This document provides an overview of HTML5 and CSS3 concepts for building web applications. It begins with defining what a web app is and its basic anatomy. It then covers new HTML5 structural tags, forms, multimedia capabilities like audio and video, offline data storage, geolocation, and canvas/SVG graphics. For CSS3, it discusses new selectors, the box model, positioning, fonts, visual effects, and media queries. Key topics are presented at a high level with examples to illustrate the main capabilities and uses of HTML5 and CSS3 for mobile web development.
3. What is a Web App?
A software built with web technologies that is accessible via a mobile
browser
The browser may be either
the standard device browser
or an embedded browser
(Hybrid app)
5. Data
Usually mobile apps do not talk directly with the database
à do not even think about JDBC, drivers, etc!
à They pass through an application server and communicate via:
• standard HTTP requests for HTML content (eg PHP)
• REST-full services (XML, JSON, etc.)
• SOAP
7. HTML 5
• Intro
• New Structural Tags and Attributes
• Forms
• Audio & Video
• Offline Data
• Geolocalization
• Web Sockets
• Canvas & SVG
8. HTML 5
HTML5 will be the new standard for HTML
HTML5 is still a work in progress
W3C final recomendation: 2020
Top browsers support many (not all) of the new HTML5 elements
http://mobilehtml5.org
http://caniuse.com
11. Roadmap
• Intro
• New Structural Tags and Attributes
• Forms
• Audio & Video
• Offline Data
• Geolocalization
• Web Sockets
• Canvas & SVG
12. New Structural Tags
Main Goal: separate presentation from content
• Poor accessibility
• Unnecessary complexity
• Larger document size
Most of the presentational features from earlier versions of
HTML are no longer supported
13. New Structural Tags
<header> header region of a page or section
<footer> footer region of a page or section
<nav> navigation region of a page or section
<section> logical region of a page
<article> a complete piece of content
<aside> secondary or related content
15. Other Structural Tags
<command> a command button that a user can invoke
<details> additional details that the user can view or hide
<summary> a visible heading for a <details> element
<meter> an amount within a range
<progress> shows real-time progress towards a goal
<figure> self-contained content, like illustrations,
diagrams, photos, code listings, etc.
<figcaption> caption of a figure
<mark> marked/highlighted text
<time> a date/time
<wbr>Defines a possible line-break
16. Custom Data Attributes
Can be used to add metadata about any element within an
HTML5 page
They are ignored by the validator for HTML5 documents
They all start with the data- pattern
They can be read by any browser using JavaScript via the
getAttribute() method
17.
18. Roadmap
• Intro
• New Structural Tags and Attributes
• Forms
• Audio & Video
• Offline Data
• Geolocalization
• Web Sockets
• Canvas & SVG
20. Form Input Types
Form input types degrade gracefully
à Unknown input types are treated as text-type
http://bit.ly/I65jai
21. Form Input Types
<input type="search"> for search boxes
<input type="number"> for spinboxes
<input type="range"> for sliders
<input type="color"> for color pickers
<input type="tel"> for telephone numbers
<input type="url"> for web addresses
<input type="email"> for email addresses
<input type="date"> for calendar date pickers
<input type="month"> for months
<input type="week"> for weeks
<input type="time"> for timestamps
<input type="datetime"> for precise timestamps
<input type="datetime-local"> for local dates and times
22. Form Field Attributes
Autofocus
– Support for placing the focus on a specific form element
<input type="text“ autofocus>
Placeholder
– Support for placing placeholder text inside a form field
<input type="text“ placeholder=“your name”>
23. Roadmap
• Intro
• New Structural Tags and Attributes
• Forms
• Audio & Video
• Offline Data
• Geolocalization
• Web Sockets
• Server-Sent Events
• Canvas & SVG
24. Audio
<audio> : a standard way to embed an audio file on a web page
<audio controls>
<source src="song.ogg" type="audio/ogg" />
<source src="song.mp3" type="audio/mpeg" />
Not Supported
</audio>
Multiple sources à the browser will use the first recognized
format
26. Audio JavaScript API
HTML5 provides a set of JavaScript APIs for interacting with an
audio element
For example:
play() pause() load() currentTime ended
volume…
à http://www.w3.org/wiki/HTML/Elements/audio
27. Video
<video> : a standard way to embed a video file on a web page
<video width="320" height="240" controls>
<source src="movie.mp4" type="video/mp4" />
<source src="movie.ogg" type="video/ogg" />
Not Supported
</video>
Multiple sources à the browser will use the first recognized
format
29. Video JavaScript API
HTML5 provides a set of Javascript APIs for interacting with a
video element
For example:
play() pause() load() currentTime ended
volume…
à http://www.w3.org/wiki/HTML/Elements/video
30. A note on YouTube videos
<video> works only if you have a direct link to the
MP4 file of the YouTube video
If you have just a link to the YouTube page of your video,
simply embed it in your page
<iframe width="560" height="315" src="http://
www.youtube.com/embed/Wp20Sc8qPeo" frameborder="0"
allowfullscreen></iframe>
31. Roadmap
• Intro
• New Structural Tags and Attributes
• Forms
• Audio & Video
• Offline Data
• Geolocalization
• Web Sockets
• Canvas & SVG
32. Offline Data
LocalStorage
stores data in key/value pairs
it is tied to a specific domain/app
persists across browser sessions
SessionStorage
stores data in key/value pairs
it is tied to a specific domain/app
data is erased when a browser session ends
33. Offline Data
WebSQL Database
relational DB
support for tables creation, insert, update, …
transactional
tied to a specific domain/app
persists across browser sessions
Its evolution is called IndexedDB, but it is actually not fully
supported yet in iOS
34. Offline data
Mobile browsers compatibility matrix
We will have a dedicated lecture to offline data
storage on mobile devices
35. Roadmap
• Intro
• New Structural Tags and Attributes
• Forms
• Audio & Video
• Offline Data
• Geolocalization
• Web Sockets
• Canvas & SVG
36. Geolocalization
Gets Latitude and Longitude from the user’s browser
There is also a watchPosition method wich calls a JS function
every time the user moves
We will have a dedicated lecture to
geolocalization on mobile devices
37. Example
function getLocation() {
if(navigator.geolocation) {
navigator.geolocation.getCurrentPosition(showPosition);
} else {
console.log(‘no geolocalization’);
}
}
function showPosition(position) {
console.log(position.coords.latitude);
console.log(position.coords.longitude);
}
39. Roadmap
• Intro
• New Structural Tags and Attributes
• Forms
• Audio & Video
• Offline Data
• Geolocalization
• Web Sockets
• Canvas & SVG
40. WebSockets
Bidirectional, full-duplex communication between devices and
server
Specifically suited for
chat, videogames, drawings sharing, real-time info
Requires a Web Socket Server to handle the protocol
41. Alternative - Polling via AJAX
+ Near real-time updates (not purely real-time)
+ easy to implement
+ no new technologies needed
- they are requested from the client and cause increased
network traffic
- AJAX requests generally have a small payload and relatively
high amount of http headers (wasted bandwith)
42. Roadmap
• Intro
• New Structural Tags and Attributes
• Forms
• Audio & Video
• Offline Data
• Geolocalization
• Web Sockets
• Canvas & SVG
43. Canvas & SVG
Canvas & SVG allow you to create graphics inside the browser
http://bit.ly/Ie4HKu
44. Canvas & SVG
Canvas
draws 2D graphics, on the fly
you use JavaScript to draw on the canvas
rendered pixel by pixel
SVG
describes 2D graphics in XML
every element is available within the SVG DOM
JavaScript event handlers for an element
48. CSS3 Main Drivers
Simplicity
– less images
– less markup
– less JavaScript
– no Flash
Better performance
– fewer HTTP requests
Better Search Engine Placement
– text as real text, not images or Flash contents
– speed
51. Inheritance
If an HTML element B is nested into another element A
à B inherits the style of A unless B has an explicit style
definition
body {
background-color: red;
}
div {
background-color: green;
}
54. Backgrounds
You can style a background of any element
div {
background:url(img.png), url(img2.png);
background-size:80px 60px;
background-repeat:no-repeat;
background-origin:content-box;
}
repeat
no-repeat | repeat
repeat-x | repeat-y
origin
top left | top center | top right | center left
| border-box | content-box etc.
56. Gradients
They can be used in every place you can use an image
div {
background: -webkit-gradient(linear, right top,
left bottom, from(red), green));
}
linear à the type of gradient (also radial, or repeating-linear)
right-top à start of the gradient
left-bottom à end of the gradient
from à starting color
to à final color
57. Text
p {
color: grey;
letter-spacing: 5px;
text-align: center;
text-decoration: underline;
text-indent: 10px;
text-transform: capitalize;
word-spacing: 10px;
}
text-align
left | right
center | justify
Text-decoration
none
underline
overline
line throughtext-transform
none | capitalize |
lowercase | uppercase
58. Text Effects
p {
text-shadow: 2px 10px 5px #FF0000;
text-overflow: ellipsis;
word-wrap:break-word;
}
2px à horizontal shadow
10px à vertical shadow
5px à blur distance
#FF0000 à color
61. Selectors
Classical ways to select elements in CSS2:
• by type
a { color: red; }
• by id
#redLink { color: red; }
• by class
.redLink { color: red; }
62. Other Selectors from CSS1 & CSS2
• div p à all <p> elements inside a <div>
• div>p à all <p> elements where the parent is a <div>
• div+p à all <p> elements that are placed immediately after
<div>
• [target] à all elements with a target attribute
• [target=_blank] à all elements with target= "_blank“
• p:first-child à every <p> element that is the first child of its
parent
63. Some selectors introduced in CSS3
• a[src^="https"] à every <a> element whose src attribute
value begins with "https”
• a[src$=".pdf"] à every <a> element whose src attribute value
ends with ".pdf”
• a[src*=“mobile"] à every <a> element whose src attribute
value contains the substring “mobile“
• p:nth-child(2) à every <p> element that is the second child of
its parent
• p:nth-last-child(2) à every <p> element that is the second
child of its parent, counting from the last child
• :not(p) à every element that is not a <p> element
70. The Display Property
It specifies if and how an element is displayed
div {
display: none;
}
The element will be hidden, and the page will be displayed as if the
element is not there
71. The Display Property
Other usual values:
block
• a block element is an element that takes up the full width
available, and has a line break before and after it
inline
• an inline element only takes up as much width as necessary
• it can contain only other inline elements
inline-block
• the element is placed as an inline element (on the same line
as adjacent content), but it behaves as a block element
– you can set width and height, top and bottom margins and paddings
72. The visibility Property
It specifies if an element should be visible or hidden
div.hidden {
visibility: hidden;
}
The element will be hidden, but still affect the layout
It can also be set to
visible, collapse (only for tables), inherit
73. Flex Box
It helps in styling elements to be arranged horizontally or
vertically
box:
• a new value for the display property
• a new property box-orient
#div {
display: box;
box-orient: horizontal;
}
74. Flex Box main elements
display: box
opts an element and its immediate children into the flexible
box model
box-orient
Values: horizontal | vertical | inherit
How should the box's children be aligned
box-direction
Values: normal | reverse | inherit
sets the order in which the elements will be displayed
75. Flex Box main elements
box-pack
Values: start | end | center | justify
Sets the alignment of the box along the box-orient axis
box-orient: horizontal;
box-pack: end;
76. Flex Box main elements
box-align
Values: start | end | center | baseline | stretch
Sets how the box's children are aligned in the box
box-orient: horizontal;
box-align: center;
77. Flex Box Children
by default child elements are not flexible
à their dimension is set according to their width
box-flex can be set to any integer
It sets how a child element occupy the
box’s space
#box1 {
width: 100px;
}
#box2 {
box-flex: 1;
}
#box3 {
box-flex: 2;
}
80. Relative Positioning
Elements behave exactly the same
way as statically positioned elements
we can adjust a relatively positioned
element with offset properties:
top, right, bottom, and left
http://bit.ly/I8cEaF
81. Relative Positioning
It is possible to create a coordinate system for child elements
http://bit.ly/I8cEaF
82. Absolute Positioning
an absolutely positioned element is removed from the normal flow
it won’t affect or be
affected by any other
element in the flow
http://bit.ly/I8cEaF
83. Fixed Positioning
shares all the rules of an absolutely positioned element
a fixed element does not scroll with the document
http://bit.ly/I8cEaF
84. Float
A floated element will move as far to the left or right as it can
Elements are floated only horizontally
The float CSS property can accept one of 4 values:
left, right, none, and inherit
86. Fonts
Before CSS3, web designers had to use fonts that were already
installed on the user's device
With CSS3, web designers can use whatever font they like
@font-face {
font-family: NAME;
src: url(Dimbo.ttf);
font-weight: normal;
font-style: normal;
}
font-style
normal
italic
oblique
font-weight
normal
bold
100
200
…
87. Fonts Usage
To use the font for an HTML element, refer to the name of the
font (NAME) through the font-family property
div {
font-family: NAME;
}
91. Transforms
A transform is an effect that lets an element
change shape, size, position, …
You can transform your elements using 2D or 3D transformations
http://bit.ly/IroJ7S
94. Transitions
They are used to add an effect when changing from one style to
another
The effect can be gradual
The effect will start when the specified CSS property changes
value
95. Transition syntax
A transition contains 4 properties:
• property
– the name of the CSS property the transition effect is for (can be all)
• duration
– how many seconds (or milliseconds) the transition effect takes to
complete
• timing-function
– linear, ease, ease-in, ease-out, ease-in-out
• delay
– when the transition effect will start
97. Animations
An animation is an effect that lets an element gradually change
from one style to another
You can change style in loop, repeating, etc.
To bind an animation to an element, you have to specify at least:
1. Name of the animation
2. Duration of the animation
div {
animation: test 5s ease-in;
}
98. Animation Definition
An animation is defined in a keyframe
It splits the animation into parts, and assign a specific style to
each part
The various steps within an animation are given as percentuals
0% à beginning of the animation (from)
100% à end of the animation (to)
101. Transitions VS Animations
• Trigger
– Transitions must be bound to a CSS property change
– Animations start autonomously
• States
– Transitions have start and end states
– Animations can have multiple states
• Repeats
– Transitions can be perfomed once for each activation
– Animations can be looped
103. Media Types
Media Queries are based on Media Types
A media type is a specification of the actual media that is being
used to access the page
Examples of media types include
• screen: computer screens
• print: printed document
• braille: for Braille-based devices
• tv: for television devices
104. Media Types
There are two main ways to specify a media type:
• <link> in the HTML page
<link rel=“stylesheet”
href=“style.css” media=“screen” />
• @media within the CSS file
@media screen {
div { color: red; }
}
105. Media Queries
They allow you to to change style based on specific conditions
For example, they can be about
• device’s display size
• orientation of the device
• Resolution of the display
• ...
107. Media Queries
A media query is a boolean expression
The CSS associated with the media query expression is applied
only if it evaluates to true
A media query consists of
1. a media type
2. a set of media features
@media screen and orientation: portrait
109. The AND operator
You can combine multiple expressions by using the and operator
@media screen and (max-device-width: 480px){
/* your style */
}
110. The COMMA operator
The comma keyword acts as an or operator
@media screen and (color),
handheld and (color) {
/* your style */
}
111. The NOT operator
You can explicitly ignore a specific type of device by using the not
operator
@media not (width:480px) {
/* your style */
}
112. Examples
Retina Displays
@media only screen and -webkit-min-device-pixel-ratio: 2
iPad in landscape orientation
@media only screen and
(device-width: 768px) and (orientation: landscape)
iPhone and Android devices
@media only screen and
(min-device-width: 320px) and (max-device-width: 480px)