Thanks for pointing that out, Chris. One nice feature of w3schools is the "try it" functionality that let's you play around with some code and see the results, though you can also do that with tools like http://jsfiddle.net/.
Anthony On Thursday, February 23, 2012 6:38:50 PM UTC-5, Chris May wrote: > > One caveat: > > While I agree that w3schools is a helpful resource (as I use it as a > regular reference), their examples do not promote best practices, most > notably absent is unobtrusive JavaScript. I had to *unlearn much *of what > I read on there. > > For more information and better resources, include http://w3fools.com/ in > your list. >