I believe that says " I've been learning HTML and HTML5 on free code camp"
It was the "coding adventures" bit.
I gotcha.
I corrected that after you're post.
It's a great discussion to have because as you look at coding, it'll be really important to understand which things you like and don't like and know which parts are programming and which are not.
No browser supports HTML5 completely correctly. Granted there are ones that do it better than others.
Partially because the final spec is just one day old. But in general, all HTML support is always just "really close." The closer the better, and that is what they generally compete over.
Agreed - and as we all know, until recently MS/IE just used to do their own thing, but now they seem to be at least trying to play better.
As far back as IE7 there has always been extra code snippets that will have to be added to deal with browser inconsistencies with HTML, XHTML and CSS. Most often MS was last to the party and only if you add proprietary coding.
And how has the learning gone? What are you working on now?
I'm working on Learning python, trying to understand the Variables, Syntax etc. Don't worry the CSS and HTML5 eBook you gave me a few years ago is still alive.