus, many corporations, businesses, organizations, freelancers, entertainers, general website developers, and others use XHTML.
XHTML is often used to create websites available on the internet, local networks, or on local machines. It is usually used with more than one language to create a more dynamic effect. XHTML, in particular, has made viewing websites from mobile devices much easier; thus, it is also used to create mobile versions of websites.
A huge amount of sites use XHTML. It would be impossible to list them all.
That is what seems to be happening already. XHTML is being used more than normal HTML for modern websites, since it forces better cross-browser compatibility -- meaning that multiple browsers viewing the same page should see the same thing. HTML may never fully take over XHTML; however, at this rate, XHTML will be the markup language most commonly used for webpages.
The requirement for a valid XHTML is that all the tags should be closed. This is actually the difference between HTML and XHTML.
You code the webpage with XHTML and you add a Cascading Style Sheet for the styles, linking to it in the head of the XHTML page. It is also possible to incorporate the style directly into the head of the XHTML webpage.
Yes it is. the xhtml 1.0 to be precise!
If you mean: When configuring CSS to display a printed page, what property is used in the XHTML link tag?The answer is: the media attribute or media="print"Example:
HTML is in XHTML, some argue that XHTML is it's own markup
XHTML is used as a stricter view of HTML. People who like to make the code clean and nice use XHTML.
The XHTML code for links is anchor tag.It is used to establish hyperlink between two pages.
HTML and XHTML are two different languages used for web and application design. XHTML was a popular choice from about the year 2000, to 2011. HTML 5 is intended to replace XHTML. XHTML followed the basic rules of XML-based languages. HTML (both prior and since) do not.
XHTML can be used to create full and feature-rich websites; any type of website that you could build in HTML4 (except for those using frames) are technically possible in XHTML.
The World Wide Web Consortium, or the W3C. They set the standards and specifications of HTML and XHTML, and how it should be used.
(1) XHTML 1.0 Strict(2) XHTML 1.0 Transitional(3) XHTML 1.0 Frameset
That is what seems to be happening already. XHTML is being used more than normal HTML for modern websites, since it forces better cross-browser compatibility -- meaning that multiple browsers viewing the same page should see the same thing. HTML may never fully take over XHTML; however, at this rate, XHTML will be the markup language most commonly used for webpages.
XHTML and CSS are both languages that are used to make web pages. XHTML is very similar to HTML and serves the same purpose. XHTML & HTML are both used to set the structure of the page - to define images, links, text, headlines, etc. CSS (Cascading Style Sheets) is used to define the style of the page - colors, spacing, etc. If you were to think of a web page as a person, XHTML would be the skeleton, and CSS would be the skin, clothing, make-up, etc.
The currently used ones are HTML 4.01, XHTML 1.0 or 1.1, and HTML5. XHTML has several doctypes available, which are sorta like mini-versions.
You can use XHTML if there is any chance you are going to need to reprocess your content, for example to send it to a PDA; XML's stricter syntax rules make automatic processing of XHTML much easier and cheaper than ordinary HTML
No. HTML existed before XHTML. XHTML combines XML and HTML, so it is an advancement on HTML.