HTML and CSS Reference
In-Depth Information
5. What do team members do in the Analysis phase
of a Web site project?
a. determine what the site will do—not how it
will be done
b. determine the information topics of the site
c. determine the content requirements of the site
d. all of the above
c. It is recommended to use hyphens in domain
names.
d. There is no reason to check for trademarks
when you are choosing a domain name.
10. Which Web hosting option is appropriate for the
initial Web presence of an organization ?
a. dedicated hosting
b. free Web hosting
c. virtual hosting
d. co-located hosting
6. In which phase is a prototype of the Web site
often created?
a. Design
b. Conceptualization
c. Production
d. Analysis
Fill in the Blank
11. ____________________ can be described as
testing how actual Web page visitors use a
Web site.
7. Which of the following happens during the
Production phase?
a. a Web authoring tool is often used
b. the graphics, Web pages, and other components
are created
c. the Web pages are individually tested
d. all of the above
12. The ____________________ determines appropri-
ate use of graphics on the site, and creates and
edits graphics.
13. The ____________________ operating system(s)
treat uppercase and lowercase letters differently.
8. Which of the following happens during the
Evaluation phase?
a. the goals for the site are reviewed
b. another loop through the development process
may result
c. both a and b
d. none of the above
Short Answer
14. Describe why the Web sites of competitors
should be reviewed when designing a
Web site.
9. Which of the following is true about domain names?
a. It is recommended to register multiple domain
names that are redirected to your Web site.
b. It is recommended to use long, descriptive
domain names.
15. Why should you try to contact the technical
support of a Web host provider before you are
one of its customers?
Hands-On Exercises
1. Skip this exercise if you have completed Hands-On Practice 2.11 in Chapter 2. In
this exercise you will validate a Web page. Choose one of the Web pages that you
have created. Launch a browser and visit the W3C HTML Validator page at
http://validator.w3.org. Notice the Validate by File Upload area. Click the Browse
button, select a file from your computer, and click the Check button to upload the
file to the W3C site. Your page will be analyzed and a Results page generated,
which shows a report of violations of the DTD that is used by your Web page. The
error messages display the offending code along with the line number, column
number, and description of the error. Don't worry if your Web page does not pass
the validations the first time. Many well-known Web sites have pages that do not
validate—even http://yahoo.com had validation errors at the time this was written.
Modify your Web page document and revalidate it until you see a message that
states “This page is valid XHTML 1.0 Transitional!” (See Figure 10.5.)
 
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