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Full Solution Manual For Programming The World Wide Web 7 E 7Th Edition Robert W Sebesta PDF Docx Full Chapter Chapter
Full Solution Manual For Programming The World Wide Web 7 E 7Th Edition Robert W Sebesta PDF Docx Full Chapter Chapter
Sebesta
Exercise 2.3
<!DOCTYPE html">
<!-- e2_3.html
This is a solution to Exercise 2.3
-->
<html lang = "en">
<head>
<title> Exercise 2.3 </title>
<meta charset = "utf-8" />
</head>
<body>
<h2> Ruper B. Baggins </h2>
<p>
1321 Causeway Circle <br />
Middle, Earth <br />
rbaggins@miderth.net<br /><br />
<a href = "e2_31.html"> Mr. Baggins' Background </a>
</p>
<hr />
<h3> Bush Watcher </h3>
<p>
<em> Forest Keepers, Limited </em> <br />
14 Cranberry Way <br />
Middle, Earth <br />
<strong> (no web site yet) </strong>
</p>
</body>
</html>
<!DOCTYPE html>
<!-- e2_31.html
This is part of the solution to Exercise 2.3
(The second document for the background info)
-->
<html lang = "en">
<head>
<title> Exercise 2.3 (background) </title>
<meta charset = "utf-8" />
</head>
<body>
<p>
Although we share the same family name, I am not in any way
related to the famous (or is it infamous) adventurer, Bilbo.
I have a lovely wife, Elvira, and two grown children, Max
and Miriam. Max has chosen to follow me in my profession,
which is described below. Miriam is a beekeeper for the town
bookkeeper, who keeps bees as a second job.
</p>
<p>
I am employed by Forest Keepers, Limited. My job, as I understand
it, is to keep an eye on the 4 acres of wild cranberries that
grow in the swamp at the edge of the village forest. I am required
to file a daily report, in triplicate, on the condition of the
cranberry bushes. To accomplish my task, I walk by and inspect
every cranberry bush in the swamp every workday. My employer provides
me with wading boots for my job. I pick up the boots at the office
every weekday morning and turn them back in, after a thorough
cleaning, after each workday.
</p>
</body>
</html>
Exercise 2.4
<!DOCTYPE html>
<!-- e2_4.html
A solution to Exercise 2.4 - an unordered list
-->
<html lang = "en">
<head>
<title> Unordered List </title>
<meta charset = "utf-8" />
</head>
<body>
<h3> Grocery List </h3>
<ul>
<li> milk - 2%, 2 gallons </li>
<li> bread - butter top wheat </li>
<li> cheddar cheese - sharp, 1 lb. </li>
<li> soup - vegetable beef, 3 cans </li>
<li> hamburger - 80% fat free, 2 lbs. </li>
<li> orange juice - not from concentrate, 1/2 gallon </li>
<li> eggs - large, 1 dozen </li>
</ul>
</body>
</html>
Exercise 2.8
<!DOCTYPE html>
<!-- e2_8.html
A solution to Exercise 2.8 - a nested, ordered list
-->
<html lang = "en">
<head>
<title> An Ordered List </title>
<meta charset = "utf-8" />
</head>
<body>
<h3> My Uncles, Aunts, and Cousins </h3>
<ol>
<li> Violet Vinelli (my mother) </li>
<li> Frederick Vinelli
<ol>
<li> Mary Vinelli </li>
<li> Betty Ann Boop </li>
<li> Bob Vinelli </li>
<li> Roger Vinelli </li>
</ol>
</li>
<li> Maxine Robinson
<ol>
Another random document with
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compare the mention in Evelyn’s Fumifugium noticed above),
refers to Vauxhall Gardens. Monconys, the French traveller
(1663), briefly describes “Les Jardins du Printemps” at Lambeth,
but it can hardly be made out whether he is alluding to the garden
called by Pepys the Old Spring Garden at Vauxhall or to the New
Spring Garden, i.e., Vauxhall Gardens (cp. Tanswell’s Lambeth, p.
181). The supposed site of the Old Spring Garden at Vauxhall (or
Lambeth) is indicated in a map in Manning and Bray’s Surrey, iii.
p. 526 (cp. Walford, vi. 340). The statement of Aubrey and Sir
John Hawkins, usually accepted by modern writers, that Sir
Samuel Morland occupied in 1675 a house on the site of Vauxhall
Gardens, is evidently erroneous (cp. Vauxhall Papers, No. 4, p.
28).
[320] Swift to Stella, 17 May, 1711.
[321] The Spectator, 20 May, 1712, No. 383. As notices of the
Spring Garden are rare at this period, the following advertisement
may be worth quoting:—“Lost in Fox Hall, Spring Garden, on the
29th past a little Spaniel Dog, Liver Coloured and white long Ears,
a Peak down his Forehead, a small Spot on each knee” (The
Postman, May 3–6, 1712). The pleasant walks of the Spring
Garden are referred to in 1714 in Thoresby’s Diary, ii. 215.
[322] A New Guide to London (1726). Guildhall Library,
London.
[323] Lockman in his Sketch of the Spring Gardens (1753?)
praises Jonathan Tyers for having reformed the morals of the
Spring Garden when he became proprietor in 1728.
[324] Several of the Vauxhall season tickets were designed for
Tyers by Hogarth. They are engraved in Nichols’s Lambeth, pl. xv.
p. 100, and in Wilkinson’s Londina lllustrata. A good though not
complete collection of Vauxhall tickets is in the British Museum,
including the series of silver tickets brought together by Mr.
Edward Hawkins. Tyers presented Hogarth as a return for his
services with a gold ticket, inscribed in perpetuam beneficii
memoriam, which was a free pass to the gardens for ever. Mrs.
Hogarth had it after her husband’s death, and in 1856 it was in the
possession of Mr. F. Gye who bought it for £20 (cp. Nightingale in
The Numismatic Chronicle, vol. xviii (1856), p. 97). In 1737 the
season tickets admitting two persons cost one guinea; in 1742
they were twenty-five shillings; in 1748, two guineas.
[325] In honour of Frederick, Tyers constructed the “Prince’s
Pavilion” at the western end of the Gardens facing the orchestra.
[326] This description is adapted from the Scots Magazine for
July 1739.
[327] The lamps about the middle of the eighteenth century
were about 1,000–1,500 in number; they afterwards greatly
exceeded this total.
[328] Smollett’s Humphry Clinker.
[329] Goldsmith’s Citizen of the World, Letter lxxi.
[330] The cascade was varied in the course of years. In 1783
the background was a mountain view with palm trees.
[331] The Connoisseur, 15 May, 1755.
[332] From A description of Vauxhall Gardens, London, S.
Hooper, 1762.
[333] Further details as to the form of the Gardens may be
seen in the guides of Lockman and “Hooper.” Mr. Austin Dobson
(Eighteenth Century Vignettes, 1st series) gives the best modern
account of the Vauxhall geography.
[334] From about 1827 the entrance chiefly used by the public
was the “coach-entrance” at the corner of Kennington Lane.
[335] This has been attributed to Roubillac, but Mr. Dobson
thinks that it was probably by Henry Cheere who made such
leaden statues for gardens. The statue was cleared in 1779 of the
bushes that had grown round it, and it was still in the gardens in
1817.
[336] In 1818 it was removed to the house of Dr. Jonathan
Tyers Barrett in Duke Street, Westminster; it was described lately
(1894) as being in the possession of Mr. Alfred Littleton.
[337] On Lowe, see supra, p. 50, p. 101 f., and p. 243.
[338] As to the introduction of the covered walk see infra, § 4.
[339] Trusler’s London Adviser, p. 163.
[340] Notes and Queries, 6th ser. ix. (1884), p. 208.
[341] Evelina, Letter xlvi. Cp. The Macaroni and Theatrical
Magazine for September 1773, p. 529, which gives a plate
showing “the Macaroney Beaus and Bells in an Uproar, or the last
Evening at Vauxhall Gardens” (W. Coll.).
[342] The Gazeteer and New Daily Advertiser, 29 June, 1772.
[343] The Vauxhall Affray, or the Macaronies defeated, London,
1773; Westminster Magazine for September 1773, p. 558; The
Macaroni and Theatrical Magazine for August 1773, where there
is a copper-plate showing the parson fighting the footman (W.
Coll.).
[344] British Magazine, 6 August, 1782.
[345] Westminster Magazine, May 1775.
[346] Middlesex Journal, July 23–25, 1775.
[347] On the gala nights the charge was three shillings.
[348] A burlesque account in the Bon Ton Magazine, June
1791, with plate (W. Coll.).
[349] Her husband, Mr. Mountain, was leader at Vauxhall from
1792.
[350] On Mrs. Bland, see supra, p. 137 (White Conduit House).
[351] Miss Tunstall, another singer, was in repute at the
gardens about 1820.
[352] Sketches from St. George’s Fields (1821), 2nd ser. p.
216.
[353] In 1806 the opening of the gardens on Saturdays was
discontinued on account of the disorderly persons staying on late
into Sunday morning. From about this time the gardens were for a
long period usually open on three days of the week only.
[354] Already in 1769 an awning or other covering was placed
over one of the walks, and “covered walks” are afterwards alluded
to. The permanent colonnade was not erected till 1810.
[355] Some accounts say £28,000.
[356] Admission, three shillings and sixpence.
[357] This Prince’s Gallery was burnt down in 1800.
[358] Among the curious characters of Vauxhall Gardens must
be noticed a youth named Joseph Leeming, who called himself
“the Aeriel” and “the Paragon of Perfection,” and offered himself
for inspection to artists and surgeons as a model of bodily
perfection. On 2 July, 1825, and on subsequent occasions he
mingled with the other visitors at Vauxhall and created excitement
by his extraordinary Spanish costume and by distributing three or
four hundred “Challenges” to the people in front of the orchestra.
One of these curious challenges is in my collection. It is a small
card printed with the words “The Aeriel (sic) challenges the whole
world to find a man that can in any way compete with him as
such. No.—.” (cp. Hone’s Every Day Book, i. p. 1456, ff.).
[359] An earlier balloon ascent from Vauxhall Gardens by
Garnerin in 1802 may be noted.
[360] A detailed account of the voyage is given in Monck
Mason’s Aeronautica, London, 1838.
[361] The publication came to an end on 23 August, 1841. It
consisted of sixteen parts, sixpence each. A set of these is in my
collection. Mr. H. A. Rogers, of Stroud Green, has recently
undertaken an interesting facsimile reprint of this scarce little
journal.
[362] This part of Tyers Street was formerly called Brunel
Street.
[363] Punch for 21 August, 1869, “The Lament of the
Colonnade.”
Transcriber’s Notes:
1. Obvious printers’, punctuation and spelling errors have been corrected silently.
2. Some hyphenated and non-hyphenated versions of the same words have been
retained as in the original.
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PLEASURE GARDENS OF THE EIGHTEENTH CENTURY ***
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