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Chapter No. 1 The World Wide WebLearn CSS, JavaScript, PHP, and more with this vital guide to modern web developmentFor more information: http://bit.ly/1SREcV6

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ee

Web development has grown to become vital in shaping
how humans interact, work, learn, and consume. Practical
Web Development provides you with a roadmap of web
development today, giving you the tools you need and the
guidance to keep you creative and productive in a world
of disruption and innovation.
Beginning with the structure of the Web and the principles
of building basic websites with HTML, you will learn about
CSS, JavaScript, and PHP, before taking a closer look
at some of the leading technologies used to build the
modern Web. You will integrate jQuery, Ajax, and JSON
into your projects before moving on to the latest tools
and techniques in responsive web design, including Zurb
Foundation or Bootstrap, to help you meet the challenges
of developing for multiple devices, and explore how
Node.js offers a powerful solution to server-side
application development. This book is for anyone that
wants to get to grips with the broader picture of web
development today.

Who this book is written for

 Find out how HTML lays the foundation
of web development
 Learn the fundamentals of web design
using CSS
 Harness JavaScript to bring websites to life

pl

e

 Learn how to write compact code with jQuery

C o m m u n i t y

 Create efficient single page applications
with Ajax

E x p e r i e n c e

D i s t i l l e d

 Discover JSON for a powerful data exchange
between client and server
 Design Mobile first, responsive pages that
look great on mobiles, tablets, and desktops
 Create and migrate powerful and scalable
web applications with Node.js
$ 44.99 US
£ 28.99 UK

"Community
Experience
Distilled"

Sa
m

 Use PHP and MySQL to dynamically
generate HTML on the server

Paul Wellens

This book is perfect for beginners who want to get started
and learn the web development basics, but also offers
experienced developers a web development roadmap that
will help them to extend their capabilities.

What you will learn from this book

Practical Web Development

Practical Web Development

Practical Web Development
Learn CSS, JavaScript, PHP, and more with this vital guide to
modern web development

Prices do not include
local sales tax or VAT
where applicable

Visit www.PacktPub.com for books, eBooks,
code, downloads, and PacktLib.

Paul Wellens

In this package, you will find:





The author biography
A preview chapter from the book, Chapter 1 'The World Wide Web'
A synopsis of the book’s content
More information on Practical Web Development

About the Author
Paul Wellens has been a senior product manager for a major computer company in

the Los Angeles area and Silicon Valley for over two decades. Before that, he used to
install Unix systems and train companies in Europe, from his native Belgium. Later
in his career, he became a web development aficionado because it brought him back
to another passion of his: programming.

This is not his first book. His prior publication is of a different nature. Nature is what
it is all about as it is a guidebook on Eastern California, which is illustrated with his
own photographs. Therefore, it should not come as a surprise to learn that, besides
experimenting with new web technologies, his major hobbies are photography and
hiking in the Eastern Sierra.

Preface
I am fortunate to have lived and worked in California for a long time. The majority
of that time, I lived in Palo Alto, which is the center of Silicon Valley, the home of
Stanford University, and the birthplace of many companies, big and small, such
as Sun Microsystems, where I worked. I sat on the front row to see how the World
Wide Web developed, as well as being present for the advent of social media.
Facebook started on the other side of the wall of my favorite restaurant. Now, some
Facebook guy or girl is sitting in what used to be my office at the bottom of the
Dumbarton Bridge. As a product manager for Solaris, one of my tasks was to make
sure that Netscape Navigator was included with our operating system. So, I was
right at the source in which the development of the Web began. I even went to the
Web 2.0 conference and bought the book of the same name.
Then, I felt the need to have my own website to display my photographs and inform
people about the beauty and interesting places of the parts of California that I had
discovered during my many journeys travelling around the state. So, I created one.
One day, I was telling a friend about it and he tried to look at it on his mobile phone.
It looked terrible. So, I bought a Nokia phone (a brick compared to what we have
today) so that I could test my own site to make sure that it looked good on a phone
as well. This is how I caught the bug of responsive design, years before someone
started calling it this.
Upon my return to Belgium, I decided that it was time to learn as much as possible
(I love to learn new things) about what is out there beyond creating websites and
took a 6-month course on PHP web development. A lot of it looked familiar as
I was previously a UNIX and C developer. There were only 12 people in the class,
who were all bright minds, and I quickly discovered that there was more to learn.

Preface

As the classes took place in Leuven, a major university town in Belgium, I went to the
local university bookstore and bought book after book on all kinds of related topics
and quickly became a jQuery fan. jQuery, by the way, was not even included in the
course. I started wondering why someone needed to have 35 different books to learn
about web development and that writing a single book that gave a comprehensive
overview of what you need to know to engage in web development would not be a
bad idea.
Since then, web development has changed a lot; more books were needed, eBooks this
time, but the concept remained the same. So, now you know why I wrote the book.
This book gives you an overview of all the general aspects of web development, in a
traditional way, using plain HTML to do static websites, as well as the current way,
to enable you to create your web pages dynamically and make sure that they look
great on mobile devices as well, by using responsive design. We conclude by giving
you a hint of what is yet to come if you replace the traditional web server by writing
your own using node.js.

What this book covers
Chapter 1, The World Wide Web, gives you an overview of the history of what we know
today as the World Wide Web.
Chapter 2, HTML, introduces HTML and gives you an overview of the most commonly
used HTML tags to do web development. You will be able to create a basic website
after reading this chapter.
Chapter 3, CSS, explains how to use Cascading Style Sheets (CSS). This is used for the
presentation part or layout of your website, from color to dimensions to typefaces.
The most commonly used CSS properties are explained here. Once you are done
with this chapter, you will be able to make your basic website look good.
Chapter 4, JavaScript, first gives you an introduction to the world of programming
and programming languages. Next, the overall syntax of JavaScript and how to
use it for client-side programming is introduced.
Chapter 5, PHP, explains PHP, which is another programming language. This one is
used to do server-side programming. It requires a web server to do the development
of your website and deploy it. You will learn how to dynamically create your web
pages, rather than having to write a bunch of HTML files.

Preface

Chapter 6, PHP and MySQL, introduces MySQL, an open source database. You will
learn how to create a database, manage it using the phpMyAdmin tool, and perform
basic CRUD (create, replace, update, delete) operations from within a PHP program.
Chapter 7, jQuery, covers a popular JavaScript library. It allows you to write more
compact and clean code and handles browser incompatibilities for you. With this,
it is going to be a lot easier and faster for you to write JavaScript code that traverses
and manipulates the web page. It does so by using selectors, which you learned to
use with CSS. So, with jQuery, you can write JavaScript code without having to learn
a lot of JavaScript.
Chapter 8, Ajax, introduces Ajax. It represents a collection of techniques to make it
easy to dynamically change only portions of a website. With this chapter, we have
entered the world of what I call "modern web development". The interface that we
use for our Ajax calls is jQuery.
Chapter 9, The History API—Not Forgetting Where We Are, explains a very important
piece of the web development puzzle. Once we are changing pages on the fly so they
look different but actually remain the same page (URL), strange things can happen
when visitors want to go back to what they think is the previous page. A solution for
this is described here that will not only work for HTML5 but for HTML4 as well.
Chapter 10, XML and JSON, describes XML and JSON. They are two popular formats
to exchange data, for example the server and the client. Although XML is used in a
variety of environments, JSON is closer to the web development community.
Chapter 11, MongoDB, describes an alternative to MySQL as a database. This is a
so-called NoSQL database and a document database. Documents are conveniently
in the JSON format. Here, how to access a MongoDB database from within a PHP
program is described.
Chapter 12, Mobile First, Responsive Design with Progressive Enhancement, has the
longest chapter title of the book. It explains how modern web development has
to be done now that more people are using mobile devices instead of traditional
computer screens to go to websites.
Chapter 13, Foundation – A Responsive CSS/JavaScript Framework, describes most of the
features of the Foundation framework, which helps you with your responsive design.
It contains everything that I have always wanted to write myself but never had the
time to do. This concludes the part of the book that covers what I call modern web
development.

Preface

Chapter 14, Node.js, gives an overview of what I call the avant-garde of web
development. It introduces node.js, which allows you to write your server-side
code in JavaScript, including your own web server, which is facilitated by using
the Express framework.
Appendix, Bootstrap – An Alternative to Foundation, describes the popular CSS/
JavaScript framework, which is an alternative to Foundation to help you with
responsive design. The main reason to include this is to point out key differences
and similarities.
The online chapter, The Mono County Site, provides a full example of a website or
application where we apply most, if not all, the things we learned. It is available
at https://www.packtpub.com/sites/default/files/downloads/B03816_
Appendix.pdf.

The World Wide Web
This book talks about the past, present, and future of Web Development. Beginning
with Chapter 2, HTML, we will walk you through all the technologies you need to
know about, in order to practice web development. Before we do that, we want to
set the stage, so that we all know which Web we are talking about: this would be the
World Wide Web (www).

World Wide Web
I love history! So let us start with a little history about the World Wide Web.
I was fortunate enough to be able to work at a company that developed the first
commercial version of the UNIX Operating System. They were founded in 1977
and I joined them ten years later. UNIX is an Operating System (the thing you need
to make your computer do something) that was intended to run on minicomputers
(although they were called that, they could not fit into your apartment and required
air-cooling). These computers were typically used as an isolated system that had
quite a number of text-based terminals attached to them.
Today UNIX lives on, and forms the basis of Linux, Solaris, MacOS, and others.
Our company spotted an opportunity to add products that would add features and
technologies that today are standard. Some of these examples are email (ability to send
a mail to a person on another computer), and ftp (ability to transfer a file to another
computer, or to just access another computer). Yes, you had to pay extra if you wanted
to be able to send mail. Thanks to the Internet, all of this was made possible.

[1]

The World Wide Web

The Internet
The Internet is a global network that today interconnects billions of computers
worldwide. Its origin dates back to research done for the US government, but
today everybody can get on the Internet, using its standard set of protocols,
commonly referred to as TCP/IP (the IP here being Internet Protocol).
Every computer or device that is connected to the Internet will have a unique
Internet address, aka IP address. It is a set of 4 numbers separated by dots, for
example, 192.25.13.90. Of course, you will never tell your friend that you bought
something at 192.25.13.90 but at, for instance, www.amazon.com. This is because
the Internet also uses a feature that translates IP addresses into easier to remember
domain names. The example I used happens to be a website you can go to and buy
things from a practice that we all know has caused the www to become what it
is today.
The Internet and the www are, in everyday speech, treated as if they are synonyms
but they are indeed not. There are a lot of different services provided on the Internet
(by companies called Internet Service Providers (ISP)), and that was already the case
before the www existed (for example, giving you access to electronic mail). What it
took for the www to emerge was (just like in JavaScript) a series of asynchronous
events. Two of those are too important to not mention.

HTTP and HTML
You have probably heard this story many times, but the World Wide Web would
not have existed without it. It is the story of Tim Berners Lee, an engineer at the
European Centre for Nuclear Research (CERN). The centre had many computers
that were, of course, hooked up to the Internet. It also produced a tremendous
amount of data and documents, and that became almost impossible to manage.
Tim worked out a solution by developing a language to write these documents in,
a protocol on top of the Internet to manage them, as well as a computer program
for users to access them.

HTML
HTML, short for Hypertext Markup Language is the name of that language. Hypertext
is text that contains hyperlinks, which in turn are those parts of a document which
readers can click on to take them to a different document, using the link. You have all
seen the blue underlined parts of a text, in not-so-good-looking web pages. These are
hyperlinks.

[2]

Chapter 1

A document in HTML consists of tags, with text in between them. There are opening
and closing tags for example, as follows:
<h1>Hello, world</h1>

Here, <h1> is the opening tag and </h1> the closing one. We will learn about a
similar markup language: XML. HTML and XML are not the same though. One
important difference is that in XML you can define your own tags, as long as you
close each one you've opened. XML is used to transfer the data and the tags are
used to organize the data.
In HTML, tags do have a specific meaning. <h1> would be used in a document for
the text of a level one header. A <a> tag—the anchor tag—is the one used to include
the hyperlinks we just discussed. So the purpose of writing HTML is not to transfer
data, but to present it to human users.
To do so, these tags are interpreted by the computer program we mentioned
earlier. Such a program is called a browser. When the reader clicks on a hyperlink,
the browser will detect that as well, and send a request to yet another program,
the web server, to go fetch another document.

HTTP
This is where HTTP, the Hypertext Transfer Protocol fits in. If a user clicks on a
link, it is like saying: go fetch another HTML document. The name of that document
would be part of a longer string that starts with http:// and also contains the
domain name of the server. It is called a uniform resource locator, but we all refer
to it as URL. Following is an example: http://www.paulpwellens.com/examples/
secondpage.html.
What you can do with HTTP has evolved over time and we will learn about it later
on in the book, but for now we need to move on with our history lesson. One more
little tidbit of history for you: guess how our friend Tim called his browser, the first
ever browser: WorldWideWeb. He later renamed it to avoid confusion.

The World Wide Web Consortium (W3C)
After he left the CERN in 1994, Tim Berners Lee founded the World Wide Web
Consortium (W3C). The consortium tries to enforce compatibility and agreement
between vendors that deliver components for the web. Incompatible versions of
HTML would cause browsers to render web pages differently; and incompatible
features added to browsers have the same unexpected result.

[3]

The World Wide Web

If you visit www.w3.org, the consortiums website, you will notice that the W3C
has evolved into a standards body for many technologies, but even in those days,
having such an organization was sorely needed.

Mosaic
History moved on, and so did I! Our company was acquired by Sun Microsystems
and I became product manager for our PC UNIX product. Oh yes, before I forget,
PCs were everywhere by then and that phenomenon would, in the long run, also
contribute to the explosion of the World Wide Web.
One day, in the year 1993, my engineering manager walked into my office, together
with Jonathan, his lead programmer. They wanted to show me what he (Jonathan)
had done over the weekend. It was a port (take the source code of a program and
make it run as a binary on a computer) of a program called Mosaic for our PC UNIX
product. I saw him type a few commands but did not quite understand why these
guys were so excited. Little did I know that this seemingly innocent little program
was going to change our lives forever!

The first browser
Mosaic was developed at the National Center for Supercomputer Applications
(NCSA)at the University of Illinois in Champaign-Urbana (this is a long drive through
cornfields from Chicago, which I took once) by a team led by Marc Andreesen. It was
the first browser to support multiple protocols (hence the name) as well as display
an image and text on the same page (surprisingly, this is not a trivial matter on a
webpage!) It soon caught attention worldwide and the browser was ported to many
platforms, so that more and more people could develop or have access to websites.
In November 1992, there were 26 websites. In the Mosaic browser, there was a What's
new section that showed a new website everyday. Three years later, there were 10,000
and another three years later, millions. Today, I do not think it is possible to count
them anymore. So how did we get from thousands to millions?

Netscape
Marc Andreesen founded a company, named it after Mosaic, and then later
renamed it Netscape Communications Corporation. They basically rewrote the Mosaic
browser and optimized it for environments with lower network bandwidth, such as
individuals who access the Internet from home through their ISP. The browser was
called Netscape Navigator. This was clearly the first commercial browser, making it
to the shelves of computer retail stores as part of a bundle, Netscape Communicator.
[4]

Chapter 1

Netscape was also credited as the first browser to include support for JavaScript.
With this scripting language, interactivity could be added to web pages. The World
Wide Web could be at anybody's fingertips, as long as you had Netscape. From 1994
to about 1999, Netscape clearly had the biggest market share for browsers.
Over time, Netscape was moved over to Mozilla Corporation, an Open Source
organization, and the development of Netscape ended. Today, users can download
the Firefox browser from www.mozilla.org.

Internet Explorer
Another derivative of Mosaic, Spyglass Mosaic, made it into the Microsoft codebase
and was eventually bundled with Microsoft Windows. We know it today as Internet
Explorer. This is how we reach the topic of the so-called browser wars. As I mentioned,
Netscape was trying to win over as many customers as possible by getting into the
retail market and charge for its browser. Microsoft, on the other hand, decided to
bundle Internet Explorer for free in its Windows Operating System (of course you
had to pay for Windows).
This led to many lawsuit-like situations as Microsoft was accused of unfair
competition by the other browser vendors. This situation has now changed as
all browsers are free. Computer users can today choose which browser they want
to use. On tablets, choices are limited, but on the other hand, browsers on tablets
usually have all the latest features.
A different and potentially more bloody war was going on at the technical level.
Despite having a standards body, the W3C, which controlled and introduced new
features (both HTML and CSS), not all browsers were adapting those features equally
as fast. So the same web pages continued to look different when they were rendered
by different browsers. Sad but true to say, the browser that was the most incompatible
and unpredictable, Internet Explorer, was, by the turn of the century, also the one used
by the majority of the people who would surf the web.
Developers therefore had no choice but to delay the use of new cool features at the
expense of spending a considerable amount of extra time making their web pages
look the same on a PC used by most visitors as it did on the system where they
were created.
Things got far worse before they began to get better, as more developers started
using JavaScript to add interaction and animation to the pages, whereas many
System Administrators recommended a configuration with JavaScript switched
off. Sometimes this resulted in the visitor seeing nothing at all on the page.

[5]

The World Wide Web

But do not despair, we are in 2015 now! In this book, we will take a different approach
and always let you use the new features when the browser supports it.

The explosion of the Web
By the turn of the century, every company wanted to have a webpage. Web pages
were created by linking more web pages, with information about the company
or just the owner of the site. The latter was made possible by smart ISPs that also
offered web hosting. People have to be able to access your site even while you or
your computer is sleeping; so these services offer 24/7 uptime to put your HTML
files. Web hosting companies also take care of getting you a domain name, such as
www.thecoolestphotographer.com.
At some point, obtaining the domain name you wanted was bordering on another
browser war, as there could only be one xyz.com, and if some entrepreneurial folks
thought that having xyz.com first would be worth money, they would grab it.
When I wanted one for myself, paulwellens.com was already taken by a British
rugby player, so I went for www.paulpwellens.com (P is my middle initial). I am
neither British nor a rugby player so this was fine with me.
So a lot of pages were created worldwide, but all they had initially was information
for you to look at, nothing else. In some cases, they were created once and never
updated. That fortunately was the exception to confirm the rule. Many companies
decided that they had to have a presence on the web and corporate websites were
thus created. The advent of CSS facilitated this a lot, as it allowed the separation of
presentation and content. That way, the marketing department would provide the
corporate logo, and the look and feel, and all the other departments would provide
the content.

Amazon.com and e-commerce
Some creative minds realized that the Web presented an opportunity to do more
than just provide information. It is only a (relatively) small step from providing
the information of the products you have on your site, to actually selling them.
E-commerce was thus born. Amazon comes to mind as a good example of a site
that everybody can relate to as being a Web shop. Developing a web shop of course
involved a lot more than having someone in the company type in some content.

[6]

Chapter 1

These products are real products; they sit in a warehouse, have a part number, a price,
a name and description, different sizes and colors, and so on. That information, more
than likely, is already present in some database that is updated each time a product is
sold in a retail store. To sell something online, your webpage has to interact with the
visitor, present him with some kind of an on-screen shopping cart, calculate subtotals,
check warehouse inventory, and so on.
To do this, more and more programming was involved, and not just data entry
into an HTML file anymore. So the job of Web Developer was born. Traditional
programmers are skilled in a single programming language (Java or C++) and usually
a single platform (Solaris or .NET). Web Developers have to be fluent in at least four
different languages, as well as know a thing or two about databases. I would like to
add one aspect which, to me, makes this job very exciting—one gets to be involved in
design aspects. The gap between a Web Designer and a Web Developer is narrowing.
So today, one talks about Front-End and Back-End developers.
So this is what we will teach you in this book; how to be a Web Developer, but not
before wrapping up our history lesson. There are a few more things that made the
web what it is today.

Google and Yahoo!
So you have a website with information, or a web shop because you are selling
something on the web, like www.mycoolproduct.com. How do you expect to reach
your potential customers, call every single one of them? This is where Google or
Yahoo fit in. These popular companies developed the so-called search engines.
You want to find out everything there is to know about a movie you just watched,
a song you cannot remember the name of, or simply the phone number of your
favorite restaurant? You visit google.com, yahoo.com, or equivalent sites and
type in what you are looking for. Chances are you will find it.
We did a usability study at work where we gave one group a set of CDs, a stack
of manuals, and a computer to install; the other group did not get the manuals
but Internet access. The second group did way better because they felt they did
not need the manuals, as they assumed them to probably be out of date, and
immediately looked things up online. And this happened over 10 years ago.
Today, the use of search engines is so commonplace that terms like Yahoo! and
Google are used as verbs. In some languages, they actually have become verbs
and made it into the official dictionary.

[7]

The World Wide Web

Social networking
I know people who do not use Facebook today, but I do not know anybody who
does not know of Facebook. For years I walked by the building where Facebook had
its office. I was not really interested. Then, when I moved back to Belgium, I decided
to join them so I could stay in touch with my friends in California, who live in a
different time zone and several thousands of miles away. From one of them I found
out that the Facebook folks have since moved into the building where I used to have
my office. Funny how that goes sometimes!
Facebook, Twitter, YouTube, and LinkedIn are examples of popular social networking
sites. Nothing is sold here, but shared. People share pictures, stories, events, thoughts,
ideas, opinions, and so on.

Web development
Many years ago, I took a 6 month class on what, basically, is part one of this book.
Months into it, it became apparent that the lack of an introductory part that explains
how all the components of the course were related, was the course's biggest flaw.
After six months, there were still people who did not understand the difference
between Java and JavaScript. So I promised myself two things: that one day I would
write a book, and that such a chapter would be part of it. So let's go!

HTML
Files written in HTML form the basis of every website. We briefly touched on
its history in the previous section; here we will dig a little deeper in its structure.
Look at the following example:
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html lang="en">
<head>
<meta charset="utf-8">
<title>Hello World example<\title>
<\head>
<body>
<h1>Hello, world<\h1>
<\body>
<\html>

The first line specifies DOCTYPE, referring to the HTML version used, so the browser
knows how to interpret the file. The one in the example is indicative of HTML5.
DOCTYPE statements used to be a lot longer.
[8]

Chapter 1

This is followed by the main tag, the <html> tag. In-between, we will find all our
HTML in two sections, <head> and <body>. The body tag is what contains your
content, and the head tag contains other information. In our example, there is one
metatag that specifies what encoding is used. The <title> tag contains text that will
be displayed by the browser at the very top of the window. It is very important to
not forget the <title> tag, as this is one of the things search engines will examine.
In this simple example, the body contains a single <h1> tag. This represents a level
one header in the document, similar to headers you find in word processors. The
browser will decide how to display that content or, as they say, render it. So how
do we get the HTML into a file and how do we get it to a browser?

HTML editors and other tools
As an HTML file is just a text file, your favorite text editor will do just fine. Just make
sure it has the .html extension in the name, for example hello.html.
However, at some point, you are probably going to include some CSS, JavaScript,
and surely PHP in the same file, in which case specialized tools will make you far
more productive.

Browsers and web servers
So now you have a file called hello.html and you want to look at it in a browser.
In real life, this file will be part of your website and you will have to put it there.
This is where the company that is hosting your website told you to put your files.
They will give you all the information to correctly transfer your file(s) to their server.
They will end up in a folder that is called the document root, the root of all the files
that make up your site. If you were to follow the instructions with the hello.html
file and transfer it there, you will see the result when you type the following address
in the URL bar of your browser:
http://www.mycoolsite.com/hello

You can also look at your file locally, and we will teach you more about that in the
next chapter.
It is very important to realize that to the people who visit your site, your web page
may not look the same as what you created. One factor—but not the only factor—is the
browser that is being used. We therefor recommend that, from the early development
stage on, you look at your work using different browsers and increase the number of
browsers, for/and different devices.

[9]

The World Wide Web

Always install Mozilla Firefox and Google Chrome on your Mac or PC. Pick one to
do your development (I like Firefox because of Firebug), but always do a little bit of
testing with other browsers before you deliver.
So, start with our little example, and you will see that even Hello World will look
different in different browsers. Fortunately, we can control almost all of this by
using CSS.

CSS
Cascading Style Sheets (CSS) is a technology that works nicely in accordance with
HTML and allows you, not the browser, to determine what your page will look like.
Look at this slightly modified example of our Hello, World webpage, hello.html:
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html lang="en">
<head>
<meta charset="utf-8">
<title>Hello World example</title>
<link href="hello.css"
rel="stylesheet" ></link>
</head>
<body>
<h1 class="green header" id="hello">Hello, World </h1>
</body>
</html>

In the line containing the <h1> tag, we added two HTML attributes, class and id,
to the <h1> element. Attributes are strings inside an HTML opening tag of the format
name="value" and the two most important attributes you can use are class and id.
Many elements can be part of several classes, but ids are unique to a single element.
Now create a file called hello.css with the following content:
h1 {
font-family:Baskerville, cambria, serif;
font-size:24px;
}
.green {
color:green;
}
#hello {
font-weight:bold;
font-style: italic;
)
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Chapter 1

This is our first CSS stylesheet. The first rule in the file means that any <h1>
element in our document will be in the Baskerville font (or cambria, if Baskerville
is not present on the user's computer), at 24 pixels, and in the color the browser
has chosen (usually black).
However, when it, or any other element, not just h1, has a class="green" (in CSS,
the . in name means class name), it will be displayed in the color green.
Finally, our specific Hello World header will be displayed in bold and italics because
of the last few lines in the CSS file. The # character is used in CSS to indicate an
identifier, so the #hello rule means a rule for the element that is set to the id= "hello".
As a result of all of this, any browser should render our HTML file as a line containing
the text Hello, world, displayed in letter type Baskerville (a serif font often used for
eBooks, no relation to Sherlock Holmes that I know of), in green, of size 24 pixels,
and in bold and italic. Just try it, it works!
Note that we did not repeat the Baskerville line in the #hello rule, the rule is
simply inherited. The <h1> rules cascade into #hello, as this happens to be an
<h1>, hence the name Cascading Style Sheets. As we just demonstrated, we can
clearly separate the content and the presentation of our page by using CSS. That
is why it is important to learn how to use CSS as early as possible.
So, as a Web Developer, you already know that you need to master at least HTML
and CSS. We will now move on to the next piece of the language puzzle—JavaScript.

JavaScript
When we talk about JavaScript in this book, unless noted otherwise, we mean
client-side JavaScript. All the code is interpreted, just like the HTML and CSS,
by the browser.
By using JavaScript, we can add action to our pages and interaction with the
visitors of our website, as well as change the contents and look of our page
through programming. Let us take a look at the following example:
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html lang="en">
<head>
<meta charset="utf-8">
<title>Hello World example</title>
<link href="hello.css"
rel="stylesheet" ></link>
</head>
<body>

[ 11 ]

The World Wide Web
<h1 class="green header" id="hello"></h1>
<script type="text/javascript">
var answer = confirm("Do you want to say hello?");
if (answer == true)
{
document.getElementById("hello").innerHTML="Hello, world";
}
</script>
</body>
</html>

If you look at this page in a browser, there will be no Hello, World displayed
on your screen, but a pop-up box will appear with a question. If you answer the
question Yes, our familiar green Hello World text will be back. The pop-up box
itself will look completely different when you use a different browser.
If you look at the code, you will recognize programming-like stuff. There is an if
clause and there is a variable (answer). Note that the name of the variable is a normal
character string but in its declaration it is preceded by var. All of the JavaScript code
is in-between an HTML <script> tag with a type attribute of text/javascript.
There is one line that is very typical to JavaScript and does all the work for us:
document.getElementById("hello").innerHTML="Hello, world";

Chapter 4, JavaScript is where we will really teach you what this means. For now, we
will give you the English interpretation of this line of code: In our document, replace
the inner content of the HTML tag with id hello by the string Hello, world.
In subsequent chapters, we will introduce JavaScript libraries, which will allow
you to write more compact JavaScript code, with a lot of work already done for you.
jQuery is one of these libraries and will be discussed in Chapter 7, jQuery.

PHP
JavaScript is a complete language and allows you to do a lot more things than
those we showed you in the previous little example. However, as I mentioned, this
is client-side JavaScript, interpreted by the browser. So once you switch off your
computer or tablet, it is all gone. Well, some of it may be saved on your machine.

[ 12 ]

Chapter 1

Imagine trying to create an online store using only the languages we have mentioned
so far. That would not work. The information of what is available in the store, as
well as the data of your specific order has to live somewhere else. That would be the
computer of the company that runs the store, not the device that runs the browser
used to visit the site.
So, dear Web Developer, you have guessed it, you will have to learn at least one
more programming language to deal with all of this, before you can create an
online store. The language itself could be any of several (it can even be JavaScript),
but where the code is stored and interpreted is the key difference here: a remote
Application Server. One of the most popular of these languages is PHP, which
is covered in detail in Chapter 5, PHP. Let us look at the following example:
<?php
$hello = "Hello World Example";
$helloheader = '<h1 class="green" id="hello">Hello, World</
h1>';
?>
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html lang="en">
<head>
<meta charset="utf-8">
<title><?php echo $hello; ?></title>
<link href="hello.css" type="text/css" rel="stylesheet"
></link>
</head>
<body>
<?php
echo $helloheader;
?>
</body>
</html>

So far we have been able to test our little examples in a browser, but this is different.
To try out this example, you will need to have an Application Server, local or not,
installed. For now, just read on.
Notice the <?php and ?> strings in the example. This is the beginning and end of
where the PHP code resides and will have to be interpreted by that Application
Server. The first portion of the code defines two variables. Note that in PHP, names
of variables start with a $ sign, whereas in JavaScript they don't. echo, familiar to
UNIX folks, simply echoes the value of these variables.

[ 13 ]

The World Wide Web

So once the AppServer is done interpreting the PHP code, all you are left with is our
HTML example from the CSS section. This is exactly how it works: the AppServer
interprets the PHP code, and then the WebServer passes the resulting HTML code
to the browser.
Apache is the name of a very popular AppServer that happens to be a WebServer at
the same time. This is software that runs on a computer we also call a server and this
is where your program file resides: hello.php.
So http://www.mycoolsite.com/hello will be, once again, the way this webpage
can be accessed. This may look like a little bit of using an overkill tour an additional
language to display Hello, World. But there are some situations where you'd want to
do so, for example if the data you need in your HTML is stored somewhere else.

Data
One of the main reasons to use the remote server and the server-side language is going
to be the storage and manipulation of data. This data can be in several formats, from
a flat text file to a spreadsheet, XML, JSON, or a full-fledged database, which requires
a Database Server. In the latter case, you may need to learn yet another language,
Standard Query Language (SQL) and deal with another (software) server: a database
server. We will address several options in this book.

Summary
In this chapter we discussed the advent and history of the World Wide Web. Next
we discussed Web Development in general with a few examples. In order to become
a developer of Web Applications, you will have to master at least four languages:
HTML, CSS, JavaScript, and a server-side language such as PHP.
Depending on how you plan to organize your data, there may be a need to learn a
fifth language (SQL) as well. There will also be more things to learn, such as how
to use a library or framework. The good news is that they all have their role in the
overall picture of what a Web Application is all about.
Now that we know what we need to learn, let us go do it! We will start with HTML.

[ 14 ]

Get more information Practical Web Development

Where to buy this book
You can buy Practical Web Development from the Packt Publishing website.
Alternatively, you can buy the book from Amazon, BN.com, Computer Manuals and most internet
book retailers.
Click here for ordering and shipping details.

www.PacktPub.com

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