Skip Navigation

Scout Archives

Home Projects Publications Archives About Sign Up or Log In

Browse Resources

(3 classifications) (14 resources)

Web publishing

Classification
Handbooks, manuals, etc. (11)
Periodicals (2)
Software (12)

Resources

Pelican

The Pelican team describe their tool as "a static site generator that requires no database or server-side logic." With Pelican, users can author site content in reStructuredText or Markdown. The tool then produces a set of static pages that can be served from any hosting provider. Users can select from among 127 built-in themes or write their own using the Jinja2 template language. The themes...

https://getpelican.com/
Usability.gov

This resource is designed to help those who create and maintain Websites ensure that those sites are usable and stable. The site was put together by the National Cancer Institute (NCI), originally for use by NCI staff, but the Institute decided to make the site publicly accessible since many principles of good design and usability are generally applicable to most Websites. The resources here span...

https://www.usability.gov/
W3C Recommendation: Mathematical Markup Language (MathML) Specification

On April 7, 1998 the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) announced the Mathematical Markup Language (MathML) specification as a W3C recommendation. MathML is a specification that is designed to aid in transmitting mathematical knowledge on the Internet. It is also "the first application of XML (Extensible Markup Language--discussed in the April 3, 1998 Scout Report) to be issued as a W3C...

http://www.w3.org/TR/REC-MathML/
W3C: Cascading Style Sheets Homepage

In 1998 the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) released the Cascading Style Sheets, level 2 specification as a W3C recommendation. Cascading style sheets help to improve layout control of HTML documents. CSS2 adds further to this control, including new positioning properties and dynamically downloadable fonts. It is also designed to interface with XML (Extensible Markup Language--discussed in the ...

http://www.w3.org/Style/CSS/
← Previous