It's always worth pointing to the Web Standards Curriculum, as that
emphasizes good practices (whereas many other sites - including many
popular recommendations - often don't live up to such high standards):
http://dev.opera.com/articles/view/1-introduction-to-the-web-standards-cur/#toc
2. A TiddlyWiki filled with a variety of inline HTML and JavaScript
that I can use as a springboard for teaching those subjects - I will
have to explain the examples in-context
Perhaps this could be of use for that purpose:
http://12days.osmosoft.com/#Playground
I've started to write a text on how-to-write-javascript-for-TW here:
http://tinyurl.com/ykemxqw
But its a lot of work, and I'm not sure how helpful.
That looks pretty useful to me.
Perhaps a way to lighten the load for yourself would be to turn it into
a series of semi-regular blog posts, rather than trying to write a
comprehensive manual (which is always daunting). This approach seems to
work well in the jQuery community, for example.
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