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English Wikipedia references for W3.org 451-500 of 2031
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Blink element
blink element is a non-standard presentational HTML element that indicates to a user agent (generally a web browser) that the page author intends the content of the element to blink (that is, alternate between being visible and invisible). The element was introduced in Netscape Navigator and has some support in other web browsers, but support for the feature is absent from Internet Explorer.
Blink_element
Missionaria Protectiva/myskin.css
User:Missionaria_Protectiva/myskin.css
Perkyle/monobook.css
User:Perkyle/monobook.css
Binary XML
Binary XML, or Binary Extensible Markup Language, refers to any specification which defines the compact representation of XML in a binary format. While there are several competing formats, none has been widely adopted by a standards organization or accepted as a de facto standard.
Binary_XML
Tomáš Garrigue Masaryk
Talk:Tomáš_Garrigue_Masaryk
Manual of Style/Archive (capitalization)
Wikipedia_talk:Manual_of_Style/Archive_(capitalization)
Caron/Archive1
Talk:Caron/Archive1
Lang
Template:Lang
Abkhaz language
Talk:Abkhaz_language
Chartreuse (color)
Chartreuse (, , or ; ) (the web color) is a color halfway between yellow and green that was named because of its resemblance to the green color of one of the French liqueurs called green chartreuse, introduced in 1764; whereas chartreuse (the traditional color) is a yellow color mixed with a small amount of green that was named because of its resemblance to the yellow color of one of the French liqueurs called yellow chartreuse, introduced in 1838.
Chartreuse_(color)
Lang
Template_talk:Lang
Framing (World Wide Web)
On a web page, framing means that a website can be organized into frames. Each frame displays a different HTML document. Headers and sidebar menus do not move when the content frame is scrolled up and down. For developers frames can also be convenient. For example, if an item needs to be added to the sidebar menu, only one file needs to be changed, whereas each individual page on a non-frameset website would have to be edited if the sidebar menu appeared on all of them.
Framing_(World_Wide_Web)
XML database
data persistence software system that allows data to be stored in XML format. This data can then be queried, exported and serialized into the desired format.Two major classes of XML database exist XML-enabled:relational database), accepting XML as input and rendering XML as output. This term implies that the database does the conversion itself (as opposed to relying on middleware). Native XML (NXD)
XML_database
Internationalized Resource Identifier
Internet, the Internationalized Resource Identifier (IRI) is a generalization of the Uniform Resource Identifier (URI), which is in turn a generalization of the Uniform Resource Locator (URL). While URIs are limited to a subset of the ASCII character set, IRIs may contain characters from the Universal Character Set (Unicode/ISO 10646), including Chinese or Japanese kanji, Korean, Cyrillic characters, and so forth.
Internationalized_Resource_Identifier
WorldWideWeb
Talk:WorldWideWeb
Internet Explorer/Archive 1
Talk:Internet_Explorer/Archive_1
Lime (color)
Lime_(color)
Naming conventions/Archive 3
Wikipedia_talk:Naming_conventions/Archive_3
XKMS
XKMS
Derivative work
Talk:Derivative_work
Chennai/Archive 1
Talk:Chennai/Archive_1
Wikicite feature requests
Wikipedia:Wikicite_feature_requests
Nofollow/Vote
Wikipedia:Nofollow/Vote
Data URI scheme
The data URI scheme is a URI scheme that provides the ability to include data items in-line in a web page as if they were being referenced as external resources. They tend to be simpler than alternative inclusion methods, such as MIME with cid or mid URIs. Data URIs are a form of Uniform Resource Locators, although they do not actually remotely locate anything. The data URI scheme is defined in RFC 2397 of the Internet Engineering Task Force.
Data_URI_scheme
Holek/monobook.css
User:Holek/monobook.css
Channel Definition Format
Channel Definition Format (CDF) is an XML standard used in conjunction with Microsoft Active Channel and Smart Offline Favorites technologies. Its use is to define a website's content and structure. The standard is somewhat similar to the RSS standard introduced by Netscape several years after CDF was introduced in 1997. The standard and Active Channel were introduced with the launch of Internet Explorer 4.0, while Smart Offline Favorites was introduced with the launch of Internet Explorer 5.0.
Channel_Definition_Format
DOM events
DOM (Document Object Model) events allow event-driven programming languages like JavaScript, JScript, ECMAScript, VBScript and Java to register various event handlers/listeners on the element nodes inside a DOM tree, e.g. HTML, XHTML, XUL and SVG documents.Historically, like DOM, the event models used by various web browsers had some significant differences. This caused compatibility problems. To combat this, the event model was standardized by the W3C in DOM Level 2.
DOM_events
Wikipedialang/Archive 1
Template_talk:Wikipedialang/Archive_1
Wikipedialang/Archive 2
Template_talk:Wikipedialang/Archive_2
Web usability
Web usability is the application of usability in those domains where web browsing can be considered as a general paradigm (or "metaphor") for constructing a GUI.
Web_usability
Reference desk archive/Jan Feb 2005
Wikipedia:Reference_desk_archive/Jan_Feb_2005
Jon Bosak
Jon Bosak led the creation of the XML specification at the W3C.Tim Bray, who was one of the editors of the XML specification, has this to say in his note on Bosak in his annotated version of the spec:XML would most likely have failed to happen. He had come to appreciate the power and flexibility of SGML in his days running Novell's (excellent) on-line documentation repository at and had acquired a conviction that HTML was not a suitable base on which to build the next layer of Web infrastructure.
Jon_Bosak
Sideshowbarker
User:Sideshowbarker
Ruby
Template_talk:Ruby
JavaScript Style Sheets
JavaScript Style Sheets (JSSS) was a stylesheet language technology proposed by Netscape Communications Corporation in 1996 to provide facilities for defining the presentation of webpages. It was an alternative to the Cascading Style Sheets (CSS) technology.
JavaScript_Style_Sheets
Uniform Resource Name
Talk:Uniform_Resource_Name
Grammarbot
User_talk:Grammarbot
Les Horribles Cernettes
Talk:Les_Horribles_Cernettes
List of user interface markup languages
user interface markup languages categorized
List_of_user_interface_markup_languages
Comparison of user interface markup languages
user interface markup languages. Please see the individual markup languages' articles for further information. This article is not all-inclusive or necessarily up-to-date.
Comparison_of_user_interface_markup_languages
Fredric Jameson
Talk:Fredric_Jameson
Johnny Stenbäck
Johnny Stenbäck is a Finnish software developer mostly known for his work on the Mozilla browser. Johnny was one of the first developers outside of Netscape to get involved with the Mozilla source released by Netscape in March 1998. He started working on the source code soon after the release, then working for the Finnish software company Citec. (Citec created DocZilla, a Mozilla-based SGML browser.) In 2000 he was hired by Netscape and moved to California. In 2003 he joined the Mozilla Foundation.
Johnny_Stenbäck
Articles for deletion/Log/2005 March 5
Wikipedia:Articles_for_deletion/Log/2005_March_5
Articles for deletion/Westcountry Brythonic
Wikipedia:Articles_for_deletion/Westcountry_Brythonic
Comparison of text editors
Talk:Comparison_of_text_editors
Spacer GIF
Cascading Style Sheets (CSS), the spacer GIF was a transparent image, often used to control blank space within a web page, that can be resized according to the width and height dimensions it is given. The reason a spacer GIF is invisible is so that an HTML developer can create a table cell and fill the background with a specific color that can be viewed through the transparent spacer GIF.
Spacer_GIF
XMLHttpRequest
XMLHttpRequest (XHR) is a DOM API that can be used inside a web browser scripting language, such as JavaScript, to send an HTTP request directly to a web server and load the server response data directly back into the scripting language. Once the data is within the scripting language, it is available as both an XML document, if the response was valid XML markup, and as plain text.
XMLHttpRequest
Aarchiba/SVG sanitizer
User:Aarchiba/SVG_sanitizer
Ajax (programming)
Ajax, sometimes written as AJAX (shorthand for asynchronous JavaScript and XML), is a group of interrelated web development techniques used on the client-side to create interactive web applications or rich Internet applications. With Ajax, web applications can retrieve data from the server asynchronously in the background without interfering with the display and behavior of the existing page.
Ajax_(programming)
Hyperlink
Talk:Hyperlink