Comments on: Week 7 Post https://digitalwriting.site/2026/03/07/week-7-post/ Experiments in Digital Content Fri, 01 May 2026 17:03:52 +0000 hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.9.4 By: LKSOC1004 https://digitalwriting.site/2026/03/07/week-7-post/#comment-791 Fri, 01 May 2026 17:03:52 +0000 https://digitalwriting.site/?p=2048#comment-791 HTML is quite the rollercoaster. In the beginning, it seems really intimidating. Learning all of the tags and figuring out the formatting on pictures feels like information overload. Then, you get your first HTML doc working. You set up some headings and paragraphs and feel accomplished. You then realize that you missed a couple things in the header. Easily fixed.

You put in some images. You put in some hyperlinks. Then, you open up the document in a viewer to see your creation. To your dismay, it looks horrible. This is the point where you realize that all the work you’ve done thus far is only half the battle. Suddenly, you feel eyes on the back of your head and a slight caress of breath on your neck. You realize that CSS is looming over you. Watching. Waiting. Plotting.

Within a few weeks, though, you get your bearings. You start being able to change colors and fonts, lay things out how you want (with a LOT of trial and error). Then, you start having ideas about menus, popups, animations etc. You then begin the cycle of struggle again to learn how to do these things. And what do you find? The same feeling of eyes, breath, and horror. You’re being hunted and the hunter is known only as “JavaScript”.

Despite all the struggles to figure out HTML, the farther you go and the more you experiment pays dividends. It is just so freeing. While the HTML journey is still very young for me, it is an exciting one. Not because of everything I can do, but because of everything I haven’t yet struggled to learn.

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By: goosefeet22 https://digitalwriting.site/2026/03/07/week-7-post/#comment-766 Thu, 30 Apr 2026 03:27:19 +0000 https://digitalwriting.site/?p=2048#comment-766 I also appreciated Troung’s videos as a beginner, like you. I think there is a lot to keep in mind with HTML and it can get overwhelming quite fast. Like you, being able to see it was very helpful. I tried to follow along where I could in CodePen, and it was really amazing to see the output! It reminds me a lot of Kahn Academy coding when that was super popular (about ten years ago when I was in elementary and middle school). Accessibility is definitely something that should be talked about more! In real life there are already so many things that are inaccessible, so why is that also the case for some websites. Like you mention, there are sources to fix this problem like w3c, that definitely need to be utilized, because everyone deserves a chance to doom scroll or go down a rabbit hole every once in a while!

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By: ipadbaby22 https://digitalwriting.site/2026/03/07/week-7-post/#comment-748 Wed, 29 Apr 2026 04:51:21 +0000 https://digitalwriting.site/?p=2048#comment-748 I agree that Troung’s videos were very beginner friendly and really helped me to expand my .html knowledge. Your summary of the chapters helped me to recall some of those topics the videos covered, especially the four major areas of accessibility. I am writing these comments while working on the Digital Culture project so it’s nice to have a reminder of what we learned and the resources we have. I have some experience with coding, but not too much with .html so Truong’s VS Code tutorials helped a lot. Now that I have used the software more I have really appreciated the beginner friendly aspects like the code plug-ins. The customization options are really fun too.

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By: li_05 https://digitalwriting.site/2026/03/07/week-7-post/#comment-682 Tue, 17 Mar 2026 13:21:24 +0000 https://digitalwriting.site/?p=2048#comment-682 I really do appreciate the accessibility with HTML. The steps and tools that surround learning HTML are all very readily easy to access. Every lesson about HTML seems liek the teacher or proctor is really wanting to share this. It’s such a great tool and skill to have so it’s very understandable why there is such a push to bring new people to the fold! Visual Studio Code (not sponsored) seems like such a great tool for that as well. Kind of shortcutting the process of learning, by autofilling some of those closing tags, so that you can focus on the main content of what you’re working with. It’s really awesome.

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