HTML5 DEVELOPMENT TRAINING COURSE DESCRIPTION
This three-day MTA Training course helps you prepare for Microsoft Technology
Associate Exam 98-375, and build an understanding of these topics: Manage the
Application Life Cycle, Build the User Interface by Using HTML5, Format the User
Interface by Using CSS, Code by Using JavaScript. This course leverages the same
content as found in the Microsoft Official Academic Course (MOAC) for this exam.
WHAT WILL YOU LEARN
* Manage the Application Life Cycle.
* Build the User Interface by Using HTML5.
* Format the User Interface by Using CSS.
* Code by Using JavaScript.
HTML5 DEVELOPMENT TRAINING COURSE DETAILS
* Who will benefit:
Anyone working with HTML5.
* Prerequisites:
None.
* Duration
3 days
HTML5 DEVELOPMENT TRAINING COURSE CONTENTS
* Managing the Application Life Cycle
* Platform fundamentals
Packaging and the runtime environment: app package, app container,
credentials/permission sets, host process, leverage existing HTML5 skills and
content for slate/tablet applications.
* Manage the state of an application
Manage session state, app state and persist state information; understand
states of an application; understand the differences between local and
session storage.
* Debug and test a HTML5 touch-enabled application
Touch gestures; gestures you test on a device.
* HTML5 UI: Text, Graphics, and Media
* HTML5 tags for text content and graphics.
When, why and how to use Canvas; when, why and how to use scalable vector
graphics (SVG).
* HTML5 tags to play media.
Video and audio tags.
* HTML5 UI: Organization, Input, and Validation
* HTML5 tags to organise content and forms
Tables, lists, sections; semantic HTML.
* HTML5 tags for input and validation
* CSS Essentials: Content Flow, Positioning, styling
* Core CSS concepts
Separate presentation from content (create content with HTML and style
content with CSS); manage content flow (inline versus block flow); manage
positioning of individual elements( float versus absolute positioning);
manage content overflow (scrolling, visible and hidden); basic CSS styling.
* CSS Essentials: Layouts
* Arrange UI content by using CSS
Use flexible box and grid layouts to establish content alignment, direction
and orientation; proportional scaling and use of "free scale" for elements
within a flexible box or grid; order and arrange content; concepts for using
flex box for simple layouts and grid for complex layouts; grid content
properties for rows and columns; use application templates.
* Managing Text Flow by Using CSS
Regions and using regions to flow text content between multiple sections
(content source, content container, dynamic flow, flow-into, flow-from,
msRegionUpdate, msRegionOverflow, msGetRegionContent); columns and
hyphenation and using these CSS settings to optimise the readability of text;
use "positioned floats" to create text flow around a floating object
* Managing the Graphical Interface by Using CSS
Graphics effects (rounded edges, shadows, transparency, background gradients,
typography and Web Open Font Format); 2-D 3-D transformations (translate,
scale, rotate, skew and 3-D perspective transitions and animations); SVG
filter effects; Canvas.
* JavaScript and coding essentials
Manage and maintain JavaScript, Create and use functions; jQuery and other
third-party libraries. Update the UI by using JavaScript Locate/access
elements; listen and respond to events; show and hide elements; update the
content of elements.
* Animations, Graphics, and Accessing Data
* Code animations with JavaScript
animation; manipulate the canvas; work with images, shapes and other
graphics.
* Access data access by using JavaScript
Send and receive data; transmit complex objects and parsing; load and save
files; App Cache; datatypes; forms; cookies; localStorage
* JavaScript coding for Touch Interface, Device and Operating System Resources,
and More
Respond to the touch interface, Gestures, how to capture and respond to
gestures, Code additional HTML5 APIs, GeoLocation, Web Workers, WebSocket;
File API, Access device and operating system resources, In- memory resources,
such as contact lists and calendar; hardware capabilities, such as GPS,
accelerometer and camera.