For those with years of web design experience, HTML coding is a breeze. These people don’t even have to check HTML cheat sheets or resort to web page editors such as Frontpage to do the job. However, for people who are just beginning to explore their web design talents, writing HTML might seem torture — the code in the final HTML file seems convoluted and readable only to you. While the site itself may look nice, anyone who views the web page source — be it your client or a web design colleague — will make fun of your efforts.
Fortunately, there is a tool called HTML Tidy that fixes invalid HTML code and makes the file appear more organized. It adds indentation to your code and transforms it to the stricter XHTML standard.