In most browsers you can right click in the window you want to see the output of, and left click on "View Source" or "View Document Source" It is usually accessible via the main menus under View - View Source or View Document source depending on the browser.
Browsers generally have an option to view the page source for the page. That will show you the HTML for that page, and also other things that are used to create it. This could include some programming in the form of scripting. So a lot of what you see in the page source is not HTML, particularly for more complex pages.
You can do it in a few ways. Open the browser and go to the File menu and pick the Open option and find the file you want. You could also find the file on your computer and right click on it and pick Open With and choose the browser you want to open it with. You can also just click on the file and if it has a htm or html extension it will automatically open in a browser.
Tools such as Dreamweaver output messy HTML code that often does not conform to the W3C standards. It also means you do not really understand the HTML code it has output, and also severely limits your capabilities of writing complex HTML.
Yes, you can see the HTML code in Kompozer.
HTML is the file format webpages are made of. When you enter an URL into your Webbrowser (Internet Explorer, Firefox, Opera etc.) you're actually seeing a HTML page displayed. There are programs that only display simple HTML pages, and can only view HTML pages stored locally on your computer. These can be used by other software (such as MS Word) to display documentation etc. The latter are more commonly called "HTML browsers", but your webbrowser is an HTML browser too! see: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Webbrowser
HTML stands for HyperText Markup Language. HTML is used only to define view of document, nothing more. Programming languages are much more powerful, you implement all kind of user, business, data logics. Similar Markup languages as HTML exists, like: LaTeX, ConTeXt, XML, (X)HTML, YAML, Textile, Markdown, etc.
<OL> tag is used to create Ordered List in a HTML page. For example: <HTML><BODY> <OL type="I"> <LI>Apple</LI> <LI>Banana</LI> </OL> </BODY></HTML> Will give output as: I. Apple II.Banana
Yes. For every web based programming language the final output is browser readable html text
ASP can't be put 'in' HTML. ASP can be written in files where HTML is written. ASP can also output HTML.
HTML cannot produce dynamic output alone but style sheets can produce dynamic output (That means style sheets more than one output pages)
Tools such as Dreamweaver output messy HTML code that often does not conform to the W3C standards. It also means you do not really understand the HTML code it has output, and also severely limits your capabilities of writing complex HTML.
The Output folder holds a folder named for each output format. For instance, if the output generated is HTML Help, the folder inside the Output folder is called "Microsoft HTML Help 1.x." This folder, in turn, holds a folder named for the project itself.Hope this helps, if you do have questions email angelo.ment@gmail.com
The Output folder holds a folder named for each output format. For instance, if the output generated is HTML Help, the folder inside the Output folder is called "Microsoft HTML Help 1.x." This folder, in turn, holds a folder named for the project itself.Hope this helps, if you do have questions email angelo.ment@gmail.com
Yes, you can see the HTML code in Kompozer.
HTML is one method by which PHP can output a response. Other response methods are file, database, email, and network (URI).
No... http://spreadsheets.google.com/pub?key=pvqW21GBJDtEkA3i4UU98Ug&output=html
HTML
Yes. if you look at page source you will see <html> and other HTML tags.
HTML