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She was supposed to read an excerpt of the great book The Adventures of Don Quixote of La Mancha, so saved the HTML source file (actually, it was ‘.htm’ but it’s the same thing) and then emailed it to me as an attachment. I encountered a similar situation while helping my daughter with a class assignment in her literature class. Then add external style sheets (known as “.css” files for the cascading style sheet spec they contain) that could be missing in action and it’s a recipe for chaos and disaster! It’s written to have the top contain one item, the left side another, and the main material in the middle, but if that’s not accessible, things can collapse or end up overwriting each other. But in my experience, where this can all be a real mess is when a page uses separate “containers” for different content, but then can’t find the source for those frames, as it’s called. While the HTML (hypertext markup language) started out as a very basic markup that let you add links, put words in bold and break up text into paragraphs, as time has passed it’s gotten quite a bit more sophisticated.
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