Book Image

HTML5 Multimedia Development Cookbook

Book Image

HTML5 Multimedia Development Cookbook

Overview of this book

HTML5 is the most significant new advancement the web has seen in many years. HTML5 adds many new features including the video, audio, and canvas elements, as well as the integration of SVG. This cookbook is packed full of recipes that will help you harness HTML5’s next generation multimedia features. HTML5 is the future.Whether you’re a seasoned pro or a total newbie, this book gives you the recipes that will serve as your practical guide to creating semantically rich websites and apps using HTML5. Get ready to perform a quantum leap harnessing HTML5 to create powerful, real world applications. Many of the new key features of HTML5 are covered, with self-contained practical recipes for each topic. Forget hello world. These are practical recipes you can utilize straight away to create immersive, interactive multimedia applications. Create a stylish promo page in HTML5. Use SVG to replace text dynamically. Use CSS3 to control background size and appearance. Use the Canvas to process images dynamically. Apply custom playback controls to your video.
Table of Contents (16 chapters)
HTML5 Multimedia Development Cookbook
Credits
Foreword
About the Authors
About the Reviewers
www.PacktPub.com
Preface

Displaying alternate content for non-supported browsers


Some of the new HTML5 elements are so new that not all desktop browsers support them yet. So how can we assume all screen readers will support them?

Getting ready

Fortunately we can rest assured that screen readers will support common text tags such as:

  • <h1>

  • <h2>

  • <h3>

  • <h4>

  • <h5>

  • <h6>

  • <p>

  • <ul>

  • <ol>

  • <li>

  • <dl>

  • <dt>

  • <dd>

and more as intended. But what about those new HTML5 elements such as:

  • <article>

  • <aside>

  • <audio>

  • <canvas>

  • <datalist>

  • <details>

  • <figcaption>

  • <figure>

  • <footer>

  • <header>

  • <hgroup>

  • <mark>

  • <meter>

  • <nav>

  • <output>

  • <progress>

  • <section>

  • <summary>

  • <time>

  • <video>

Are those going to convey the meaning to the user as we intend? If so, terrific. But if not, what information does the user get? Is it meaningful at all? Certainly we would agree...