- What are modern Web Standards?
- What is common standard used to share web based information?
- How many Web Standards are there?
- What is labeling in website?
What are modern Web Standards?
Web standards consist of the following: Recommendations published by the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C), such as HTML/XHTML, Cascading Style Sheets (CSS), image formats such as Portable Network Graphics (PNG) and Scalable Vector Graphics (SVG), as well as accessibility technologies like WAI-ARIA.
What is common standard used to share web based information?
The W3C is the best known web standards body, but there are others such as the WHATWG (who maintain the living standards for the HTML language), ECMA (who publish the standard for ECMAScript, which JavaScript is based on), Khronos (who publish technologies for 3D graphics, such as WebGL), and others.
How many Web Standards are there?
The W3C primarily pursues its mission through the creation of Web Standards and guidelines. Since 1994, W3C has published more than 100 such standards, called W3C Recommendations.
What is labeling in website?
Labeling, in the most basic sense, is a type of representation. On the web, we use labels to represent larger chunks of information simply because we can't crowd every page with all of the information on the entire website – it's just not practical and it doesn't look very nice.