How much do you want or need to know about HTML? Do you need special fonts for math, chemistry, or foreign languages? Do you want to include multi-media in your Web pages? The following resources will give you the basic answers to these questions, and will point you to links outside of this guide that can give further help.
Information on Hypertext Markup Language tutorials, classes, editors, converters, and validators.
Documents designed primarily for printing can be made viewable on the Web by converting them into Portable Document Format.
Displaying mathematical, chemical, and other scientific notations and symbols on the Web may require specialized tools. Including characters from languages other than English on your Web pages is usually possible, but may require special language software.
Although text-based pages can be viewed with all browsers on all platforms, you will probably want to include pictures, videos, or animations on your Web pages where appropriate.
Interactivity on a Web page may be as simple as providing an email reply mechanism for your readers, or as complex as creating dynamic, customized Web pages from databases.
You cannot control which browser your readers use to view your pages, but understanding the differences between different products, and even between the same products on different platforms, can help insure that your pages will look good and make sense to all who read them.