HTML 5 and CSS 3: The Techniques You'll Soon be Using

HTML 5 and CSS 3: The Techniques You’ll Soon Be Using

Tutorial Details
  • Technology: CSS3, HTML 5
  • Difficulty: Intermediate
  • Completion Time: 1-2 hours

Final Product What You'll Be Creating

In this tutorial, we are going to build a blog page using next-generation techniques from HTML 5 and CSS 3. The tutorial aims to demonstrate how we will be building websites when the specifications are finalized and the browser vendors have implemented them. If you already know HTML and CSS, it should be easy to follow along.


1. HTML 5

HTML 5 is the next major version of HTML. It introduces a bunch of new elements that will make our pages more semantic. This will make it a lot easier for search engines and screenreaders to navigate our pages, and improve the web experience for everyone. In addition, HTML 5 will also include fancy APIs for drawing graphics on screen, storing data offline, dragging and dropping, and a lot more. Let’s get started marking up the blog page.


2. Basic Structure

Before we begin marking up the page we should get the overall structure straight:

Diagram of basic structure

In HTML 5 there are specific tags meant for marking up the header, navigation, sidebar and footer. First, take a look at the markup and I’ll explain afterwards:

<!doctype html>
<html>
<head>
	<title>Page title</title>
</head>
<body>
	<header>
		<h1>Page title</h1>
	</header>
	<nav>
		<!-- Navigation -->
	</nav>
	<section id="intro">
		<!-- Introduction -->
	</section>
	<section>
		<!-- Main content area -->
	</section>
	<aside>
		<!-- Sidebar -->
	</aside>
	<footer>
		<!-- Footer -->
	</footer>

</body>
</html>

It still looks like HTML markup, but there are a few things to note:

  • In HTML 5, there is only one doctype. It is declared in the beginning of the page by <!doctype html>. It simply tells the browser that it’s dealing with an HTML-document.
  • The new tag header is wrapped around introductory elements, such as the page title or a logo. It could also contain a table of contents or a search form. Every header typically contains a heading tag from <h1> to <h6>. In this case the header is used to introduce the whole page, but we’ll use it to introduce a section of the page a little later.
  • The nav-tag is used to contain navigational elements, such as the main navigation on a site or more specialized navigation like next/previous-links.
  • The section-tag is used to denote a section in the document. It can contain all kinds of markup and multiple sections can be nested inside each other.
  • aside is used to wrap around content related to the main content of the page that could still stand on it’s own and make sense. In this case we’re using it for the sidebar.
  • The footer-tag should contain additional information about the main content, such as info about who wrote it, copyright information, links to related documents and so on.

Instead of using divs to contain different sections of the page we are now using appropriate, semantic tags. They will make it a lot easier for search engines and screen readers to figure out what’s what in a page.


3. Marking Up the Navigation

The navigation is marked up exactly like we would do it in HTML 4 or XHTML, using an unordered list. The key is that this list is placed inside the nav-tags.

<nav>
	<ul>
		<li><a href="#">Blog</a></li>
		<li><a href="#">About</a></li>
		<li><a href="#">Archives</a></li>
		<li><a href="#">Contact</a></li>
		<li class="subscribe"><a href="#">Subscribe via. RSS</a></li>
	</ul>
</nav>

4. Marking Up the Introduction

We have already defined a new section in the document using the section tag. Now we just need some content.

<section id="intro">
	<header>
		<h2>Do you love flowers as much as we do?</h2>
	</header>
	<p>Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipisicing elit, sed do eiusmod tempor incididunt ut labore et dolore magna aliqua. Ut enim ad minim veniam, quis nostrud exercitation ullamco laboris nisi ut.</p>
</section>

We add an id to the section tag so we can identify it later when styling. We use the header tag to wrap around the introductory h2 element. In addition to describing a whole document, the header-tag should also be used to describe individual sections.


5. Marking Up the Main Content Area

Our main content area consists of three sections: the blog post, the comments and the comment form. Using our knowledge about the new structural tags in HTML 5, it should be easy to mark it up.

Marking up the Blog Post

Go through the markup and I’ll explain the new elements afterwards.

<section>
	<article class="blogPost">
		<header>
			<h2>This is the title of a blog post</h2>
			<p>Posted on <time datetime="2009-06-29T23:31:45+01:00">June 29th 2009</time> by <a href="#">Mads Kjaer</a> - <a href="#comments">3 comments</a></p>
		</header>
		<p>Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipiscing elit. Proin euismod tellus eu orci imperdiet nec rutrum lacus blandit. Cras enim nibh, sodales ultricies elementum vel, fermentum id tellus. Proin metus odio, ultricies eu pharetra dictum, laoreet id odio...</p>
	</article>
</section>

We start a new section and wrap the whole blog post in an article-tag. The article tag is used to denote an independent entry in a blog, discussion, encyclopedia, etc. and is ideal to use here. Since we are viewing the details of a single post we only have one article, but on the front page of the blog we would wrap each post in an article-tag.

The header element is used to present the header and metadata about the blog post. We tell the user when the post was written, who wrote it and how many comments it has. Note that the timestamp is wrapped in a

Diagram describing use of the datetime HTML attribute
  1. The year followed by a figure dash (a minus sign to you non-typography nerds)
  2. The month followed by a figure dash
  3. The date
  4. A capital T to denote that we are going to specify the local time
  5. The local time in the format hh:mm:ss
  6. The time zone relative to GMT. I’m in Denmark which is 1 hour after GMT, so I write +01. If you were in Colorado you would be 7 hours behind GMT, and you would write -07.

Marking up the Comments

Marking up the comments is pretty straight-forward. No new tags or attributes are used.

<section id="comments">
	<header>
		<h3>Comments</h3>
	</header>
	<article>
		<header>
			<a href="#">George Washington</a> on <time datetime="2009-06-29T23:35:20+01:00">June 29th 2009 at 23:35</time>
		</header>
		<p>Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipisicing elit, sed do eiusmod tempor incididunt ut labore et dolore magna aliqua. Ut enim ad minim veniam, quis nostrud exercitation ullamco laboris nisi ut.</p>
	</article>
	<article>
		<header>
			<a href="#">Benjamin Franklin</a> on <time datetime="2009-06-29T23:40:09+01:00">June 29th 2009 at 23:40</time>
		</header>
		<p>Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetur adipisicing elit, sed do eiusmod tempor incididunt ut labore et dolore magna aliqua. Ut enim ad minim veniam, quis nostrud exercitation ullamco laboris nisi ut.</p>
	</article>
</section>

Marking up the Comment Form

Several enhancements to forms have been introduced in HTML 5. You longer have to do client-side validation of required fields, emails, etc. The browser takes care of this for you.

<form action="#" method="post">
	<h3>Post a comment</h3>
	<p>
		<label for="name">Name</label>
		<input name="name" id="name" type="text" required />
	</p>
	<p>
		<label for="email">E-mail</label>
		<input name="email" id="email" type="email" required />
	</p>
	<p>
		<label for="website">Website</label>
		<input name="website" id="website" type="url" />
	</p>
	<p>
		<label for="comment">Comment</label>
		<textarea name="comment" id="comment" required></textarea>
	</p>
	<p><input type="submit" value="Post comment" /></p>
</form>

There are new two new types of inputs, email and url. Email specifies that the user should enter a valid E-mail, and url that the user should enter a valid website address. If you write required as an attribute, the user cannot submit an empty field. “Required” is a boolean attribute, new to HTML 5. It just means that the attribute is to be declared without a value.

Marking up the Sidebar and Footer

The markup of the sidebar and footer is extremely simple. A few sections with some content inside the appropriate aside- and footer-tags.

You can view the final, unstyled markup here. Now for the styling.


6. Styling with CSS 3

CSS 3 builds upon the principles about styles, selectors and the cascade that we know so well from earlier versions of CSS. It adds loads of new features, including new selectors, pseudo-classes and properties. Using these new features it becomes a lot easier to set up your layout. Let’s dive in.

Basic Setup

To start off with we are going to define some basic rules concerning typography, background color of the page, etc. You’ll recognize all of this from CSS 2.1

/* Makeshift CSS Reset */
{
	margin: 0;
	padding: 0;
}

/* Tell the browser to render HTML 5 elements as block */
header, footer, aside, nav, article {
	display: block;
}

body {
	margin: 0 auto;
	width: 940px;
	font: 13px/22px Helvetica, Arial, sans-serif;
	background: #f0f0f0;
}

h2 {
	font-size: 28px;
	line-height: 44px;
	padding: 22px 0;
}

h3 {
	font-size: 18px;
	line-height: 22px;
	padding: 11px 0;
}

p {
	padding-bottom: 22px;
}

First we reset margin- and padding-styles with a simple rule. In a production environment I would use a more complete CSS Reset such as Eric Meyer’s (for CSS 2.1) but for the scope of the tutorial this will do.

We then tell the browser to render all the new HTML 5 elements as block. The browsers are fine with elements they don’t recognize (this is why HTML 5 is somewhat backwards compatible), but they don’t know how those elements should be rendered by default. We have to tell them this until the standard is implemented across the board.

Also note how I’ve chosen to size the fonts in pixels instead of ems or %. This is to maintain the progressive nature of the tutorial. When the major browsers one day are completely finished implementing HTML 5 and CSS 3 we will all have access to page zooming instead of just text resizing. This eliminates the need to define sizes in relative units, as the browser will scale the page anyway.

See what the page looks like with the basic styling applied. Now we can move on to styling the rest of the page. No additional styles are required for the header, so we’ll go straight to the navigation.


7. Styling the Navigation

It is important to note that the width of the body has been defined as 940px and that it has been centered. Our navigation bar needs to span the whole width of the window, so we’ll have to apply some additional styles:

nav {
	position: absolute;
	left: 0;
	width: 100%;
	background: url("nav_background");
}

We position the nav-element absolutely, align it to the left of the window and make it span the whole width. We’ll center the nested list to display it within the boundaries of the layout:

nav ul {
	margin: 0 auto;
	width: 940px;
	list-style: none;
}

Now we’ll define some additional styles to make the navigation items look prettier and align them to the grid the layout is based on. I’ve also included a style for highlighting the page the user is on, and some custom styling for the subscription-link.

nav ul li {
	float: left;
}

	nav ul li a {
		display: block;
		margin-right: 20px;
		width: 140px;
		font-size: 14px;
		line-height: 44px;
		text-align: center;
		text-decoration: none;
		color: #777;
	}

		nav ul li a:hover {
			color: #fff;
		}

		nav ul li.selected a {
			color: #fff;
		}

		nav ul li.subscribe a {
			margin-left: 22px;
			padding-left: 33px;
			text-align: left;
			background: url("rss.png") left center no-repeat;
		}

8. Styling the Introduction

The markup for the introduction is pretty simple: A section with a heading and a paragraph of text. However, we’ll use some new CSS 3 tricks to make it look more appealing.

#intro {
	margin-top: 66px;
	padding: 44px;
	background: #467612 url("intro_background.png") repeat-x;
	background-size: 100%;
	border-radius: 22px;
}

We are using two new properties. The first one is background-size, which allows you to scale the background-image. In our case, we scale it to 100% on both axes. If the box expands as we add more content to it, the gradient background will scale as well. This is something that was not possible in CSS 2.1 without non-semantic markup and miscellaneous browser issues.

The second new property is border-radius, which applies rounded corners to the element. The radius of our rounded corners are 22px in every corner. You could specify different values for each corner or choose to only round individual corners.

Unfortunately, neither of the properties are fully implemented into the major browsers. However, we can get some support by using vendor-specific attributes. Background-size is supported by newer versions of Safari, Opera and Konqueror. Border-radius is supported by newer versions of Safari and Firefox.

#intro {
	...
	/* Background-size not implemented yet */
	-webkit-background-size: 100%;
	-o-background-size: 100%;
	-khtml-background-size: 100%;

	/* Border-radius not implemented yet */
 	-moz-border-radius: 22px;
	-webkit-border-radius: 22px;
}

Since we have a background-color defined, there will be no major problems in browsers that don’t support background-size, such as Firefox. Now we just need to style the heading and the text.

#intro h2, #intro p {
	width: 336px;
}

#intro h2 {
	padding: 0 0 22px 0;
	font-weight: normal
	color: #fff;
}

#intro p {
	padding: 0;
	color: #d9f499;
}

The flower image can be added easily by giving #intro a second background image, something that CSS 3 supports.

#intro {
	...
	background: #467612 url("intro_background.png") top left (287px 100%) repeat-x,
			url("intro_flower.png") top right (653px 100%) no-repeat;
	...
}

We give the two background images explicit dimensions to ensure that they don’t overlap, and we’re set. Note the shorthand notation of background-size.

Unfortunately, no browser reliably supports this yet, so we’ll have to do it the old-fashioned way: by including an inline image and positioning it using CSS. See the final example to see how it was done.


9. Styling the Content Area and Sidebar

The content area and sidebar are going to be aligned beside each other. Traditionally you would do this by using floats, but in CSS 3 we are going to use tables!

“What?! Tables?” you might ask and look confused. You probably learned years ago that using tables for web layout is a big no-no, and it still is. You should never use the table-element to mark up a layout. However, in CSS 3 we can make elements behave like tables without it ever showing in the markup! To start off with, we’re going to need some divs to group the sections in a little more logical manner.

<div id="content">
	<div id="mainContent">
		<section>
			<!-- Blog post -->
		</section>
		<section id="comments">
			<!-- Comments -->
		</section>
		<form>
			<!-- Comment form -->
		</form>
	</div>
	<aside>
		<!-- Sidebar -->
	</aside>
</div>

Everything still makes sense semantically, but now we can style it. We want the #content div to behave like a table, with #mainContent and aside as table-cells. With CSS 3, this is very easy:

#content {
	display: table;
}

	#mainContent {
		display: table-cell;
		width: 620px;
		padding-right: 22px;
	}

	aside {
		display: table-cell;
		width: 300px;
	}

That’s all! No more floating, faux column background images, clearing or collapsing margins. We’ve made the elements behave like a table, and this makes it much easier for us to do layout.


10. Styling the Blog Post

The styling of the post header is rather trivial so I’ll skip to the fun part: the multi-column layout.

Multiple columns

Multiple columns of text was previously impossible without manually splitting the text, but with CSS 3 it’s a piece of cake, although we have to add a div around the multiple paragraphs for this to work with current browsers.

<div>
	<p>Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet...</p>
	<p>Pellentesque ut sapien arcu...</p>
	<p>Vivamus vitae nulla dolor...</p>
	...
</div>

Now we can add two simple properties and call it a day.

.blogPost div {
	column-count: 2;
	column-gap: 22px;
}

We want 2 columns and a gap of 22px between the columns. The additional div is needed because there is currently no supported way of making an element span more than one column. In the future, however, you’ll be able to specify the column-span property, and we could just write:

.blogPost {
	column-count: 2;
	column-gap: 22px;
}

	.blogPost header {
		column-span: all;
	}

Of course the column-count and column-gap properties are only supported by some browsers, Safari and Firefox. We have to use the vendor-specific properties for now.

.blogPost div {
	/* Column-count not implemented yet */
	-moz-column-count: 2;
	-webkit-column-count: 2;

	/* Column-gap not implemented yet */
	-moz-column-gap: 22px;
	-webkit-column-gap: 22px;
}

Box shadow

If you look closely at the image in the blog post you’ll see a drop-shadow. We are able to generate this using CSS 3 and the box-shadow property.

.blogPost img {
	margin: 22px 0;
	box-shadow: 3px 3px 7px #777;
}
Illustration describing how the browsers render the box-shadow CSS property

The first “3px” tells the browser where we want the shadow to stop horizontally. The second “3px” tells it where we want the shadow to stop vertically. The last “7px” is how blurred the border should be. If you set it to 0 it will be completely solid. Last but not least we define the base color of the shadow. This color is of course faded, depending on how much you blur the shadow.

It probably comes as no surprise that this property is not implemented in all browsers yet. In fact, it only works in Safari, and you have to use the vendor-specific property.

.blogPost img {
	margin: 22px 0;
	-webkit-box-shadow: 3px 3px 7px #777;
}

11. Zebra-striping the Comments

Zebra-striping, or highlighting every second element in a series, has traditionally involved selecting all the elements via javascript, then looping through them and highlighting all the odd elements. CSS 3 introduces the pseudo-class “nth-child”, which makes it ridiculously simple to do this without javascript. We’ll use it to zebra-stripe the comments.

section#comments article:nth-child(2n+1) {
	padding: 21px;
	background: #E3E3E3;
	border: 1px solid #d7d7d7;

	/* Border-radius not implemented yet */
	-moz-border-radius: 11px;
	-webkit-border-radius: 11px;
}

The weird value “2n+1″ is actually pretty simple if you understand what it stands for:

  • 2n selects every second item. If you wrote 3n it would select every third item, 4n every fourth item, and so on.
  • The +1 tells the browser to start at element 1. If you are familiar with programming you probably know that all arrays start at 0, and this is also true here. This means that element 1 is actually the second element in the series.

Alternatively, you could simply write:

section#comments article:nth-child(odd) { ... }

Since the standard includes the two most used values as shorthand, odd and even. The rest of the comment styling should be simple to understand with your new knowledge.

Styling the Comment Form, Footer and Sidebar

A couple of CSS 3 techniques are reused in the styling of the comment form, footer and sidebar. In the comment form and the footer I’ve used the same type of table layout technique used in the main layout. In the sidebar border-radius is used to add rounded corners to the different sections.


12. The Final Design

See the final design with all styling applied.

Compatibility

The page renders correctly in Safari 4 and newer webkit-based browsers, as it is the only rendering engine that supports all of the CSS 3 techniques we have used. Firefox 3 has some problems applying rounded corners to our flower image and it doesn’t support background-size, but besides that the layout works. I’ve chosen to ignore Internet Explorer as it requires a bit of hacking to get HTML 5 to work. You could also define some more rules and get everything working across major browsers, but all of this is outside the scope of the tutorial.

Conclusion

When HTML 5 and CSS 3 are one day implemented in all browsers it will be a lot easier to build websites. We’ll finally be able to stop using floats for layout (which they were never meant to be used for), and we will spend considerably less time writing javascript to scale our background images or zebra-stripe our tables. Hopefully we will use all this extra time to study some long-neglected areas of web design, like front end optimization and proper information architecture.


Note: Want to add some source code? Type <pre><code> before it and </code></pre> after it. Find out more
  • http://www.jeewanaryal.web44.net Jeewan

    Nice work, thank you :-)

  • Carlos Arbelaez

    Hello, nice job. I would like to use it on my course at the university. With your permision, I would like to translate the document to spanish and distribute it on my students with your credits ?

    Best wishes

    Carlos Arbelaez

  • Dennis

    This is the future, in the current. I like that one day browsers will start page zooming, the % are starting to kinda get tiring.

  • http://www.directio.ro Ghid turistic

    Now that is the way to make a tutorial. Soon enought I will star learning css/ html and I’ll be back on this tutorial for sure

  • http://HTML5-CONVERTER.COM html5 converter

    Thanks for sharing your info. I really appreciate your efforts and I will be waiting for your further write ups thanks once again.

  • http://www.theoutdoorlens.com Viking Warrior

    Spectacular, well organized tutorial and definite bookmark.

  • Rehan

    Where can we find the images used???

  • http://publinversion.es Tu imprenta online

    great job, thanks for your time work ;)

  • http://www.classicmichaelkorshandbags.com/ michael kors handbags

    No matter how many times I read it, it never gets old. You definitely hit the nail on the head on this one. This is something people need to know about. Your blog is really incredible and the design is really top notch. Really,your blog is incredible. Keep going, man. Keep going!

  • Rajeev

    nice job…This is very helpful tutorial for us….Thanks

  • MARK

    Very helpful ….

  • aakash

    Very important
    thanks

  • Farzad

    Great work, thanks

  • Alex

    First of all, I love this tut, very well done.
    But, I have this very strange problem and some help would be highly appreciated.

    Please look at this url: http://www.animotions.nl/html5test/basic.html

    I used your method to create this page and all I want to do is have an image above the Intro Text “Welcome to my html 5 test”, but as soon as i paste the code above this line (see source section id slideshow) the aside bar shifts down.

    The strange thing is, as soon as I put just 1 character in front of the img tag, the image and main text shift down but the aside bar shifts up to a normal position.

    You can see this happening here: http://www.animotions.nl/html5test/basic2.html

    Now I tried 100 different ways to order the text, change the CSS, it always ends up shifting down the aside bar.

    Any ideas? Thanks!
    Alex

  • http://letsmakesometrafficnoiseblog.com Wendolyn Sitterson

    I know that is truly boring and you are therefore skipping an additional comment, however i just wanted to throw a big thanks – you settled several things for me personally!

  • http://adamshaffi.in Shaffi

    Thanks for given the HTML5 Tutorial Details. i wait for further samples. Thanks lot…

  • http://www.bestspot2shop.com Trigve Hagen

    Great Tutorial!!

  • Fett’e Brown

    Thank you for this code. It gave me the concept that I needed in order to complete my assignment.

  • http://rollinshultz.blogspot.com/,http://rollinshultz.facebook.com Rollin Shultz

    It is very nice. You are using the new HTML tags , I have adopted and which I find convenient for eliminating div IDs. I did this build with your code and images, and I played with it a bit. I did a gradient background in place of your background and if you try it I bet you will like it.

    background: #C0C0C0; /* Old browsers */
    background: -moz-linear-gradient(top, #C0C0C0 0%, #ededed 53%, #f9f9f9 100%); /* FF3.6+ */
    background: -webkit-gradient(linear, left top, left bottom, color-stop(0%,#C0C0C0), color-stop(53%,#ededed), color-stop(100%,#f9f9f9)); /* Chrome,Safari4+ */
    background: -webkit-linear-gradient(top, #C0C0C0 0%,#ededed 53%,#f9f9f9 100%); /* Chrome10+,Safari5.1+ */
    background: -o-linear-gradient(top, #C0C0C0 0%,#ededed 53%,#f9f9f9 100%); /* Opera 11.10+ */
    background: -ms-linear-gradient(top, #C0C0C0 0%,#ededed 53%,#f9f9f9 100%); /* IE10+ */
    background: linear-gradient(top, #C0C0C0 0%,#ededed 53%,#f9f9f9 100%); /* W3C */
    filter: progid:DXImageTransform.Microsoft.gradient( startColorstr=’#C0C0C0′, endColorstr=’#f9f9f9′,GradientType=0 ); /* IE6-9 */

    I tried the border-radius commands and they worked in Firefox 13 w/o the -moz-. When I am coding I like to try the base command first to see if it works before adding the -moz, -o-, -webkit- etc.

  • http://www.umairulhaque.com Umair Ulhaque

    Nicely written with comprehensive guidelines.. I am just moving to html5 and css3 it was a good start for me to make use of new elements thanks to the author

  • http://www.yacobi.eu yacobi

    Cool, but regarding the comments section, you put each comment wrapped in inside . But a comment section is usually an ordered list with somes inside!

  • http://www.yacobi.eu yacobi

    Regarding the comments section, you put each comment wrapped in <article> inside <section>. But a comment section is usually an ordered list with somes <li> inside.

  • daxuky

    Nice work dude! I’ve started learning HTML5 and this tuto have helped me a lot!

  • http://www.topcreativemag.com Ricardo Nunes

    That’s a very good beginners tutorial!

  • Hein

    This is great post!

  • http://uploadpic.net uploadpic

    Thank you for this article, I’m inspired now with the new elements.

  • gutoLee

    Nice tutorial! Thank you! But I’m wonder why you are presenting css properties that don’t have yet implemented in most browers? It would’nt be more nice if you’ve covered stuffs 100% functional in every browser.

  • Rusty

    Great article BUT. How on earth on the comments section do you manage to get the headings to the left aligned and the comments to the right wrapped ?? Been trying for ages but cannot do it. Can you put the CSS up as well please ??? Driving me mad trying to do it. :-(

  • Asif Khan

    Nice Tuts ……it very Help Ful

  • http://www.picaflora.com N’Djamena M.

    Thanks for this tutorial. I’m kind of on the fence about HTML5/CSS3. It seems to be really growing in popularity these days but I’m not sure I want to invest time in learning it while it’s still not implemented across the major browsers. Cross-browser compatibility is very important for me.

  • rraqi

    very nice :D
    if you want help for html 5 check out this page

    THENX

  • http://www.foxazbeats.com FoxaZ

    That’s an amazing tutorial. Very helpful!

  • lucho gizza

    Excelente tutorial, good tutorial! thanks!

  • http://mfmosem.blogspot.com MFMOsem

    this is a definitely good starting point for me! thank you

  • Jade

    I believe you have used the section, article and aside tag in the wrong context

    It should be used like this instead

    Blah
    Content

    Blah
    Content

    With the aside is generally used as content related to the main content in the page, not for a nav which is unrelated.

    I got lots of info of correct way to use the new HTML5 tags from http://html5doctor.com/

  • Deepu

    Thanks.

    its very easy to understand both html5 and css3 for new guys….

  • Sudha

    Thanks to share your knowledge to all. I got more ideas from this. I am new one to web design. Keep it this kind of sharing.

  • Niranjan

    Really, good job!

  • Mjs34

    When you get to section 9. Styling the Content Area and Sidebar you do not indicate where the code goes in the html doc. When I check the source code of the final results page it differs from what you had me code in the html portion of the tutorial. Maybe you make adjustments further along in the tut, but it can be very confusing for a novice. Makes me wonder if it’s worth the money I pay.

  • http://tapsuccess.com Randallg

    Awesome article. Thanks!

    p.s. “You longer have to do client-side” should be “You no longer have to do client-side”

  • Randallg

    ‘There are new two new types of inputs” probably should be “There are now two new types of inputs”?

  • http://amir.rachum.com Amir Rachum

    How do handle sticky footer business?

  • http://www.connecttheory.com amul

    I’d have to agree with others here and point out that some of the material here is dated now in oct 2012. However the basics still apply…

    Browsers have been iterating rapidly so by the very nature the technology documentation will always go out of date.

  • http://sikkander.in Sikkander

    Nice tutorial….

  • http://www.facebook.com/reinierk Reinier Kaper

    I’d suggest you take a close look at your outline, because this mark-up is far from nice. Don’t get me wrong, HTML5 isn’t as great as people pretend, simply because of the section, article, aside, nav, etc elements. They imply new sections and are arguably useless…

    Just a little example: you use an h2 for the blog article and an h2 for the intro section, but because they are both within a section, they have the same weight in the outline.

    Also, because you have the blog article in a section, it creates a new Untitled heading (because the section itself implies this) which is not right.

    Furthermore, I don’t think you use the aside in the right way. Both Categories and Archives should be in their own aside, because (again) an aside implies a new section and creates an Untitled heading.

    Don’t get me wrong: HTML5 creates more issues with outlines than it solves, but if you follow the current specs, you’ll see that this is not really the right way to do things.

    I also suggest using H5o, an HTML5 outliner snippet to see you outline, it really helps and lets you see where you miss (implied) headings (think about all the poor screenreaders, they go nuts over this).

  • Xxobit

    Great tutorial! It helped me a lot, especially the content part. You make it so damn easy compared with what I was tought. Thanks again for this tut.

  • Rajkumar

    Good

  • Cishemant Mahajan

    Nice one!! Can you explain me the difference between HTML5 and Microsoft Silverlight.

  • Nick

    Some say that an unordered list inside a nav tag is redundant.

  • Chris

    This layout doesn’t work in Internet Explore. How come?