| A | B | 
| Webpage | A document stored on a web server which can be accessed and viewed using a web browser on a computer or mobile device. | 
| Static webpage | Content remains the same every time it is viewed. | 
| Dynamic webpage | Content can change each time it is accessed based on how each viewer interacts with the content. | 
| Website | A collection of related webpages. | 
| Standards | Basic set of rules for authoring and scripting languages used to make webpages. | 
| W3C | Develops the HTML coding standards. | 
| HTML | The first authoring language used to create files that can be viewed on the World Wide Web. | 
| XML | Uses author-defined tags to identify data so that the data can be easily imported into other applications. | 
| XHTML | Uses XML code along with the HTML programming language to develop webpages. | 
| HTML 5 | Adopted as the next standard and merges some of the features of HTML and XML. | 
| Style Sheets | Describe how browsers should present or display information on a webpage. | 
| CSS | A popular style sheet language. | 
| Scripting Languages | Lightweight programming languages used to create interactive webpages in which content will respond to mouse or keyboard actions or at specified timed events. | 
| JavaScript | The most popular scripting language on the internet. | 
| Applets | Short programs written in Java code that can be embedded into webpages and allow web developers to add multimedia, animation, gaming, and other interactive elements. | 
| Text Editors | Allow developers to write code in plain text. | 
| Web Editors | Provide a graphical user interface with menus containing commands to make webpage creation easier for developers. | 
| Linear Structure | Used for pages that users need to read in order. | 
| Webbed Structure | Used when the order in which the user views the pages does not matter. | 
| Hierarchichal Structure | Used to organize complex bodies of information. |