Find Computer Science articles in our library resources.
Other Resources:
Access to some of these resources is limited to Cal U patrons, while others are free Web sites available to anyone.
Programmers! Find function definitions and sample code in publicly accessible source code hosted on the Internet. Allows you to search using regular expressions (regexp) for code written in a number of programming languages. About Google Code Search.
A very helpful site for those working with HTML code, including applets, scripts, and CSS. Provides clear examples of codes and their effects.
More than 3,000 books online! NAP publishes the reports issued by the National Academy of Sciences, the National Academy of Engineering, the Institute of Medicine, and the National Research Council. Although the site will be happy to sell you physical copies, you can read many (but not all) of the books online for free. Look for the "FREE!" link.
The NSDL was created by the National Science Foundation so that educators at all levels of science, technology, engineering, and mathematics education could find innovative teaching resources and tools.
Science.gov provides access to authoritative, selected science information provided by 12 U.S. Government agencies, including research and development results. Science.gov brings together reliable resources selected by the respective agencies as important science information. Science.gov is the official "FirstGov for Science Cross-Agency Portal."
Search for thousands of terms in this illustrated on-line technology encyclopedia. The site also includes links pointing to other computing resources, such as: news items, events, Web development, software reviews, etc.
A terrific collection of interactive tutorials covering HTML, XHTML, XML, CSS, browser scripting, server scripting, multimedia, and more. Interactive pages let you alter the code and see the results of your changes.
A gateway to resources covering many areas of Web design: accessibility, CSS, color, Flash, JavaScript, PHP, XML, etc. From the University of Minnesota Duluth.
"Section 508 of the Rehabilitation Act requires access to electronic and information technology procured by Federal agencies. The Access Board developed accessibility standards for the various technologies covered by the law." Section 508 guidelines include Web sites, so Web developers should be familiar with them. This site provides links to the actual regulations, FAQs, and other important information.
The Center for Information Technology Accommodation (CITA), in the U.S. General Services Administration's Office of Governmentwide Policy, maintains this site so that "Federal employees and the public can access resources for understanding and implementing the requirements of Section 508." Look here for direct access to the 16 guidelines covering Web-based Intranet and Internet Information and Applications.
Alternate Access: PDF Version
"This publication provides guidance to non-technical administrators regarding how to assure that websites in their organizations are accessible to everyone."
Provides an array of resources designed to help create accessible Web content. From the Univ. of Wisconsin--Madison.
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