Webmaster in a Nutshell, Third Edition Reviews



Amazon.com Customer Reviews

Life easier, desktop manageable with 2003 THIRD edition - Review written on March 04, 2003
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Rating: 5 out of 5
24 customers found this review helpful.

I invested in a copy of the THIRD edition and am DELIGHTED. This reference does a good job of putting all the day-to-day needed information in one place. It saves me froming having to keep separate references on HTML, CSS, XML, JavaScript, CGI/Perl, HTTP, PHP, Apache functions, etc. right in my face.

I really applaud the compact and accessible way each chapter organizes and presents the details of syntax: they are clear yet take up much less space (1/5 the pages of books that are billed as references to each of the subjects included here) while giving you 95% of what a "comprehensive reference" might. I had been concerned that the information might be too compressed to be accessible, but in fact this volume is so much easier to scan through for an answer than many other reference styles. (Kudos to the book designers at O'Reilly!)

Although a reference work, it is not only a listing of syntax (as helpful as those lists are). The authors have compiled pretty readable and thorough mini-backgrounds and basic principles for each of the enormous realms that they document here. These are providing some reminders for me as I am ramp up my knowledgebase and skills; plus there are hints that I have not yet seen elsewhere in weightier tomes (e.g., on performance).

Readers may save themselves some money and desktop/bookshelf space + save some trees: this Nutshell is a vast storehouse that may enable you to forestall buying reference volumes for each of the topics covered here. Thanks to Spainhour & Eckstein for some careful work!

Note to aspiring (novice) webmasters: this IS a REFERENCE book. That is not a bad thing. You'll still appreciate having it by your side because you're regularly going to have basic questions about formating ("how do I say this in CSS instead of HTML?"). However, as one young reviewer below discovered, to BECOME a webmaster (or master) is going to require some "Quickstart" books, some instruction in DESIGN, and STRATEGY, etc. Bon voyage!

[ Further note from my earlier review: be sure you are NOT getting EARLIER edition. Complaints mentioned (below) in reviews of this book are rectified in the THIRD edition (ISBN 0596003579 ). It's probably a good idea to be watching as the reviews of that December 20002 volume to see how the work has changed.
In any event, with browsers and markup languages changing so fast almost everyone can be advised to jump to considering the most current edition -- even though (as of this writing) new copies of this 1999 second edition are still available. ]

A DEPENDABLE MINI-REFERENCE - Review written on January 12, 2003
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Rating: 4 out of 5
31 customers found this review helpful, 2 did not.

This newly released Third Edition of "Webmaster in a Nutshell" indicates a promising improvement over the Second Edition. It is one of the few books that completely analysed all the contemporary web technologies we use today: JavaScript, Apache, XML, HTML, HTTP, PHP, CSS, and CGI. This book will benefit any web-developer (or enthusiast) who pays close attention to it. Most of the chapters have been revised, and additional updates embraced JavaScript, PHP, Apache, and CSS. The book's wide coverage makes it a dependable mini-reference text.
You won't become a real webmaster by reading that book - Review written on November 16, 2002
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Rating: 2 out of 5
21 customers found this review helpful, 16 did not.

Why ? Simply because It's not at all about Webmastering but only about Design (few)/Development, read the TOC:
- HTML/XML
- JavaScript
- CGI/PERL
- PHP
- CSS (3rd edition)
- Apache functions

There's nothing about:
- promoting your website: reference it, ad...
- project management/deployment
- internet/intranet
- design/graphics
- internet law: think about it twice before publishing your website!
- webmaster tools: mailing lists, forums...
...

You will only learn the basics of HTML, JavaScript, CGI/PERL, PHP, CSS (3rd edition) and Apache Web Server. So It's good for an introduction about Web Design (HTML/CSS), Web Development (PHP, CGI/PERL) but I really think some other books are really meant to deal with such topics.

Webmastering is not only about knowing a few tips & tricks about Web Design & Development, HTML or JavaScript. Once the web site is designed and developped, you can't just upload it to a FTP and wait for the visitors to come, you have to promote it, to maintain it... Raise it like your own child or it will become a guttersnipe that no one will ever want to meet again after the first meeting.

I advice you to read "Webmastering for Dummies" if you want to learn the basics of Webmastering and get books like "PHP & MySQL Development", "PHP Professional", "HTML Bible" to master the programming languages of the web. Reading some books about Application Design and Usability is also a good idea,...

So after reading that book, do you really think you can become your own webmaster ?

Almost the only book on my desk - Review written on April 16, 2002
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Rating: 4 out of 5
9 customers found this review helpful.

Get your Web development library together, and then get this book! This book is not going to teach you all the bits and pieces, but this is exactly what the cover says "A Desktop Quick Reference", and a good one at that. It saves you having to haul a bunch of books around.

The sections on HTML 4, CSS, and JavaScript are fantastic, and I would recommend the book on these alone. The HTTP section is useful for the list of header fields with pretty good descriptions for a quick reference. There is also a group of sections on Server Configuration which are handy when browsing Apache configurations.

The PHP and CGI/Perl sections are not as useful and this is why I drop a star. The "reference" part of the PHP section is simply a list of function one-liners. I tend not to use the CGI/Perl sections at all. I'm not a Perl developer, and I find I need a more comprehensive guide to help me out.

In summary, this book is most useful if you know what you are doing, but just can't remember the detail!

A Fantastic Reference. - Review written on October 26, 2001
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Rating: 5 out of 5
5 customers found this review helpful.

In the preface, the author writes "when those books [how-to books] have been digested and placed on your bookshelf, this one will remain on your desktop." I don't think I could say it any better.

This book is not designed to show you how to do HTML, JavaScript, PHP, CGi and so on. It is designed as a reference, and I think it does a terrific job. The format is very efficient, and easy to look up what you need.

Perhaps the best features of the book are the brief summaries of each section. The reader is expected to already be familiar with that topic, but the book still provides a very succinct summary, just to make sure. This is rather handy when you are somewhat familiar with the topic, but not a guru.

I particularly liked the section on getting the best performance out of the webpage, and webserver. Many of the tips listed here are very common sense, yet can make dramatic improvements in load time.

Thus, to sum up. This book is a very comprehensive reference to several aspects of the web, including HTML, CGI, JavaScript, PHP and others. Anyone who actively works in this field of computing should seriously consider purchasing this book. You will use it often both as a reference, and as a brush-up.

Quick and Easy Reference - Review written on August 22, 2001
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Rating: 4 out of 5

I buy books on SQL, Linux, JSP, Java, PHP, Perl, and CGI development all the time. However, this is the one that is always on my desk, usually cracked open, and full of bookmarks and dog-ears. It was definitely my best book buy so far.
Solid - Review written on June 23, 2001
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Rating: 4 out of 5
3 customers found this review helpful.

As with all o'reilly books I have read, or browsed through, this one gets right to the point.

"Webmaster in a nutshell" is a great overview of the basic tools used in building and maintaining a web site. However, this is not a book for the right-brain-left-wing web artists out there. There's no design tips, no pictures and best of all they have left out the obligatory four page 'History of the Internet" that seems to accompany any and all books of this type. I think one guy wrote that a few years ago and they just xerox it into each book.

Overall, I would rate this book as not too deep, not too shallow, but JUST RIGHT. I loved this book and I recommened it to anyone from beginner to advanced. Bottom Line: It's a great reference book and a whole lot more.

Great for experinced and begineers alike - Review written on March 17, 2001
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Rating: 5 out of 5

This book covers everything and the short refernce section is great too.
Just great. - Review written on January 29, 2001
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Rating: 5 out of 5
1 customer found this review helpful.

I like this book. I think it's very consice and detail enough at the same time. It's worth money and time. Enjoy.
The Bomb - Review written on January 06, 2001
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Rating: 5 out of 5
1 customer found this review helpful, 2 did not.

Im a Senior Webmaster and this Webmaster in a Nutshell 2nd Edition is great. I keep in my draw by my computer, the new section on PHP is wonderful, this is a new and up and coming language, which I find much more easier to use then perl. Also this new edition has a wonderful XML section.

All in all if your in the design and development biz you should have a copy by your side, it supplies you with great reference info in: HTML 4.0, CSS, XML, CGI/PERL, PHP, HTTP and Server Configuration. All you will ever need in one simple book.

Not recommended for newbies! Might confuse the heck out of ya...

great reference overall but definite bias toward UNIX/Apache - Review written on November 23, 2000
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Rating: 4 out of 5
3 customers found this review helpful.

Overall it is a very valuable reference but a few comments:

Regarding the table of content:

The book focuses largely on web development on a UNIX platform with Apache webserver and does not address many topics of relevance to those of us who (not necessarily by choice) work on windows.

The list of topic covered is quiet inclusive but I would have prefered a book one or two hundred pages thicker that would have included coverage of: ColdFusion, ASP, JSP, Applet programming, Active X controls and plugin based multimedia applications (Flash, etc). The current section on Apache configuration can go as far as I am concerned.

Regarding the book itself:

The book does a very good job at explaining simply and providing reference for a number of topics, especially for the price which is typically low for that kind of books. For instance, the section on CSS concisely and clearly review css principle (some coverage of css2 would have been good) and give a very good reference. Another example: the section on PhP did a perfect job to introduce me to that environment which I was unfamiliar with while offering a comprehensive reference.

However, the book (and the 'In a nutshell' collection as a whole) is designed for a public familiar with web authoring and programming concepts. I got acquainted with the book when I took over a class which uses it as a coursebook. As a coursebook it was less sucessful because it assumes too much knowledge of basic programming concepts (arrays, objects, etc) for real beginners.

To sum up:

If you are already familiar with web authoring and have programming experience, this is a very worthwhile book which may even prove to be about the only reference you need if you work is mostly on Apache with Perl or PhP. For server-side application programmer and multimedia designer, some additional reference may be needed.

I see that there is a deluxe edition of the book (currently out of print but still on sale at Amazon) which offer also five book on CD for a slightly higher price. I'ld go for that one.

Up-to-date, all encompassing; not for ASPers or *designers*! - Review written on September 10, 2000
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Rating: 4 out of 5
7 customers found this review helpful.

After a nice short overview, the text dives straight into a full HTML 4 tag list, with info on browser-specific elements. Frames, tables, forms and colours are also described in a more tutorial style.

CSS and XML are introduced with similar tutorial style with references following on CSS 1 and XSL (dec 98), and the same procedure follows for Javascript 1.2 (good), CGI with Perl (ok), PHP (see below) and HTTP (a bit incomplete, but headers listed). There is then information on Apache configuration and optimisation.

I'm not sure about the PHP chapter as I ignored it; they seem to have favoured a full PHP reference but only convered using CGI with Perl - I guess this is as they have other Perl books.

I would recommend this book to webmasters, after considering the following - this book is not about _design_, as it does not cover any style or graphics issues. There is also nothing covering ASP (see _ASP In A Nutshell_) or webservers other than apache.

It's on my Desk - Review written on August 18, 2000
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Rating: 4 out of 5
4 customers found this review helpful.

I purchased this book about a week ago and have been very happy with it. I've managed to push several books into the dustier shelves because I've got this one at hand. It doesn't cover the deepest-darkest secrets of most topics, but most of the time I don't need that part - I just need a reminder of which attributes are part of which HTML tag or which methods are supported by a particular javascript object. For that, this book does a great job. Like one of the previous reviewers, I'd have appreciated a little more on Perl though, so I have to give this one only 4 stars - it's replaced two books, but I still have the third one on my desk.
Other review not accurate - Review written on July 10, 2000
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Rating: 5 out of 5
1 customer found this review helpful, 6 did not.

The first review said Perl has been taken out of this ref - not true. There is a section on Perl/CGI . Just saw the book at Barnes/Noble.
The Best Desk Reference for the Web Professional - Review written on June 29, 2000
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Rating: 5 out of 5
1 customer found this review helpful, 2 did not.

If you already know the web and just need a book to look up particular things, because hey, no one can have it all memorized, everybody has to look something up once in a while, this book is for you. I have seen no other book that can pack that much information in such a small space and still be easy to look up just what you need, it has tables on everything from HTML to PHP3 and even the new XML, if you need to look up a tag in HTML because you cannot remember it's properties, just go look in the table, if you want to quickly learn a new topic, it can help you there too, organized in sections from HTML to Apache Server Administration, this book is the ultimate resource for the web professional.
Excellent Reference For Any Web Designer - Review written on June 25, 2000
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Rating: 5 out of 5
14 customers found this review helpful, 1 did not.

As a part-time web designer, I'm always looking to learn more "web tricks" and WebMaster In a Nutshell allows me to do just that. The second edition of this book covers so many different aspects of web development. It devotes chapters to new developments in HTML (HTML 4) and JavaScript. There are also chapters devoted to Cascading Style Sheets, XML, CGI, Apache modules, and HTTP itself.

All current HTML tags and attributes are listed, along with JavaScript event handlers. Tables, frames, character entries and color values are also covered in various chapters. Very handy material!

While this is definitely not a tutorial book, it does contain lots of reference material and I learned a few new tricks reading through this book. It's one I'll know I'll refer to again and again when I have a question about how to do a particular task while working on one of my websites.

Also recommended: HTML 4 Visual Quick Start Guide by Elizabeth Castro; and UNIX in A Nutshell by Arnold Robbins.

The HOTTEST Book on a Wemaster's Shelf! - Review written on June 24, 2000
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Rating: 5 out of 5
1 customer found this review helpful.

This book is seriously a MUST have! I was so impressed with the first edition (1996) that I bought the 2nd, and I am even more impressed. I love both these books SO much that I literally carry them around with me. Probably the BEST and most compact reference you can buy!

Let me remind the readers that this is a REFERENCE book. Do NOT, I repeat, do NOT buy this book if you are expecting to learn everything inside it from scratch. You will pull your hair out. Buy this book if you already grasp the basics of HTML, javascript, CSS, CGI with perl, and server config. (Basically what an average webmaster should) - You will not only consider this your 'golden' book, you will use it over and over until the pages wear thin.

Countless times I found myself forgetting a simple thing - such as the name of a certain HTML tag or the return type of a specific function, so I pulled out this book and got my answer in seconds. Don't pass this one up! DON'T! I promise you that this little Red and White book will forever be your best friend!

Arachnophobes Beware - Review written on June 20, 2000
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Rating: 1 out of 5
1 customer found this review helpful, 25 did not.

I am a true archnophobe, and the cover of this book, even the picture of the cover of this book, is more than I can stand.
Great reference - Review written on May 18, 2000
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Rating: 5 out of 5
3 customers found this review helpful, 1 did not.

This book like all of the books in the Nutshell series is great reference material. They seem to know just what and how much material into the book to make it one of the best. It covers basics on all the concepts you need to know for web mastering. When you need to look something up, this is the first place I recommend you go. Almost every time you'll find what you are looking for here.
Very good reference book.... - Review written on February 15, 2000
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Rating: 5 out of 5
5 customers found this review helpful.

This book does an excellent job as reference material for any web designer or web server admin. I bought this book quite a while ago and since that time it hasn't left my desktop. I reccomend this book to anyone who deals with web sites or web servers for a profession.
Excellent reference source! - Review written on February 11, 2000
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Rating: 5 out of 5
3 customers found this review helpful.

This book is the first by O'Rielly that I've picked up and is definately not the last. It is an excellent reference book. I know some about webmastering but this book showed me things I didn't know. It isn't a tutorial, but it does cover the most used aspects of web development.
An excellent book to have - Review written on January 12, 2000
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Rating: 5 out of 5
6 customers found this review helpful.

Either you are a seasoned IT professional or a relatively new player, this book is good to have. It will take you to a tour of how todays' WWW work. It does not have the most detailed reference on everything about Perls (its object oriented features, for example) but for what's been produced, it is worth the price ! Get it !
Excellent as a Reference Book. - Review written on January 09, 2000
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Rating: 5 out of 5
9 customers found this review helpful.

I think the gentleman who gave this book 2 stars missed the point of the the entire In a Nutshell series. Most, if not all, of them are meant as a ready reference. They were never designed to teach. They were however designed so that you could say "Now what parameter can be used with that tag?" and find the answer. In this role, the Webmaster in a Nutshell, really shines, since you can leave it on your desk and not have a seperate reference for HTML and Javascript.
2nd Ed now has HTML4, CSS + XML, but missing Perl Quick Ref - Review written on January 08, 2000
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Rating: 4 out of 5
43 customers found this review helpful, 3 did not.

As an avid fan of the first edition, I was delighted to discover that the second edition covered HTML4, Cascading Style Sheets, XML and the new JavaScript functions.

The book excells as a quick reference to these and virtually all other webmaster areas, including Apache server configuration, CGI variables and much more. You just can't beat it. It replaces half a dozen books costing thirty or fourty quid each!

Once you've grasped the basics of HTML and JavaScript, this may well be the only reference book you ever need.

Now on to the nitpicking... and why I only gave it 4 out of 5 stars.

I was exceptionally disappointed to see that the Perl Quick Reference that I had been so fond of in the first edition had now been replaced with a mere overview of the cgi.pm module; and that a quick reference to the PHP scripting language appeared to have taken Perl's place.

Yes, I have other Perl references. Heck, I've *already* got the Perl Pocket Reference, Perl In A Nutshell and Linux In A Nutshell (which includes a Perl Quick Ref). But that's not the point.

The second edition, like the first, sells itself as the only book you'll keep on your desktop (as opposed to on your shelf). Sorry, but with the Perl Quick Ref missing, this just isn't true anymore. Perl is the number one CGI programming language and the number one quick fix language. Whatever you want to do, you can rattle up a quick and dirty Perl solution in seconds. PHP just isn't up in that category. I need a Perl Quick Reference on my desk at all times.

I just don't understand the decision to cut the Perl Quick Ref, since it only took up a dozen pages or so. It was as vital to any half decent webmaster as the HTML or JavaScript sections.

O'Reilly, *please*, put back the Perl Quick Ref and earn yourself the full five stars.

Please Disregard Review from Osaka, Japan Below - Review written on December 15, 1999
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Rating: 5 out of 5
4 customers found this review helpful, 1 did not.

The reader from Osaka, Japan is reviewing the first edition of this book, printed in 1996. Obviously, it is obsolete; that's why we wrote the second edition! Chapter 11 is no longer CGI Variables, it is instead now a tutorial on Javascript. The 1.1 variables are updated. We also no longer cover NCSA in the latest edition, but instead concentrate more on Apache, 2 chapters worth.
Get it. (if you find it at a yard sale) - Review written on December 15, 1999
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Rating: 2 out of 5
2 customers found this review helpful, 10 did not.

Its 8:00am on Monday. Your boss pulls you into his office and looks you over seriously. He says: Thompson, I want to put our company on the web. Do you know how to do that? I've been told I need to hire a Webmaster, where do I find one? You, being egar to please, tell her/him that you can put the company on the web and you can be the Webmaster. The fisrt thing you do is go out and buy this book. But that is the only situation that I can recommend this book for. I keep it around as a reminder of what my job is but it doesn't go into enough detail about any of the topics it covers. It may have been more apropriately titled: Your responsiblities as a Webmaster. Good Reference, but not good enough for the experienced.
Hello... - Review written on May 03, 1999
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Rating: 4 out of 5
2 customers found this review helpful, 2 did not.

To the reader who decries the lack of coverage of IIS... wake up and smell the publication date; in 1996 IIS barely existed. I have this book and it's a great reference; of course some stuff is out of date, but that's because the technology changes so fast. A new edition is coming out this summer. Yeah!
Good, but not great - Review written on March 23, 1999
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Rating: 3 out of 5
1 customer found this review helpful, 2 did not.

I am an information architect who was looking for a desktop reference to provide some technical support for my job. I own many books by O'Reilly and was anxious to recieve this book. However, in the section on servers there is NO REFERENCE to Microsoft IIS. How could they leave out one of the most popular server titles????
good as a reference for webmasters - Review written on March 14, 1999
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Rating: 4 out of 5
1 customer found this review helpful.

This book is a good introduction to all the topics a webmaster is interested in. Is a good tool for working with the server, but only if you know what you are doing. It does not teach the reader, it is only a good reference.
Indispensable for all Webmasters. - Review written on January 15, 1999
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Rating: 5 out of 5

Excellent reference book. Don't go to work without this one. What is a webmaster anyway? A webmaster knows how to do many things.
I like this book - Review written on July 17, 1997
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Rating: 5 out of 5

I read this book in Russian...It's The First and The Best of Book about Web-mastering in my country which I can recomended for All. It's truely a _desktop_ Book!
Very Handy - Review written on June 23, 1997
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Rating: 5 out of 5

This book isn't a replacement for other books that cover the topics within more fully, but it provides an excellent quick reference guide for most of the tools used to program sophisticated web content.

Instead of having a stack of books open to various pages while I figure out how to do something new, I can usually find enough information within this one relatively slim and portable book

handy - Review written on May 12, 1997
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Rating: 4 out of 5
1 customer found this review not to be helpful.
Of all the books in our office, this is the one in highest demand. The coverage of Javascript is weak, but otherwise it has everything a webmaster needs in a convenient package.
Incredibly useful - Review written on November 06, 1996
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Rating: 4 out of 5

This book keeps all of my most important quick references on SSIs, Perl, JavaScript, response codes, server configuration, HTML, etc. all right in my fingertips (or briefcase). Coooooooool