The Hypertext Transfer Protocol (HTTP) is an application-level
protocol with the lightness and speed necessary for distributed,
collaborative, hypermedia information systems. This documents
HTTP/1.0.
The Hypertext Transfer Protocol (HTTP) is an
application-level protocol for distributed, collaborative,
hypermedia information systems. This documents HTTP/1.1.
This specification defines the HyperText Markup Language (HTML),
the publishing language of the World Wide Web. This specification
defines HTML 4.01, which is a subversion of HTML 4.
The HyperText Markup Language (HTML) is a simple markup language
used to create hypertext documents that are portable from one
platform to another. HTML documents are SGML documents.
This specification defines the Second Edition of XHTML 1.0,
a reformulation of HTML 4 as an XML 1.0 application, and three
DTDs corresponding to the ones defined by HTML 4.
ISO 639 provides two sets of language codes, one as a two-letter
code set (639-1) and another as a three-letter code set (this part
of ISO 639) for the representation of names of languages.
These pages document the country names (official short names
in English) in alphabetical order as given in ISO 3166-1 and the
corresponding ISO 3166-1-alpha-2 code elements.
This document describes a language tag for use in cases where
it is desired to indicate the language used in an information
object, how to register values for use in this language tag,
and a construct for matching such language tags.
This document defines a "Content-language:" header, for use in
cases where one desires to indicate the language of something that
has RFC 822-like headers, like MIME body parts or Web documents,
and an "Accept-Language:" header for use in cases where one wishes
to indicate one's preferences with regard to language.