W3C HTML Activities
HTML is the universal markup language for the Web.
HTML Tutorials
To learn more about HTML, read our HTML tutorial.
To learn more about XHTML, read our XHTML tutorial.
HTML Versions
HTML 2.0
HTML 2.0 was developed by the Internet Engineering Task Force HTML Working
Group in 1996.
HTML 2.0 is an outdated version of HTML.
For a Web developer there is no need to study the HTML 2.0
standard.
HTML 3.2
HTML 3.2 became a W3C Recommendation 14. January 1997. HTML 3.2 contained new features such as
fonts, tables,
applets, superscripts, subscripts and more, to the existing HTML
2.0 standard.
One of the elements added to the HTML 3.2 standard, was the
<font> tag. This tag introduced unnecessary complexity to the important task
of separating HTML content (text) from its presentation (style). The
<font> tag became deprecated in HTML 4.0.
HTML 4.0
HTML 4.0 became a W3C Recommendation 18. December 1997. A second
release was issued on 24. April 1998 with only some editorial
corrections.
The most important feature of HTML 4.0 was the introduction of style sheets
(CSS).
Our W3C CSS chapter summarizes the W3C CSS
activities.
HTML 4.01
HTML 4.01 became a W3C Recommendation 24. December 1999.
HTML 4.01 was a minor update of corrections and bug-fixes from HTML 4.0.
XHTML 1.0
XHTML 1.0 reformulates HTML 4.01 in XML.
XHTML 1.0 became a W3C Recommendation 20. January 2000.
Our W3C XHTML chapter summarizes the W3C XHTML
activities.
HTML 5
On January 22nd, 2008, W3C published a working draft for HTML 5.
HTML 5 improves interoperability, and reduces development costs, by making precise rules on how to handle all HTML elements, and how to recover from errors.
Some of the new features in HTML 5 are functions for embedding audio, video, graphics, client-side data storage, and interactive documents.
HTML 5 also contains new elements like <nav>, <header>, <footer>, and <figure>.
The HTML 5 working group includes AOL, Apple, Google, IBM, Microsoft, Mozilla, Nokia, Opera, and many hundred other vendors.
W3C HTML Specifications and Timeline
The XHTML specifications and timeline
are found in the next chapter.
W3C Reference:
W3C HTML Home Page

Whether you're new to XML or already an advanced user,
the user-friendly views and powerful entry helpers,
wizards, and debuggers in XMLSpy are designed to meet your XML
and Web development needs from start to finish.
New features in Version 2010!
- XML editor
- Graphical XML Schema / DTD editors
- XSLT 1.0/2.0 editor, debugger, profiler
- XQuery editor, debugger, profiler
- XBRL validator, taxonomy editor, taxonomy wizard
- Support for Office Open XML (OOXML)
- Graphical WSDL 1.1/2.0 editor & SOAP debugger
- JSON editing & conversion
- Java, C#, C++ code generation
- And much more!
Download a free trial today!
|
|
|
|