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If you don't know how to write HTML, it's pretty easy. There are plenty of good HTML tutor sites, available online for free. One of the best of these is the Beginner's Guide to HTML. Also look at the World Wide Web Consortium's Getting Started with HTML. HTML editors (Like FrontPage) can help, but Web purists usually frown on using them. Sometimes these editors are browser-specific, which means that someone using another kind of browser might not see the page correctly. Professors usually require HTML projects to be coded by hand, rather than through an HTML editor.
Just a short while ago, you had to pay money to publish a web page on a server. Now, of course, you have any number of free web hosting services. So it's a good idea to create your own web page, show off your tech savvy, and display your resume, all at the same time. But with a web page come some potential problems, too:
What makes a bad web page? Everyone has a different answer, but the consensus seems to be:
There are a lot of online web-style guides. Some of them disagree, but you really can't go wrong with these:
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This page created by Christopher Ryland 25 August 2000. Last updated 28 July 2002.