The computer program used to check a piece of code or document for correctness is called a validator. Validators are used in a lot of online word games.
Use an HTML validator - http://validator.w3.org/ and a CSS validator - http://jigsaw.w3.org/css-validator/
The most popular way (and to some, official) to validate your CSS is by going here: http://jigsaw.w3.org/css-validator
An HTML validator is used to check the validity or syntactical correctness of a fragment code or document. It also technically refers to validation using DTDs by SGML tools.
A XML validator checks documents that are written in XML, eXtensible Markup Language. It can be downloaded from XML Validation and many more websites online.
validator and moderator
validator and moderator
Each machine has a coin mechanism and a bill validator. The coin mechanism weighs the coin's and distributes change for the bill validator. The validator checks the bills as they are inserted, many need to be upgraded to the new bill, so if a machine does not take the new bills it is not necessarily broken just needs to be upgraded.ThanksHope this helps
A w3 validator runs side by side with your web browser. It checks and validates that each web documentation you are running and or open are what they say they are and are't going to mess with your computer in harmful manners.
CompareValidator
The W3C validator checks websites to see if there are any errors in the coding. Errors in coding can cause links to not work, pictures not to show up, and other problems with the way a website works.
Some tools people could use to validate HTML code are Dr. Watson, Validate HTM Firefox add on and WDG HTML validator. Also popular to validate HTML codes are Cahse HTML validator life and HTML Toolbox.
There is no such word as a "hapliod". If you meant haploid, the answer depends on the species.There is no such word as a "hapliod". If you meant haploid, the answer depends on the species.There is no such word as a "hapliod". If you meant haploid, the answer depends on the species.There is no such word as a "hapliod". If you meant haploid, the answer depends on the species.