Byte-Sized-Chunks: Cascading Style Sheets (CSS) with HTML

Udemy
Course Summary
Use CSS to make a spectacular difference to the appearance of your webpages!
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Course Description
Note: This course is a subset of our much longer course 'Learn By Example: HTML, CSS and Javascript' so please don't sign up for both:-)
- Relatively few folks formally learn HTML or CSS, because its quite easy to get stuff done in these technologies in a "quick-and-dirty way".
- That "quick-and-dirty" way of learning and doing leads to problems over time, because CSS is actually quite complex, so it is easy to do things the wrong way
- This course will help, because it has 20 examples. Each is self-contained, has its source code attached, and gets across a simple, specific use-case. Each example is simple, but not simplistic.
What's Included:
- Basic HTML: Folks stopped counting HTML as a language worth formally learning sometime in the 90s, but this is only partially justified. It always helps to have strong basics.
- CSS: Cascading Stylesheets are incredibly powerful, and incredibly hard to use - until you know how they really work. Once you understand inheritance and selection in CSS, it will all make a lot more sense.
Using discussion forums
Please use the discussion forums on this course to engage with other students and to help each other out. Unfortunately, much as we would like to, it is not possible for us at Loonycorn to respond to individual questions from students:-(
We're super small and self-funded with only 2 people developing technical video content. Our mission is to make high-quality courses available at super low prices.
The only way to keep our prices this low is to *NOT offer additional technical support over email or in-person*. The truth is, direct support is hugely expensive and just does not scale.
We understand that this is not ideal and that a lot of students might benefit from this additional support. Hiring resources for additional support would make our offering much more expensive, thus defeating our original purpose.
It is a hard trade-off.
Thank you for your patience and understanding!