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Is the literature outdated?
He dealt only with Cubase and Delphi, and even those he mastered before the Olympiad in Informatics and was not able to create anything but the simplest calculator. Now, studying in the 3rd year of a law school, I decided to master html, css, javascript and other languages \u200b\u200bthat would help me in laying out sites (I apologize if I misunderstand my idea, I select terms, make allowances for my experience).
For these purposes, I started reading a book from headfirstlabs "Learning html, xhtml and css" in 2012. At the same time I read the relevant news, articles, posts and ran into a problem: is this book outdated, will I have to relearn everything later, is there any information that is superfluous today? Or how will it work for a beginner, and then everything will smooth out by itself?
And I also ask you to help with the choice of literature, what plan should I draw up,
Thanks for the help!
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IMHO mine says everything that I read, I forget quickly or remember so abstractly :) When I take it and really practice it on real things. Where infa settles faster. You'd better try to make something :)
Yes, the book is outdated. If it was published in 2012, then the information in it is completely as of 2010-11. Six years in the world of front-end is a lot, almost an era. You can start on it, but then move on to something fresher.
Although in a sense, you can even extract the advantages - to feel the layout for old browsers, so that later you can compare it with new ones. Beginners often take it all for granted.
Well, in order to find out what layout is, etc. - norms book
For any next step - put the book aside and start googling info on keywords
Shl. Why stick to one book at all? Now information about the frontend is just mountains
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