Basic HTML Tutorial, Part 2
by Scott on March 13th, 2007
This is part 2 of our Basic HTML Tutorial series. In this episode, I go into tag properties, tags without ending tags, colors and images. Hope you enjoy it.
-Scott
Free Video Tutorials for your enjoyment.
This is part 2 of our Basic HTML Tutorial series. In this episode, I go into tag properties, tags without ending tags, colors and images. Hope you enjoy it.
-Scott
BOB
I cant get the image thing to work. What did you type after the
Aug 28th, 2007 4:51 pm
derk
hey man i wanna no how you center the title please email me and tell me
Aug 30th, 2007 7:58 pm
An anonymous watcher
keep these coming dude
Oct 4th, 2007 12:52 pm
Anass
Thank you for your free video tutorials those are very helpful and useful.
And i believe too that Video Tutorials are the way of the future and are the most effective means of teaching people how to perform both simple and complex operations.
Thank you again
i have learned a lot with you..
All The best.
Anass
Oct 9th, 2007 5:13 am
Ingve
Hi,im wondering if you can make some new tutorials?
How to make a menu f.eks at ur homepage.. like:
”What do we offer”
”contact us”
and f.eks a guestbook… and a loggin page maby?
if its not very hard to learn:)
I hope you read this
BRR
Ingve
Nov 26th, 2007 8:07 am
David Cade
I have a problem with uploading pictures. Everytime I put that html tag and the picture name into notepad then refresh my web browser it comes up with a square with a red cross in it where the picture should be.
Jan 4th, 2008 1:48 am
Leeanne
great tut im hopin to make my own website soon are you guys gonna do tuts on hyperlinks as well lolve this one it was so easy to understand
Thanx mucho
Jan 27th, 2008 3:47 pm
Scott
@BOB: after the what?
@derk: center the title on the titlebar? in general, you can’t. sorry buddy.
@anonymous watcher: i’ll have to make some more soon. thanks.
@Anass: i agree and i hope to keep making them.
@Ingve: i do need to make some new ones, apparently.
@David Cade: that means you aren’t referencing the image correctly. you have to reference it just like any other directory structure (locally) then when it’s (remote) you have to reference it based on the path where you are.
@Leeanne: glad to help.
Jan 28th, 2008 10:55 am