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1997-01-12
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ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 1. Introduction to HTML 3.2 ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
Until recently, the latest "official" HTML version was HTML 2.0, as specified
in RFC 1866. It served its purpose very well, but many HTML authors wanted
more control over their document and more ways to mark up their text and
enhance the appearance of their sites.
HTML 3.0
Netscape, being the leading browser at that time, introduced new tags and
attributes with every new version. Other browsers tried to duplicate them, but
as Netscape never fully specified their new tags, this didn't always work as
expected. It led to great confusion and problems when authors used these
elements and then saw they didn't work as expected in another browser.
At about the same time, the IETF's HTML working group lead by Dave Raggett
introduced the HTML 3.0 draft, which included many new and very useful
enhancements to HTML. Most browsers only implemented a small subset of the
elements from this draft. The phrase "HTML 3.0 enhanced" quickly became
popular on the Web, even though it more often than not referred to documents
containing browser-specific tags, rather than documents adhering to the HTML
3.0 draft. This was one of the reasons why the draft was abandoned.
As more and more browser-specific tags were introduced, it became obvious a new
standard was needed. For this reason, the W3C drafted the Wilbur standard,
which later became known as HTML 3.2. As the W3C puts it:
HTML 3.2 aims to capture recommended practice as of early '96 and as such
to be used as a replacement for HTML 2.0 (RFC 1866). Widely deployed
rendering attributes are included where they have been shown to be
interoperable. SCRIPT and STYLE are included to smooth the introduction of
client-side scripts and style sheets. Browsers must avoid showing the
contents of these element. Otherwise support for them is not required.
Most of the extensions to HTML, as introduced by the various browser
developers, were not specified as thoroughly as the HTML 2.0 specs do for the
standard elements. This meant that the W3C had to "reverse engineer" the
correct functionality for the extensions which were chosen for HTML 3.2. Since
HTML 3.2 is defined in terms of SGML, some elements had to be defined slightly
differently to make them legal.
The future of HTML: Cougar
HTML 3.2 is an attempt to write down what current browsers support or should
support. This will hopefully ensure that a document which is written for
Wilbur will be rendered in an acceptable way by all current browsers.
The next version of HTML, which is code-named Cougar, will introduce new
functionality, most of which comes from the now-expired HTML 3.0 draft. Some
of the elements from Wilbur already hint at what can be expected. For example,
the SCRIPT and STYLE elements will be used in the future to allow inclusion of
inline scripts and style sheets, although currently a browser does not have to
support them. It only has to hide the contents of the tags.
As it's still very early, not many details about Cougar are available yet.
Cougar will introduce full style sheet support. This will allow authors to
assign a style to a document easily, while keeping the HTML for its intended
purpose: marking up the content of the document. It will also have better
support for international documents.
Note
One of the reasons that HTML 3.0 didn't make it, was that it was so big.
Because of this, future versions of HTML will be introduced in a modular way,
so browsers can easily implement them bit by bit. An example of this approach
is RFC 1942, which describes a very extensive implementation of HTML TABLEs.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 1.1. The principles of the language ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
An HTML document consists of text, marked up with elements. An element consists
of a start tag with optionally a closing tag. If there is no closing tag, the
element is said to be empty. If there is a closing tag, the element is used to
mark up its contents in a particular way. Note that in some cases, the closing
tag may be omitted as it can be clear from the context where it ends.
Elements can have certain attributes, which provide extra information about the
enclosed text. These attributes are used on the opening tags, and may not be
repeated or added to the closing tag. An attribute consists of a name and (most
of the times) a value. This value may always be enclosed in quotes ("), but
must be enclosed in quotes if the value contains more than just letters,
digits, hyphens and/or periods.
For example, <A HREF="foo/bar.html">foozlebib</A> is the HTML markup to turn
the text "foozlebib" into a hyperlink to document "foo/bar.html". The element
used here is A, with the attribute HREF. The value for HREF is quoted, as it
contains the character "/".
<H1 ALIGN=CENTER>Welcome!</H1> marks up the text "Welcome!" as a level one
header. The attribute ALIGN here indicates the alignment of this header, in
this case centered. As the value consists only of letters, the quotes may be
omitted.
Tags and attribute names are not case sensitive; attribute values are (except
when they are given in a list of possible values).
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 1.2. The structure of an HTML 3.2 document ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
An HTML document that adheres to HTML 3.2 begins with a so-called DOCTYPE
declaration. This is necessary for HTML validators to check the elements you
used against the ones in the HTML version you use. The DOCTYPE declaration for
HTML 3.2 looks like this:
<!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 3.2//EN">
Next comes the HTML opening tag. This top-level element contains the head and
the body of the document. The head of a document provides information about the
document, and the body contains the actual marked up text.
Every HTML 3.2 compliant document looks basically as follows:
(Note: the line numbers are only here for the explanation below)
1. <!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 3.2//EN">
2. <HTML>
3. <HEAD>
4. <TITLE>The title of the documents</TITLE>
5. <META NAME="description" CONTENT="This is a document">
6. <LINK REV="made" HREF="mailto:galactus@htmlhelp.com">
7. </HEAD>
8. <BODY>
9. ... document body
10. </BODY>
11. </HTML>
1. DOCTYPE
This is a so-called DOCTYPE declaration. It is used by SGML tools to detect
what kind of document is being processed. If your document adheres to the
Wilbur standard, the above is what it should look like.
If your document is HTML 2.0 compliant, the DOCTYPE of it is
<!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//IETF//DTD HTML 2.0//EN">
Some HTML editors like to include an arbitrary DOCTYPE declaration in your
documents, even when it is not correct. Note that in particular, any doctype
for HTML 3.0 is not an "official" declaration, since that proposal has been
expired for a long time now.
2. HTML
This tag goes around the entire document. Basically, it states that the rest is
all HTML, as opposed to some other language which may use tags within < and >
brackets. In theory, it can also be used by servers to see that the document
they want to send is actually HTML and not plain text. However, this is almost
never done (for performance reasons, usually).
3. HEAD
The head of your document contains information about the document itself.
Nothing within the HEAD section should be displayed in the document window. The
head section must include the TITLE of the document. It can optionally contain
things like a description, a list of keywords for search engines, and the name
of the program used to create the HTML document.
The HEAD tag is optional. If you arrange all the information about the document
at the top of the document, and all body tags below, it is obvious for a parser
where the header ends and where the body begins.
4. TITLE
The TITLE tag is the only required tag for the head section. It is typically
displayed in the browser's window title bar, and used in bookmark files and
search engine result listings. For the last two situations, you should make
sure the title is descriptive for the document - "Homepage" or "Index" doesn't
say much in a bookmark file.
5. META
META tags provide "meta information" about the document. For example, it can
give a description of the document, indicate when the document will have
expired or what program was used to generate it. There are many possible META
constructs, so read the section on meta tags for more information.
This particular META tag provides a description of the document, which is used
by search engines such as Alta Vista and Infoseek in their "search results".
6. LINK
A LINK tag provides information about the document relative to the rest of the
site. For example, you can have a LINK tag stating where the table of contents
is, what the next document is or where the style sheet can be found.
This particular LINK tag gives the address of the document's author. Some
browsers (most notably Lynx) allow you to send a comment to this person with
one keystroke if this tag is defined.
9. BODY
The BODY of the document contains the actual information. There may be only one
BODY statement in the document. Some editors incorrectly insert another BODY
statement for each new attribute you want to add to the body, but this can have
unexpected side-effects (such as some of the attributes getting ignored
completely).
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 1.3. Writing structured documents ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
Writing a structured document does not mean that you are writing in a
straitjacket. It only means you have to lay out the document in advance. It
also means the document becomes easier to read, maintain and extend. While this
may not seem too important if you just want a homepage, when you have a whole
site to maintain, well-structured documents make life a lot easier!
It is also important to note that HTML uses the ISO Latin 1 character set.
Apart from the entities defined in the Wilbur draft, the characters from this
list are the only ones you should use. Other characters are not guaranteed to
show up at all in a browser, let alone show up as the character you're hoping
for.
Designing a structured contents for your HTML document is an art in itself. I
won't go into it too deeply here. Initially, use only the six headers to set up
the structure of the document, adding lists, tables and other block elements
until the general layout of the document is finished. Then begin filling in the
blocks, marking up the text with the appropriate text-level elements. Images
are very important, but as the IMG tag is a text-level tag, it must be
contained in a block-level tag.
Often a document will be part of a set, so it will use a common style. This
style should specify a standard structure for documents, including navigation
aids and standard images. Writing a template is then a very handy thing. The
WDG's Style guide for online hypertext discusses this in more detail.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 1.4. The syntax of this reference. ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
In this overview of tags, some simple rules are used to explain the syntax of
these elements and to give a lot of information in as little room as possible.
To illustrate the syntax rules, here's the section on IMG:
Appearance <IMG SRC=URL>
Attributes. SRC=URL, ALT=string, ALIGN=left|right|top|middle|bottom,
HEIGHT=n, WIDTH=n, BORDER=n, HSPACE=n, VSPACE=n, USEMAP=URL,
ISMAP
Contents None (Empty).
May occur in DIV, CENTER, BLOCKQUOTE, FORM, TH, TD, DT, DD, LI, P, H1,
H2, H3, H4, H5, H6, PRE, ADDRESS, TT, I, B, U, STRIKE, EM,
STRONG, DFN, CODE, SAMP, KBD, VAR, CITE, FONT, APPLET,
CAPTION.
The first section, Appearance, gives a common way to use this tag. As you can
see here, the IMG tag does not have an ending tag. If the beginning or ending
tag appears inside square brackets, it is optional and may be left off.
The next section describes the attributes for the IMG tag. If an attribute
appears in bold, it is required, otherwise it may be omitted. In the above
case, SRC is required, but the other attributes are not. Note that the
attributes themselves are listed in all caps, and the possible values (if
possible) in lower case. Note that an attribute value must be quoted if it
contains more than just letters, digits, hyphens and periods.
The contents section describes which tags are permitted inside this tag. For
IMG, there are none. And last, you can see which tags allow IMG inside them.
The attributes and their values are noted in a very compact format as well.
The "|" character is used to separate mutually exclusive attributes or values.
For example, A=foo|bar indicates that attribute "A" may get foo or bar as
value, but not both, or anything else. A=string|B=string indicates that you
may use either A or B, but not both.
If an attribute can take more possible values than can be given in a list, the
following special symbols are used:
n.
A number. It must be an integer, and not have a "-" or "+" sign
prepended. Numbers do not have to be enclosed in quotes.
p%
A percentage. The percentage must also be an integer. Exactly what the
percentage applies to depends on the tag. Percentages must be enclosed in
quotes.
URL
An URL. This can be an absolute or a relative URL, depending on the
situation. In most cases, both are permitted. It is recommended that URLs
always be enclosed in quotes.
string
A string of characters. Any character is permitted, including entities.
It is recommended that strings are always enclosed in quotes.
#RRGGBB
A color code, in hexadecimal notation. The color is constructed in the
red-green-blue format. Each part gets a hexadecimal number between 00 and
FF, and it should be given in two digits at all times. Note that a color
code must have a # as the first character, and it must be enclosed in
quotes.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 2. Overview of all HTML 3.2 elements ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
As explained in the section on structure of Wilbur documents, an HTML document
consists of two major sections: HEAD and BODY. Each has its own permitted
elements and requirements.
The elements themselves can also have requirements about where they may occur,
and which elements may occur inside them. This is only important in the BODY
section of a document. In here, elements can be grouped in two distinct groups:
block level and text level elements. The former make up the document's
structure, and the latter "dress up" the contents of a block.
The HTML comments are a special case.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 2.1. Basic document elements ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
An HTML document that adheres to HTML 3.2 begins with a so-called DOCTYPE
declaration. This is necessary for <A
HREF="/links/validators.htm">validators</A> to check the elements you used
against the ones in the HTML version you use. The DOCTYPE declaration for HTML
3.2 looks like this:
<!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 3.2//EN">
Next comes the HTML opening tag. This top-level element contains the head and
the body of the document. The head of a document provides information about the
document, and the body contains the actual marked up text.
An outline of an HTML 3.2 document would be as follows:
<!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 3.2//EN">
<HTML>
<HEAD>
(information about document)
</HEAD>
<BODY>
(document body)
</BODY>
</HTML>
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 2.1.1. HTML - HTML Document ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
Appearance: [<HTML>] [</HTML>]
Attributes: VERSION=string
Contents: HEAD followed by BODY.
May occur in: (Not appliciable).
The HTML tag is the outermost tag. It is not required and may safely be
omitted. It indicates that the text is HTML (the version can be indicated with
the optional VERSION attribute), but this information is almost never used by
servers or browsers.
Notes
If used, the HTML tags should go around the entire document, but directly
after the DOCTYPE declaration.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 2.1.2. HEAD - Document head ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
Appearance: [<HEAD>] [</HEAD>]
Attributes: None.
Contents: TITLE, ISINDEX, BASE, SCRIPT, STYLE, META, LINK.
May occur in: HTML.
The HEAD part of the document provides information about the document. It
should not contain text or normal markup. If a browser encounters such markup,
it will assume it has arrived in the BODY section of the document already.
Notes
You may only omit this tag if you group all the tags which may go in it
at the top.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 2.1.3. BODY - Document body ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
Appearance: [<BODY>] [</BODY>]
Attributes: BACKGROUND=URL, BGCOLOR=#RRGGBB, TEXT=#RRGGBB, LINK=#RRGGBB,
VLINK=#RRGGBB, ALINK=#RRGGBB
Contents: H1, H2, H3, H4, H5, H6, P, UL, OL, DIR, MENU, PRE, DL, DIV,
CENTER, BLOCKQUOTE, FORM, HR, TABLE, ADDRESS, as well as TT,
I, B, U, STRIKE, BIG, SMALL, SUB, SUP, EM, STRONG, DFN,
CODE, SAMP, KBD, VAR, CITE, A, APPLET, IMG, FONT, BASEFONT,
BR, MAP, INPUT, SELECT, TEXTAREA and plain text.
May occur in: HTML.
The BODY tag contains the actual contents of the document. That contents
should consist of block elements only. You may put in plain text in the body,
this is then assumed to be inside a P container.
The attributes contain the appearance of the document. The BACKGROUND
attribute should point to the location of an image, which is used as the
(tiled) background of the document. The other attributes set the colors for
the background, text, links, visited links and active (currently being
selected) links, using the order above.
The color is composed by specifying the red, green and blue components of the
color in hexadecimal notation, with a # in front. For example, to specify
white, the red, green and blue components are 255, 255, 255, so you would use
"#FFFFFF". You can also use the following color names, although they are not
as widely supported as the codes:
ΓöîΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö¼ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö¼ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö¼ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö¼ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö¼ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö¼ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö¼ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÉ
ΓöéBlack Γöé#000000 ΓöéGreen Γöé#008000 ΓöéSilver Γöé#C0C0C0 ΓöéLime Γöé#00FF00 Γöé
Γö£ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöñ
ΓöéGray Γöé#808080 ΓöéOlive Γöé#808000 ΓöéWhite Γöé#FFFFFF ΓöéYellow Γöé#FFFF00 Γöé
Γö£ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöñ
ΓöéMaroon Γöé#800000 ΓöéNavy Γöé#000080 ΓöéRed Γöé#FF0000 ΓöéBlue Γöé#0000FF Γöé
Γö£ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö╝ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöñ
ΓöéPurple Γöé#800080 ΓöéTeal Γöé#008080 ΓöéFuchsia Γöé#FF00FF ΓöéAqua Γöé#00FFFF Γöé
ΓööΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö┤ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö┤ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö┤ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö┤ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö┤ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö┤ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓö┤ΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÇΓöÿ
The BODY tag is optional; if you put all the HEAD elements first, the browser
can immediately see where the actual document body begins.
Notes
If the background image cannot be displayed, the color specified in
BGCOLOR will be used.
If you set one of the attributes, set them all. Otherwise your specified
color may conflict with a user's default. This could result in unreadable
text. For example, imagine that you set your TEXT color to light gray,
but forget to set the background. Then someone with a light gray
background will not see anything at all.
Do not set unvisited and visited links to the same color, it will confuse
your readers.
The names that you can use instead of the hexadecimal values are not as
widely supported as the color codes.
Netscape 1.1 produced a "fade" effect when more than one BODY tag was
used in a document. It would render the BGCOLOR colors in sequence. This
bug has been fixed in later versions. Do not expect that using multiple
BODY tags will give the intended results.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 2.1.4. Plain text ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
In HTML, plain text is defined as normal text and entities. For the text, you
can use all characters from the ISO Latin 1 character set. Not all characters
in this set might be available on your platform, or they could have a special
meaning in HTML. Also, if you expect that the document will be distributed with
a method other than HTTP, some characters may get converted or eaten by the
transport mechanism. For example, using characters above decimal 127 in "ASCII
mode" FTP is not a good idea.
In such cases, use entities. An entity is constructed as follows: the "&"
character, followed either by the entity's name or "#nnn", with nnn a decimal
number indicating the ISO-8859-1 character you want, and finally a ";"
character.
In most cases, you should use the reserved name if possible. There are also
some reserved characters which do not exist in the character set used, but
which are defined for HTML.
The most commonly escaped characters are "&", "<" and ">", since these three
have a special meaning in HTML.
Notes
You can leave off the semicolon at the end of an entity if it is followed
by a space or similar character. In these cases it is clear where the
entity ends. But if it is followed by text, always use the semicolon.
Characters which do not appear in the ISO Latin 1 character set should
not be used in an HTML document. The same goes for numeric values which
show up blank in this set. They are undefined (apart from character 32,
which is the space character, and character 160, which is the
non-breaking space).
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 2.1.5. HTML comments ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
Since HTML is officially an SGML application, the comment syntax used in HTML
documents is actually the SGML comment syntax. Unfortunately this syntax is a
bit unclear at first.
The definition of an SGML comment is basically as follows:
A comment declaration starts with <!, followed by zero or more comments,
followed by >. A comment starts and ends with "--", and does not contain
any occurrence of "--".
This means that the following are all legal SGML comments:
1. <!-- Hello -->
2. <!-- Hello -- -- Hello-->
3. <!---->
4. <!------ Hello -->
5. <!>
Note that an "empty" comment tag, with just "--" characters, should always
have a multiple of four "-" characters to be legal. (And yes, <!> is also a
legal comment - it's the empty comment).
Not all HTML parsers get this right. For example, "<!------> hello-->" is a
legal comment, as you can verify with the rule above. It is a comment tag with
two comments; the first is empty and the second one contains "> hello". If you
try it in a browser, you will find that the text is displayed on screen.
There are two possible reasons for this:
1. The browser sees the ">" character and thinks the comment ends there.
2. The browser sees the "-->" text and thinks the comment ends there.
There is also the problem with the "--" sequence. Some people have a habit of
using things like "<!-------------->" as separators in their source.
Unfortunately, in most cases, the number of "-" characters is not a multiple
of four. This means that a browser who tries to get it right will actually get
it wrong here and actually hide the rest of the document.
For this reason, use the following simple rule to compose valid and accepted
comments:
An HTML comment begins with "<!--", ends with "-->" and does not contain
"--" or ">" anywhere in the comment.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 2.2. Elements for the HEAD section ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
The header section is used to provide information about the document. This can
be the title of the document, the name of the author, a short description, and
many other things.
The header is marked up using the HEAD element. It may only contain the
following elements. If any other elements, or plain text, occurs inside the
HEAD section, the browser should assume the HEAD ends here, and start rendering
the BODY.
TITLE - Document title
ISINDEX - Primitive search
META - Meta-information
LINK - Site structure
BASE - Document location
SCRIPT - Inline script
STYLE - Style information
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 2.2.1. BASE - Document location ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
Appearance: <BASE HREF=URL>
Attributes: HREF=URL
Contents: None (Empty).
May occur in: HEAD.
The BASE tag is used to indicate the correct location of the document.
Normally, the browser already knows this location. But in cases such as a
mirrored site, the URL used to get the document is not the one that should be
used when resolving relative URLs. That's when you use the BASE tag. The
required HREF attribute must contain a full URL which lists the real location
of the document.
For example, in a document which contains <BASE
HREF="http://www.htmlhelp.com/">, the relative URL in <IMG
SRC="icon/wdglogo.gif"> corresponds with the full URL
http://www.htmlhelp.com/icon/wdglogo.gif.
Notes
It is not necessary to include this tag; use it only if relative URLs
won't work otherwise.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 2.2.2. ISINDEX - Primitive search ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
Appearance: <ISINDEX>
Attributes: PROMPT=string.
Contents: None (Empty).
May occur in: HEAD.
The ISINDEX tag was used before FORMs became more popular. When inserted in a
document, it will allow the user to enter keywords which are then sent to the
server. The server then executes a search and returns the results. The PROMPT
attribute can be used to override the default text in the dialog box ("Enter
search keywords: ").
Notes
This tag should be inserted by the server if the document can be
searched. Merely inserting this tag will not make the document
searchable!
For more flexibility, use a FORM instead.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 2.2.3. LINK - Site structure ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
Appearance: <LINK REL=string HREF=URL>
Attributes: REL=string, REV=string, HREF=URL, TITLE=string
Contents: None (Empty).
May occur in: HEAD.
LINK is used to indicate relationships between documents. There are two
possible relationships: REL indicates a normal relationship to the document
specified in the URL. REV indicates a reverse relationship. In other words,
the other document has the indicated relationship with this one. The TITLE
attribute can be used to suggest a title for the referenced URL or relation.
Some possible values for REL and REV:
REV="made"
Indicates the creator of the document. Usually the URL is a mailto:
URL with the creator's e-mail address. Advanced browsers will now
let the reader comment on the page with just one button or
keystroke.
REL="stylesheet"
This indicates the location of the appropriate style sheet for the
current document.
The following LINK tags allow advanced browsers to automatically generate a
navigational buttonbar for the site. For each possible value, the URL can be
either absolute or relative.
REL="home"
Indicates the location of the homepage, or starting page in this
site.
REL="toc"
Indicates the location of the table of contents, or overview of this
site.
REL="index"
Indicates the location of the index for this site. This doesn't have
to be the same as the table of contents. The index could be
alphabetical, for example.
REL="glossary"
Indicates the location of a glossary of terms for this site.
REL="copyright"
Indicates the location of a page with copyright information for
information and such on this site.
REL="up"
Indicates the location of the document which is logically directly
above the current document.
REL="next"
Indicates the location of the next document in a series, relative to
the current document.
REL="previous"
Indicates the location of the previous document in a series,
relative to the current document.
REL="help"
Indicates the location of a help file for this site. This can be
useful if the site is complex, or if the current document may
require eplanations to be used correctly (for example, a large
fill-in form).
Notes
Support for the LINK tag is currently very limited, although it may be
useful for site maintenance.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 2.2.4. META - Meta-information ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
Appearance: <META NAME=string CONTENT=string>
Attributes: HTTP-EQUIV=string|NAME=string, CONTENT=string
Contents: None (Empty).
May occur in: HEAD.
The META tag is used to convey meta-information about the document, but can
also be used to specify headers for the document. You can use either
HTTP-EQUIV or NAME to name the meta-information, but CONTENT must be used in
both cases. By using HTTP-EQUIV, a server should use the name indicated as a
header, with the specified CONTENT as its value. For example,
<META HTTP-EQUIV="Expires" CONTENT="Tue, 04 Dec 1993 21:29:02 GMT">
<META HTTP-EQUIV="Keywords" CONTENT="Nanotechnology, Biochemistry">
<META HTTP-EQUIV="Reply-to" CONTENT="dsr@w3.org (Dave Raggett)">
The server should include the following response headers when the document is
requested:
Expires: Tue, 04 Dec 1993 21:29:02 GMT
Keywords: Nanotechnology, Biochemistry
Reply-to: dsr@w3.org (Dave Raggett)
Popular uses for META include:
<META NAME="generator" CONTENT="Some program">
This indicates the program used to generate this document. It is
often the name of the HTML editor used.
<META NAME="author" CONTENT="Name">
This indicates the name of the author.
<META NAME="keywords" CONTENT="keyword keyword keyword">
Provides keywords for search engines such as Infoseek or Alta Vista.
These are added to the keywords found in the document itself. If you
insert a keyword more than seven times here, the whole tag will be
ignored!
<META NAME="description" CONTENT="This is a site">
Search engines which support the above tag will now display the text
you specify here, rather than the first few lines of text from the
actual document when the document shows up in a search result. You
have about 1,000 characters for your description, but not all these
will be used.
<META HTTP-EQUIV="refresh" CONTENT="n; URL=http://foo.bar/">
This is a so-called "meta refresh", which on certain browsers causes
the document mentioned in the URL to be loaded after n. seconds.
This can be used for slide shows or for often-changing information,
but has some drawbacks. In particular, if you use a value of zero
seconds, the user can no longer go "Back" with his back button. He
will be transferred to the specified URL, and when he presses "back"
there, he will go back to the document with the refresh, which
immediately redirects him to the document he tried to get away from.
<META HTTP-EQUIV="expires" CONTENT="Tue, 20 Aug 1996 14:25:27 GMT">
This indicates that the document containing this META tag will
expire at this date. If the document is requested after this date,
the browser should load a new copy from the server, instead of using
the copy in its cache.
Notes
Not all servers use the information from META tags to generate headers,
although some browsers will treat what they find in here like it was a
header.
The "keywords" and "description" values are currently only used by Alta
Vista and Infoseek.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 2.2.5. SCRIPT - Inline scripts ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
Appearance: <SCRIPT> </SCRIPT>
Attributes: None.
Contents: Plain text, but should be a valid script.
May occur in: HEAD.
The SCRIPT tag is included only to ensure upward compatibility. Newer versions
of HTML will include support for inline scripts, which should be contained in
this tag. The tag should contain a valid script.
Note that current browsers are only required to hide the contents of the
SCRIPT tag, it does not have to use the information contained therein.
In the meantime, if you need scripts in your documents, put them inside HTML
comments.
Notes
Not all browsers support scripts.
Since not all browsers will hide the tag's contents, you may want to
enclose it in comments.
Note that if your script uses the ">" or "--" symbols, some browsers may
end the comment accidentally.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 2.2.6. STYLE - Style markup ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
Appearance: <STYLE> </STYLE>
Attributes: TYPE=string
Contents: Plain text, but should be valid style markup.
May occur in: HEAD.
The STYLE tag is included only to ensure upward compatibility. Newer versions
of HTML will include support for style sheets, and this tag can be used to
provide "in-line" style information. The tag should contain only valid style
statements, in the language indicated in the TYPE attribute.
Note that current browsers are only required to hide the contents of the STYLE
tag, it does not have to use the information contained therein.
Notes
Since not all browsers will hide the tag's contents, you may want to
enclose them in comments.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 2.2.7. TITLE - Document title ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
Appearance: <TITLE> </TITLE>
Attributes: None.
Contents: Plain text.
May occur in: HEAD.
Each document must have exactly one TITLE element. This element provides the
title of the document. It is usually displayed at the top of the browser's
window, but also used to label a bookmark entry for the document and as a
caption in search engine results.
It may only contain text and entities, but no markup.
Notes
Make sure the TITLE tag is also useful out of context. It should still be
understandable when it is used as label in a bookmarks file.
Although it is legal to use entities inside TITLE, not all browsers are
able to handle these properly. It is recommended that you restrict
yourself to the characters 32-126 decimal from ISO Latin 1.
Netscape 1.x had a bug with respect to titles. When more than one TITLE
tag was used in the HEAD, it would display them in a sequence, causing a
"marquee" effect. This bug has been fixed in later versions.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 2.3. Elements for the BODY section ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
The text in the BODY of a document is mainly marked up using block-level
elements. Text inside a block-level element is marked up using text-level
elements. Certain block-level elements may also contain other block-level
elements, or only a restricted set of elements and no text.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 2.3.1. Block-level elements. ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
The BODY of a document consists of multiple block elements. If plain text is
found inside the body, it is assumed to be inside a paragraph P. Block-level
elements can be grouped into several distinct categories:
Headings
H1 - Level 1 header
H2 - Level 2 header
H3 - Level 3 header
H4 - Level 4 header
H5 - Level 5 header
H6 - Level 6 header
List elements
UL - Unordered list
OL - Ordered list
DIR - Directory list
MENU - Menu item list
LI - List item
DL - Definition list
- DT - Definition term
- DD- Definition
Text containers
P - Paragraph
PRE - Preformatted text
BLOCKQUOTE - Large quotation
ADDRESS - Address information
Others
DIV - Logical division
CENTER - Centered division
FORM - Input form
HR - Horizontal rule
TABLE - Tables
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 2.3.2. Text-level elements. ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
These elements are used to mark up text inside block level elements. Some block
level elements exclude certain text level elements, and some text level
elements may only appear inside specific block level elements. This is
documented in the section on that block level element.
Text-level markup can roughly be divided into three groups: physical markup,
logical markup and "special" markup. The first group contains elements that
indicate a specific rendering for the enclosed text, the second indicate the
logical meaning of the enclosed text, and the third group indicates some
"action". It is recommended that logical elements are used whenever possible,
as they adapt better to various viewing environments than physical styles. For
example, if boldface is not available, a different way to render emphasized
text can be chosen, but only if it is known that this is emphasized text, and
not to be rendered bold for some other reason.
Logical markup
EM - Emphasized text
STRONG - Strongly emphasized
DFN - Definition of a term
CODE - Code fragment
SAMP - Sample text
KBD - Keyboard input
VAR - Variable
CITE - Short citation
Physical markup
TT - Teletype
I - Italics
B - Bold
U - Underline
STRIKE - Strikeout
BIG - Larger text
SMALL - Smaller text
SUB - Subscript
SUP - Superscript
Special markup
A - Anchor
BASEFONT - Default font size
IMG - Image
APPLET - Java applet
- PARAM - Parameters for Java applet
FONT - Font modification
BR - Line break
MAP - Client-side imagemap
- AREA - Hotzone in imagemap
Forms
INPUT - Input field, button, etc.
SELECT - Selection list
- OPTION - Selection list option
TEXTAREA - Input area
Tables
CAPTION - Table caption
TR - Table row
TH - Header cell
TD - Table cell
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 2.4. Block-level elements ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
The text in a document is mainly marked up using block-level elements. Text
inside a block-level element is marked up using text-level elements. Certain
block-level elements may also contain other block-level elements, or only a
restricted set of elements and no text.
H1 - Level 1 header
H2 - Level 2 header
H3 - Level 3 header
H4 - Level 4 header
H5 - Level 5 header
H6 - Level 6 header
DIV - Logical division
CENTER - Centered division
FORM - Input form
HR - Horizontal rule
TABLE - Tables
P - Paragraph
PRE - Preformatted text
BLOCKQUOTE - Large quotation
ADDRESS - Address information
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 2.4.1. ADDRESS - Address information ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
Appearance: <ADDRESS> </ADDRESS>
Attributes: None.
Contents: P, TT, I, B, U, STRIKE, BIG, SMALL, SUB, SUP, EM, STRONG,
DFN, CODE, SAMP, KBD, VAR, CITE, A, APPLET, IMG, FONT,
BASEFONT, BR, MAP, INPUT, SELECT, TEXTAREA and plain text.
May occur in: BODY, DIV, CENTER, BLOCKQUOTE, FORM, TH, TD, DD, LI.
The ADDRESS tag should be used to enclose contact information, addresses and
the likes. It is often rendered with a slightly indented left margin and
italics.
Notes
If you include an address in here, be sure to use BR for explicit
linebreaks after every line, otherwise the address won't come out right.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 2.4.2. BLOCKQUOTE - Large quotations ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
Appearance: <BLOCKQUOTE> </BLOCKQUOTE>
Attributes: None.
Contents: H1, H2, H3, H4, H5, H6, P, UL, OL, DIR, MENU, PRE, DL, DIV,
CENTER, BLOCKQUOTE, FORM, HR, TABLE, ADDRESS, as well as TT,
I, B, U, STRIKE, BIG, SMALL, SUB, SUP, EM, STRONG, DFN,
CODE, SAMP, KBD, VAR, CITE, A, APPLET, IMG, FONT, BASEFONT,
BR, MAP, INPUT, SELECT, TEXTAREA and plain text.
May occur in: BODY, DIV, CENTER, BLOCKQUOTE, FORM, TH, TD, DD, LI.
If you are quoting more than a few lines from a document, use a BLOCKQUOTE to
indicate this. Block quotations are often rendered with indented margins, and
possibly in italics, although a rendering with the standard quotation symbol
for E-mail, "> ", is of course also possible.
Notes
If you quote from someone else's work, don't forget to include a credit
and/or copyright notice.
Do not use BLOCKQUOTE simply to create indented text. This is not the
required rendering, so you will not achieve the effect you want on all
browsers. It will also confuse page indexers and summarizers.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 2.4.3. CENTER - Centered division ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
Appearance: <CENTER> </CENTER>
Attributes: None.
Contents: H1, H2, H3, H4, H5, H6, P, UL, OL, DIR, MENU, PRE, DL, DIV,
CENTER, BLOCKQUOTE, FORM, HR, TABLE, ADDRESS, as well as TT,
I, B, U, STRIKE, BIG, SMALL, SUB, SUP, EM, STRONG, DFN,
CODE, SAMP, KBD, VAR, CITE, A, APPLET, IMG, FONT, BASEFONT,
BR, MAP, INPUT, SELECT, TEXTAREA and plain text.
May occur in: BODY, DIV, CENTER, BLOCKQUOTE, FORM, TH, TD, DD, LI.
The CENTER tag is one of the first Netscape extensions. It is used to indicate
that large blocks of text should appear centered. In the Wilbur standard, it
is defined as an alias for <DIV ALIGN=CENTER>.
The tag is more widely supported than the DIV method, as it was the first
widely implemented Netscape extension to HTML 2.
Notes
The CENTER tag is <STRONG>not</STRONG> text-level markup, so do not use
it to center single lines of text inside a paragraph or other block
element. It will introduce a new paragraph.
Older versions of Netscape treated CENTER as if it were text-level
markup, so it was rendered without a paragraph break there.
For better portability with browsers which do not support this tag, use
ALIGN=CENTER on headers and paragraphs if possible.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 2.4.4. DIV - Logical division ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
Appearance: <DIV ALIGN=foo> </DIV>
Attributes: ALIGN=left|right|center
Contents: H1, H2, H3, H4, H5, H6, P, UL, OL, DIR, MENU, PRE, DL, DIV,
CENTER, BLOCKQUOTE, FORM, HR, TABLE, ADDRESS, as well as TT,
I, B, U, STRIKE, BIG, SMALL, SUB, SUP, EM, STRONG, DFN,
CODE, SAMP, KBD, VAR, CITE, A, APPLET, IMG, FONT, BASEFONT,
BR, MAP, INPUT, SELECT, TEXTAREA and plain text.
May occur in: BODY, DIV, CENTER, BLOCKQUOTE, FORM, TH, TD, DD, LI.
The DIV tag is used to mark up divisions in a document. It can enclose
paragraphs, headers and other block elements. Currently, you can only use it
to set the default alignment for all enclosed block elements. Future standards
will most likely include more options for DIV.
Just like with other block elements such as P or H1, you can specify left,
right and centered alignment.
Notes
The align attribute on a block element inside DIV overrides the align
value of the DIV element.
Instead of <DIV ALIGN=CENTER>, use CENTER. This element is more widely
supported at the moment, even though HTML 3.2 defines both as identical.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 2.4.5. FORM - HTML forms ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
Appearance: <FORM ACTION=URL> </FORM>
Attributes: ACTION=URL, METHOD=get|post, ENCTYPE=string
Contents: H1, H2, H3, H4, H5, H6, P, UL, OL, DIR, MENU, PRE, DL, DIV,
CENTER, BLOCKQUOTE, HR, TABLE, ADDRESS, as well as TT, I, B,
U, STRIKE, BIG, SMALL, SUB, SUP, EM, STRONG, DFN, CODE,
SAMP, KBD, VAR, CITE, A, APPLET, IMG, FONT, BASEFONT, BR,
MAP, INPUT, SELECT, TEXTAREA and plain text.
May occur in: BODY, DIV, CENTER, BLOCKQUOTE, TH, TD, DD, LI.
Forms allow a person to send data to the WWW server. You can use the INPUT,
TEXTAREA and SELECT tags to add individual elements, such as checkboxes, input
fields or "drop down" lists to your form. A form may contain all markup (both
text and body level tags), but it may not have a nested form.
FORM has one required attribute, ACTION, specifying the URL of a CGI script
which processes the form and sends back feedback. There are two methods to
send form data to a server. GET, the default, will send the form input in an
URL, whereas POST sends it in the body of the submission. The latter method
means you can send larger amounts of data, and that the URL of the form
results doesn't show the encoded form.
You can specify an encoding type with ENCTYPE, the default of
"application/x-www-form-urlencoded" is most widely supported. An alternative
is "text/plain", which is typically used in combination when the ACTION
attribute points to a mailto: URL. If a browser supports both, the contents of
the form is sent in plain text to the indicated recipient.
Notes
A form should always have at least one submit button. This can be done
with <INPUT TYPE=submit NAME=submitit> or with an image: <INPUT
TYPE=image NAME=submitit>.
More than one submit button is legal. If each submit button has a unique
NAME attribute, the name of the selected submit button is sent along with
the rest of the form input. This allows the parsing script to determine
which button was pressed.
The URL specified in the ACTION attribute does not have to be a CGI
script, although you can get pretty weird results if you try to feed data
to a document which isn't a CGI script. A popular reason to do this is to
get a "button" which when pressed takes you to a new page. This can be
done with: <PRE> <FORM ACTION="destination_url" METHOD=GET> <INPUT
TYPE=submit NAME=foo VALUE="Go to destination"> </FORM> </PRE>
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 2.4.6. H1 - Level 1 heading ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
Appearance: <H1> </H1>
Attributes: ALIGN=left|right|center
Contents: TT, I, B, U, STRIKE, BIG, SMALL, SUB, SUP, EM, STRONG, DFN,
CODE, SAMP, KBD, VAR, CITE, A, APPLET, IMG, FONT, BASEFONT,
BR, MAP, INPUT, SELECT, TEXTAREA and plain text.
May occur in: BODY, DIV, CENTER, BLOCKQUOTE, TH, TD, DD, LI.
The level 1 heading is the most important header in the document. It should be
rendered more prominently than any other header. It is usually used to
indicate the title of the document. Often it has the same contents as the
TITLE, although this is not required and not always a good idea. The title
should be useful out of context (for example, in a bookmarks file) but the
level 1 heading is only used inside the document.
The optional ALIGN attribute controls the horizontal alignment of the header.
It can be LEFT, CENTER or RIGHT.
Notes
Headers should be used in hierarchical order.
Do not assume that this header means "very large font size and bold."
While this is a popular rendering, it can be anything the browser
chooses.
Search engines may give words appearing in headers more importance in
their index. The headers are also often used to build an "outline" of the
document, which appears in the search results.
Right alignment is not as widely supported as centered.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 2.4.7. H2 - Level 2 heading ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
Appearance: <H2> </H2>
Attributes: ALIGN=left|right|center
Contents: TT, I, B, U, STRIKE, BIG, SMALL, SUB, SUP, EM, STRONG, DFN,
CODE, SAMP, KBD, VAR, CITE, A, APPLET, IMG, FONT, BASEFONT,
BR, MAP, INPUT, SELECT, TEXTAREA and plain text.
May occur in: BODY, DIV, CENTER, BLOCKQUOTE, TH, TD, DD, LI.
The level 2 heading is the second most important header in the document. It
should be rendered more prominently than a H3, but less prominently than a H1.
It is often used to mark up chapters in a document.
The optional ALIGN attribute controls the horizontal alignment of the header.
It can be LEFT, CENTER or RIGHT.
Notes
Headers should be used in hierarchical order.
Do not assume that this header means "very large font size and bold."
While this is a popular rendering, it can be anything the browser
chooses.
Search engines may give words appearing in headers more importance in
their index. The headers are also often used to build an "outline" of the
document, which appears in the search results.
Right alignment is not as widely supported as centered.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 2.4.8. H3 - Level 3 heading ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
Appearance: <H3> </H3>
Attributes: ALIGN=left|right|center
Contents: TT, I, B, U, STRIKE, BIG, SMALL, SUB, SUP, EM, STRONG, DFN,
CODE, SAMP, KBD, VAR, CITE, A, APPLET, IMG, FONT, BASEFONT,
BR, MAP, INPUT, SELECT, TEXTAREA and plain text.
May occur in: BODY, DIV, CENTER, BLOCKQUOTE, TH, TD, DD, LI.
The level 3 heading is the third most important header in the document. It
should be rendered more prominently than a H4, but less prominently than a H2.
It is often used to mark up sections inside a chapter in a document.
The optional ALIGN attribute controls the horizontal alignment of the header.
It can be LEFT, CENTER or RIGHT.
Notes
Headers should be used in hierarchical order.
Do not assume that this header means "very large font size and bold."
While this is a popular rendering, it can be anything the browser
chooses.
Search engines may give words appearing in headers more importance in
their index. The headers are also often used to build an "outline" of the
document, which appears in the search results.
Right alignment is not as widely supported as centered.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 2.4.9. H4 - Level 4 heading ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
Appearance: <H4> </H4>
Attributes: ALIGN=left|right|center
Contents: TT, I, B, U, STRIKE, BIG, SMALL, SUB, SUP, EM, STRONG, DFN,
CODE, SAMP, KBD, VAR, CITE, A, APPLET, IMG, FONT, BASEFONT,
BR, MAP, INPUT, SELECT, TEXTAREA and plain text.
May occur in: BODY, DIV, CENTER, BLOCKQUOTE, TH, TD, DD, LI.
The level 4 heading should be rendered more prominently than a H5, but less
prominently than a H3. It is often used to mark up subsections in a document.
The optional ALIGN attribute controls the horizontal alignment of the header.
It can be LEFT, CENTER or RIGHT.
Notes
Headers should be used in hierarchical order.
Do not assume that this header means "large font size and bold." While
this is a popular rendering, it can be anything the browser chooses.
Search engines may give words appearing in headers more importance in
their index. The headers are also often used to build an "outline" of the
document, which appears in the search results.
Right alignment is not as widely supported as centered.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 2.4.10. H5 - Level 5 heading ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
Appearance: <H5> </H5>
Attributes: ALIGN=left|right|center
Contents: TT, I, B, U, STRIKE, BIG, SMALL, SUB, SUP, EM, STRONG, DFN,
CODE, SAMP, KBD, VAR, CITE, A, APPLET, IMG, FONT, BASEFONT,
BR, MAP, INPUT, SELECT, TEXTAREA and plain text.
May occur in: BODY, DIV, CENTER, BLOCKQUOTE, TH, TD, DD, LI.
The level 5 heading is the second least important header in the document. It
should be rendered more prominently than a H6, but less prominently than a H4.
Because it is often rendered in a small font, it is not used very often. It
should be used to divide sections inside a H4.
The optional ALIGN attribute controls the horizontal alignment of the header.
It can be LEFT, CENTER or RIGHT.
Notes
Headers should be used in hierarchical order.
Do not assume that this header means "small font size and bold." While
this is a popular rendering, it can be anything the browser chooses.
Search engines may give words appearing in headers more importance in
their index. The headers are also often used to build an "outline" of the
document, which appears in the search results.
Right alignment is not as widely supported as centered.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 2.4.11. H6 - Level 6 heading ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
Appearance: <H6> </H6>
Attributes: ALIGN=left|right|center
Contents: TT, I, B, U, STRIKE, BIG, SMALL, SUB, SUP, EM, STRONG, DFN,
CODE, SAMP, KBD, VAR, CITE, A, APPLET, IMG, FONT, BASEFONT,
BR, MAP, INPUT, SELECT, TEXTAREA and plain text.
May occur in: BODY, DIV, CENTER, BLOCKQUOTE, TH, TD, DD, LI.
The level 6 heading is the least important header in the document. It should
be rendered less prominently than a H5, but more prominently than normal text.
Because it is often rendered in a small font, it is not used very often. It
should be used to divide sections inside a H5.
The optional ALIGN attribute controls the horizontal alignment of the header.
It can be LEFT, CENTER or RIGHT.
Notes
Headers should be used in hierarchical order.
Do not assume that this header means "very small font size and bold."
While this is a popular rendering, it can be anything the browser
chooses.
Search engines may give words appearing in headers more importance in
their index. The headers are also often used to build an "outline" of the
document, which appears in the search results.
Right alignment is not as widely supported as centered.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 2.4.12. HR - Horizontal rule ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
Appearance: <HR>
Attributes: ALIGN=left|right|center, NOSHADE, SIZE=n., WIDTH=n.|p%
Contents: None (Empty).
May occur in: BODY, DIV, CENTER, BLOCKQUOTE, TH, TD, DD, LI.
HR is used to draw horizontal rules across the browser window. If the margins
are currently smaller, for example because of images (IMG) which are placed
against the margins, the rule will extend to these margins instead of the
whole window. A horizontal rule is typically used to separate sections within
a document.
In HTML 3.2, the appearance can be controlled more than in HTML 2. You can
specify the thickness of the rule with the SIZE attribute, which takes an
integer number of pixels. The width of the rule can be specified in number of
pixels or as a percentage of the currently available window width, using the
WIDTH attribute. Don't forget that percentage values must be quoted! The
NOSHADE attribute is used to indicate that the rule should not get its usual
shaded appearance, but instead should be drawn as a thick line.
Notes
None of the attributes for HR existed in HTML 2, so they may not be
supported by all browsers. This can produce bizarre effects if you are
using multiple HRs in a row to produce growing or shrinking "stripes".
If you use too many rules on a document, the end result can be that the
document looks like a "sandwich" because there is little text between
each rule.
Setting an absolute width is not recommended, since you have no way to
know how wide the currently available window is. Use a percentage if you
have to change the width.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 2.4.13. P - Paragraph ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
Appearance: <P> [</P>]
Attributes: ALIGN=left|center|right
Contents: TT, I, B, U, STRIKE, BIG, SMALL, SUB, SUP, EM, STRONG, DFN,
CODE, SAMP, KBD, VAR, CITE, A, APPLET, IMG, FONT, BASEFONT,
BR, MAP, INPUT, SELECT, TEXTAREA and plain text.
May occur in: BODY, DIV, CENTER, BLOCKQUOTE, TH, TD, DD, LI, ADDRESS.
The P tag is used to indicate paragraphs. The optional attribute ALIGN
indicates the preferred alignment for the contents of this paragraph. Support
for ALIGN=RIGHT is not as large as support for the other two. Note that
ALIGN=LEFT is the default.
Notes
Some browsers render extra whitespace when multiple empty paragraphs are
used in sequence. This is not required by the specs, so do not count on
this to get vertical whitespace in your document.
When a paragraph has the ALIGN=CENTER or ALIGN=RIGHT attribute, some
browsers do not use the default alignment for the next paragraph unless
this paragraph is explicitly closed.
In the very first version of HTML, the P tag was an empty tag like BR.
Some references and books still claim that this is the case. However,
HTML 2.0 defines the P tag as a container, and there is no difference
between a paragraph with and one without explicit alignment.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 2.4.14. PRE - Preformatted text ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
Appearance: <PRE> </PRE>
Attributes: WIDTH=n.
Contents: TT, I, B, U, STRIKE, EM, STRONG, DFN, CODE, SAMP, KBD, VAR,
CITE, A, APPLET, BASEFONT, BR, MAP, INPUT, SELECT, TEXTAREA
and plain text.
May occur in: BODY, DIV, CENTER, BLOCKQUOTE, TH, TD, DD, LI.
PRE is used to include sections of text in which formatting is critical.
Unlike in the other HTML containers, text in a PRE pair will only be wrapped
at the linebreaks in the source, and spaces will not be collapsed. You can
even use tabs, although it is better to use multiple spaces since those will
always be the right number.
Text inside this tag will be displayed in a monospaced font to retain the
formatting. This is the reason you cannot include font-changing tags inside
PRE text. Images are excluded because they can introduce problems with
alignment. An image can't be translated to a certain number of characters.
The optional WIDTH attribute can be used to indicate how wide the text is (for
example, WIDTH=80 for a typical text file). This would allow the browser to
pick a font which fits the entire text in the current window. Unfortunately
this isn't very widely supported.
Notes
Although text-level markup is allowed inside PRE, not all tags are
supported.
A P tag is strictly not permitted inside PRE, but if a browser encounters
one, it should treat it as two newlines.
Since HTML tags are permitted inside PRE, you cannot just "insert" a text
file into an HTML document by slapping <PRE> and </PRE> around them. You
have to convert the &, < and > characters into entities first.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 2.5. Logical text-level markup ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
Text-level markup can roughly be divided into three groups: physical markup,
logical markup and "special" markup. The first group contains elements that
indicate a specific rendering for the enclosed text, the second indicate the
logical meaning of the enclosed text, and the third group indicates some
"action". It is recommended that logical elements are used whenever possible,
as they adapt better to various viewing environments than physical styles. For
example, if boldface is not available, a different way to render emphasized
text can be chosen, but only if it is known that this is emphasized text, and
not to be rendered bold for some other reason.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 2.5.1. CITE - Short citations ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
Appearance: <CITE> </CITE>
Attributes: None.
Contents: TT, I, B, U, STRIKE, EM, STRONG, DFN, CODE, SAMP, KBD, VAR,
CITE, A, APPLET, BASEFONT, BR, MAP, INPUT, SELECT, TEXTAREA
and plain text.
May occur in: DIV, CENTER, BLOCKQUOTE, FORM, TH, TD, DT, DD, LI, P, H1,
H2, H3, H4, H5, H6, ADDRESS, TT, I, B, U, STRIKE, EM,
STRONG, DFN, CODE, SAMP, KBD, VAR, CITE, FONT, A, APPLET,
CAPTION.
The CITE element marks up the title of a cited work. For example, a text
discussing HTML could say <CITE>RFC 1866</CITE> says ....
Text in CITE is typically rendered in italics.
Notes
Do not use CITE for anything but titles of cited works. It will confuse
indexers and automatic programs to extract information from your
documents. Use EM for emphasis or I for text which must appear in
italics.
There is no element in HTML 3.2 to mark up short cited phrases. For
longer texts, you can use BLOCKQUOTE.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 2.5.2. CODE - Code fragments ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
Appearance: <CODE> </CODE>
Attributes: None.
Contents: TT, I, B, U, STRIKE, EM, STRONG, DFN, CODE, SAMP, KBD, VAR,
CITE, A, APPLET, BASEFONT, BR, MAP, INPUT, SELECT, TEXTAREA
and plain text.
May occur in: DIV, CENTER, BLOCKQUOTE, FORM, TH, TD, DT, DD, LI, P, H1,
H2, H3, H4, H5, H6, ADDRESS, TT, I, B, U, STRIKE, EM,
STRONG, DFN, CODE, SAMP, KBD, VAR, CITE, FONT, A, APPLET,
CAPTION.
CODE is used for snippets of code which appear inside a paragraph of text. It
is usually rendered in a monospaced font. You can use this tag to mark up
things like <CODE>for ( ; ; ) ;</CODE> is a nice way to make an endless loop
in C.
For larger blocks of code, use PRE instead. If what you are marking up is
what a user should type in, use KBD.
Notes
CODE will usually be rendered in a monospaced font, but multiple spaces
are collapsed, unlike in PRE. This can screw up the spacing in your code
if you want to provide more than one line.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 2.5.3. DFN - Definition of a term ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
Appearance: <DFN> </DFN>
Attributes: None.
Contents: TT, I, B, U, STRIKE, EM, STRONG, DFN, CODE, SAMP, KBD, VAR,
CITE, A, APPLET, BASEFONT, BR, MAP, INPUT, SELECT, TEXTAREA
and plain text.
May occur in: DIV, CENTER, BLOCKQUOTE, FORM, TH, TD, DT, DD, LI, P, H1,
H2, H3, H4, H5, H6, ADDRESS, TT, I, B, U, STRIKE, EM,
STRONG, DFN, CODE, SAMP, KBD, VAR, CITE, FONT, A, APPLET,
CAPTION.
DFN is used to mark up terms which are used for the first time. These are
often rendered in italics so the user can see this is where the term is used
for the first time.
Notes
Not all browsers render this tag in an appropriate way.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 2.5.4. EM - Emphasized text ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
Appearance: <EM> </EM>
Attributes: None.
Contents: TT, I, B, U, STRIKE, EM, STRONG, DFN, CODE, SAMP, KBD, VAR,
CITE, A, APPLET, BASEFONT, BR, MAP, INPUT, SELECT, TEXTAREA
and plain text.
May occur in: DIV, CENTER, BLOCKQUOTE, FORM, TH, TD, DT, DD, LI, P, H1,
H2, H3, H4, H5, H6, ADDRESS, TT, I, B, U, STRIKE, EM,
STRONG, DFN, CODE, SAMP, KBD, VAR, CITE, FONT, A, APPLET,
CAPTION.
EM is used to indicate emphasized text. While it is often rendered identical
to I, italics, using EM rather than I is preferred. It allows the browser to
distinguish between emphasized text and other text which can be drawn in
italics (for example citations, CITE).
EM text should be rendered distinct from STRONG text.
Notes
Use EM only for emphasized text. If you want to use an italic font for
some other reason, use a more appropriate element like CITE, DFN or I.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 2.5.5. KBD - Keyboard input ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
Appearance: <KBD> </KBD>
Attributes: None.
Contents: TT, I, B, U, STRIKE, EM, STRONG, DFN, CODE, SAMP, KBD, VAR,
CITE, A, APPLET, BASEFONT, BR, MAP, INPUT, SELECT, TEXTAREA
and plain text.
May occur in: DIV, CENTER, BLOCKQUOTE, FORM, TH, TD, DT, DD, LI, P, H1,
H2, H3, H4, H5, H6, ADDRESS, TT, I, B, U, STRIKE, EM,
STRONG, DFN, CODE, SAMP, KBD, VAR, CITE, FONT, A, APPLET,
CAPTION.
KBD is used to indicate text which should be entered by the user. It is often
drawn in a monospaced font, although this is not required. It differs from
CODE in that CODE indicates code fragments and KBD indicates input.
Notes
Do not use KBD if your text requires a monospaced font; use TT instead.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 2.5.6. SAMP - Sample text ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
Appearance: <SAMP> </SAMP>
Attributes: None.
Contents: TT, I, B, U, STRIKE, EM, STRONG, DFN, CODE, SAMP, KBD, VAR,
CITE, A, APPLET, BASEFONT, BR, MAP, INPUT, SELECT, TEXTAREA
and plain text.
May occur in: DIV, CENTER, BLOCKQUOTE, FORM, TH, TD, DT, DD, LI, P, H1,
H2, H3, H4, H5, H6, ADDRESS, TT, I, B, U, STRIKE, EM,
STRONG, DFN, CODE, SAMP, KBD, VAR, CITE, FONT, A, APPLET,
CAPTION.
SAMP is used to indicate a sample of text which should be used literally. For
example, "The text <SAMP>General Protection Fault</SAMP> is well known to
Windows users."
It differs from KBD text in that KBD text indicates text the user must enter,
whereas SAMP text can also be output.
Notes
Do not use SAMP if your text requires a monospaced font; use TT instead.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 2.5.7. STRONG - Strongly emphasized text ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
Appearance: <STRONG> </STRONG>
Attributes: None.
Contents: TT, I, B, U, STRIKE, EM, STRONG, DFN, CODE, SAMP, KBD, VAR,
CITE, A, APPLET, BASEFONT, BR, MAP, INPUT, SELECT, TEXTAREA
and plain text.
May occur in: DIV, CENTER, BLOCKQUOTE, FORM, TH, TD, DT, DD, LI, P, H1,
H2, H3, H4, H5, H6, ADDRESS, TT, I, B, U, STRIKE, EM,
STRONG, DFN, CODE, SAMP, KBD, VAR, CITE, FONT, A, APPLET,
CAPTION.
STRONG is used to indicate strongly emphasized text. While it is often
rendered identical to B, boldface, using STRONG rather than B is preferred. It
allows the browser to distinguish between strongly emphasized text and other
text which must be drawn in boldface in the case where boldface is not
available.
STRONG text should be rendered distinct from EM text.
Notes
Do not use STRONG if your text requires boldface; use B instead.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 2.5.8. VAR - Variable ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
Appearance: <VAR> </VAR>
Attributes: None.
Contents: TT, I, B, U, STRIKE, EM, STRONG, DFN, CODE, SAMP, KBD, VAR,
CITE, A, APPLET, BASEFONT, BR, MAP, INPUT, SELECT, TEXTAREA
and plain text.
May occur in: DIV, CENTER, BLOCKQUOTE, FORM, TH, TD, DT, DD, LI, P, H1,
H2, H3, H4, H5, H6, ADDRESS, TT, I, B, U, STRIKE, EM,
STRONG, DFN, CODE, SAMP, KBD, VAR, CITE, FONT, A, APPLET,
CAPTION.
VAR is used to mark up variables, for example in discussions of computer
programs. Using this tag allows programs to automatically generate lists of
the used variables. Example: "The variable <VAR>c</VAR> is used as a counter
in this program."
Notes
VAR will usually be rendered in a monospaced font, but multiple spaces
are collapsed, unlike in PRE. This can screw up the spacing in your VAR
if you want to provide more than one line.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 2.6. Physical text-level markup ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
Text-level markup can roughly be divided into three groups: physical markup,
logical markup and "special" markup. The first group contains elements that
indicate a specific rendering for the enclosed text, the second indicate the
logical meaning of the enclosed text, and the third group indicates some
"action". It is recommended that logical elements are used whenever possible,
as they adapt better to various viewing environments than physical styles. For
example, if boldface is not available, a different way to render emphasized
text can be chosen, but only if it is known that this is emphasized text, and
not to be rendered bold for some other reason.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 2.6.1. B - Bold ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
Appearance: <B> </B>
Attributes: None.
Contents: TT, I, B, U, STRIKE, EM, STRONG, DFN, CODE, SAMP, KBD, VAR,
CITE, A, APPLET, BASEFONT, BR, MAP, INPUT, SELECT, TEXTAREA
and plain text.
May occur in: DIV, CENTER, BLOCKQUOTE, FORM, TH, TD, DT, DD, LI, P, H1,
H2, H3, H4, H5, H6, ADDRESS, TT, I, B, U, STRIKE, EM,
STRONG, DFN, CODE, SAMP, KBD, VAR, CITE, FONT, A, APPLET,
CAPTION.
B is used to indicate that the enclosed text must be rendered in a bold
typeface. It must be rendered distinct from I-italics text.
If you want to indicate strong emphasis, use the STRONG element instead. B
should only be used when you want bold typeface for some other reason than to
denote strong emphasis. While the two tags usually produce the same output,
the B tag does not provide any reasons why the enclosed text is in boldface.
This means an indexer or text-only browser cannot pick a good alternative.
With STRONG this is possible.
Notes
Putting large blocks of text in boldface makes the text hard to read.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 2.6.2. BIG - Larger text ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
Appearance: <BIG> </BIG>
Attributes: None.
Contents: TT, I, B, U, STRIKE, EM, STRONG, DFN, CODE, SAMP, KBD, VAR,
CITE, A, APPLET, BASEFONT, BR, MAP, INPUT, SELECT, TEXTAREA
and plain text.
May occur in: DIV, CENTER, BLOCKQUOTE, FORM, TH, TD, DT, DD, LI, P, H1,
H2, H3, H4, H5, H6, ADDRESS, TT, I, B, U, STRIKE, EM,
STRONG, DFN, CODE, SAMP, KBD, VAR, CITE, FONT, A, APPLET,
CAPTION.
The BIG tag (as well as SMALL) is new. A browser should draw the enclosed text
in a larger font if available, and ignore the tag otherwise. Since this tag is
new, support for it is not universal. The FONT tag can do the same, with
SIZE="+1".
Notes
Nesting BIG tags may produce text in a larger font than with just one BIG
tag, but this is not required by the specs (although it is recommended).
It is legal to nest BIG and SMALL, although the results are undefined.
BIG is not supported by all browsers, so you might want to use <FONT
SIZE="+1"> instead.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 2.6.3. I - Italics ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
Appearance: <I> </I>
Attributes: None.
Contents: TT, I, B, U, STRIKE, EM, STRONG, DFN, CODE, SAMP, KBD, VAR,
CITE, A, APPLET, BASEFONT, BR, MAP, INPUT, SELECT, TEXTAREA
and plain text.
May occur in: DIV, CENTER, BLOCKQUOTE, FORM, TH, TD, DT, DD, LI, P, H1,
H2, H3, H4, H5, H6, ADDRESS, TT, I, B, U, STRIKE, EM,
STRONG, DFN, CODE, SAMP, KBD, VAR, CITE, FONT, A, APPLET,
CAPTION.
I is used to indicate that the enclosed text must be rendered in a italic
(slanted) typeface. It must be rendered distinct from B-bold text.
You should use EM or CITE instead of I if you can. While they usually produce
the same output, the I tag does not provide any reasons why the enclosed text
is in italics. This means an indexer or text-only browser cannot pick a good
alternative. With EM and CITE this is possible. The browser can now
distinguish between emphasized text and citations and choose different methods
to display them.
Notes
The I tag should only be used if text is in italics by convention.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 2.6.4. SMALL - Smaller text ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
Appearance: <SMALL> </SMALL>
Attributes: None.
Contents: TT, I, B, U, STRIKE, EM, STRONG, DFN, CODE, SAMP, KBD, VAR,
CITE, A, APPLET, BASEFONT, BR, MAP, INPUT, SELECT, TEXTAREA
and plain text.
May occur in: DIV, CENTER, BLOCKQUOTE, FORM, TH, TD, DT, DD, LI, P, H1,
H2, H3, H4, H5, H6, ADDRESS, TT, I, B, U, STRIKE, EM,
STRONG, DFN, CODE, SAMP, KBD, VAR, CITE, FONT, A, APPLET,
CAPTION.
The SMALL tag (as well as BIG) is new. A browser should draw the enclosed text
in a smaller font if available, and ignore the tag otherwise. Since this tag
is new, support for it is not universal. The FONT tag can do the same, with
SIZE="-1".
Notes
Nesting SMALL tags may produce text in a smaller font than with just one
SMALL tag, but this is not required by the specs (although it is
recommended).
It is legal to nest BIG and SMALL, although the results are undefined.
SMALL is not supported by all browsers, so you might want to use <FONT
SIZE="-1"> instead.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 2.6.5. STRIKE - Strike-through text ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
Appearance: <STRIKE> </STRIKE>
Attributes: None.
Contents: TT, I, B, U, STRIKE, EM, STRONG, DFN, CODE, SAMP, KBD, VAR,
CITE, A, APPLET, BASEFONT, BR, MAP, INPUT, SELECT, TEXTAREA
and plain text.
May occur in: DIV, CENTER, BLOCKQUOTE, FORM, TH, TD, DT, DD, LI, P, H1,
H2, H3, H4, H5, H6, ADDRESS, TT, I, B, U, STRIKE, EM,
STRONG, DFN, CODE, SAMP, KBD, VAR, CITE, FONT, A, APPLET,
CAPTION.
The STRIKE tag specifies that the enclosed text should be rendered in a
strike-through appearance. Usually this is done with a line through the middle
of the text.
Notes
Since this tag is new, support for it is not universal. If you absolutely
require strikethrough text, you will have to use an image.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 2.6.6. SUB - Subscript ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
Appearance: <SUB> </SUB>
Attributes: None.
Contents: TT, I, B, U, STRIKE, EM, STRONG, DFN, CODE, SAMP, KBD, VAR,
CITE, A, APPLET, BASEFONT, BR, MAP, INPUT, SELECT, TEXTAREA
and plain text.
May occur in: DIV, CENTER, BLOCKQUOTE, FORM, TH, TD, DT, DD, LI, P, H1,
H2, H3, H4, H5, H6, ADDRESS, TT, I, B, U, STRIKE, EM,
STRONG, DFN, CODE, SAMP, KBD, VAR, CITE, FONT, A, APPLET,
CAPTION.
SUB specifies that the enclosed text should be rendered in subscript, with the
enclosed text slightly lower than the surrounding text. This can be useful for
mathematical formulas.
Notes
Since this tag is new, support for it is not universal. Make sure that
the text would still look readable if the SUB tag weren't used.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 2.6.7. SUP - Superscript ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
Appearance: <SUP> </SUP>
Attributes: None.
Contents: TT, I, B, U, STRIKE, EM, STRONG, DFN, CODE, SAMP, KBD, VAR,
CITE, A, APPLET, BASEFONT, BR, MAP, INPUT, SELECT, TEXTAREA
and plain text.
May occur in: DIV, CENTER, BLOCKQUOTE, FORM, TH, TD, DT, DD, LI, P, H1,
H2, H3, H4, H5, H6, ADDRESS, TT, I, B, U, STRIKE, EM,
STRONG, DFN, CODE, SAMP, KBD, VAR, CITE, FONT, A, APPLET,
CAPTION.
SUP specifies that the enclosed text should be rendered in superscript, with
the enclosed text slightly higher than the surrounding text. This can be
useful for mathematical formulas.
Notes
Since this tag is new, support for it is not universal. Make sure that
the text would still look readable if the SUP tag weren't used.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 2.6.8. TT - Teletype font ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
Appearance: <TT> </TT>
Attributes: None.
Contents: TT, I, B, U, STRIKE, EM, STRONG, DFN, CODE, SAMP, KBD, VAR,
CITE, A, APPLET, BASEFONT, BR, MAP, INPUT, SELECT, TEXTAREA
and plain text.
May occur in: DIV, CENTER, BLOCKQUOTE, FORM, TH, TD, DT, DD, LI, P, H1,
H2, H3, H4, H5, H6, ADDRESS, TT, I, B, U, STRIKE, EM,
STRONG, DFN, CODE, SAMP, KBD, VAR, CITE, FONT, A, APPLET,
CAPTION.
The TT tag specifies that the enclosed text should be rendered in a teletype
(monospaced) font. This can be used to simulate typewriter output. If
possible, use CODE, SAMP or KBD instead. These tags allow the browser to pick
a suitable rendering for each specific case, instead of the generic rendering
you get with TT. It also makes the job easier for convertors and search
robots.
Notes
Text inside TT is not preformatted text like PRE; spaces are collapsed
and newlines ignored.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 2.6.9. U - Underline ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
Appearance: <U> </U>
Attributes: None.
Contents: TT, I, B, U, STRIKE, EM, STRONG, DFN, CODE, SAMP, KBD, VAR,
CITE, A, APPLET, BASEFONT, BR, MAP, INPUT, SELECT, TEXTAREA
and plain text.
May occur in: DIV, CENTER, BLOCKQUOTE, FORM, TH, TD, DT, DD, LI, P, H1,
H2, H3, H4, H5, H6, ADDRESS, TT, I, B, U, STRIKE, EM,
STRONG, DFN, CODE, SAMP, KBD, VAR, CITE, FONT, A, APPLET,
CAPTION.
U is used to indicate the enclosed text should be underlined. As most browsers
use underlining to indicate hyperlinks, try to avoid this tag. It can confuse
your users if they see "hyperlinks" that do not work.
Underlining is an alternative rendering for italic text (for example, on
typewriters). Since HTML has an I tag for italics, use that if this is what
you are using U for.
Notes
Most graphical browsers do not support underlined text, since it makes it
harder to distinguish text from hyperlinks.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 2.7. Special text-level markup ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
Text-level markup can roughly be divided into three groups: physical markup,
logical markup and "special" markup. The first group contains elements that
indicate a specific rendering for the enclosed text, the second indicate the
logical meaning of the enclosed text, and the third group indicates some
"action". It is recommended that logical elements are used whenever possible,
as they adapt better to various viewing environments than physical styles. For
example, if boldface is not available, a different way to render emphasized
text can be chosen, but only if it is known that this is emphasized text, and
not to be rendered bold for some other reason.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 2.7.1. A - Hyperlinks ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
Appearance: <A HREF=URL> </A>
Attributes: HREF=URL, NAME=string, REL=string, REV=string, TITLE=string
Contents: TT, I, B, U, STRIKE, EM, STRONG, DFN, CODE, SAMP, KBD, VAR,
CITE, APPLET, BASEFONT, BR, MAP, INPUT, SELECT, TEXTAREA and
plain text.
May occur in: DIV, CENTER, BLOCKQUOTE, FORM, TH, TD, DT, DD, LI, P, H1,
H2, H3, H4, H5, H6, ADDRESS, TT, I, B, U, STRIKE, EM,
STRONG, DFN, CODE, SAMP, KBD, VAR, CITE, FONT, APPLET,
CAPTION.
The anchor tag is the "glue" for hypertext documents. The enclosed text and/or
image(s) will be selectable by the user, and doing so will take the user to
the location specified in the HREF attribute. The TITLE attribute can be used
to provide a description of that location, which is displayed by some browsers
when the mouse moves over the URL.
The NAME attribute is used to set up "named anchors." The enclosed text will
be marked as a "target" to which a browser can jump directly. For example, if
you have <A NAME="toc">Table of Contents</A> somewhere in the document, and
the user selects the URL "#toc" he will be taken to that line.
REL and REV are not widely used, although these attributes were already
present in the HTML 2.0 specs. They are used to mark up relationships between
the current document and the resource in the link. REL="foo" in document A, in
a link pointing to B, indicates that document A has a relationship of "foo"
with document B. REV="foo" indicates B has that relationship with A. Since
these attributes are not widely used, there is no standard list of values for
REL and REV.
Notes
Be sure to close the quotes around the value in HREF. Older browsers were
often quite forgiving about them, but as this caused other problems, it
was fixed in newer releases. This means that a hyperlink with an unclosed
quote may not work correctly.
You may not nest anchors, not even if one uses the HREF and the other
uses the NAME attribute.
The A element used with the NAME attribute requires a closing tag and
non-empty content.
TITLE is most often used for mailto URLs, where it is used to set the
subject of the message. Some browsers also use it if you bookmark the
link.
Since you cannot nest anchors, you can't hyperlink a named anchor. You
can however combine the NAME and HREF anchors into one anchor; <A
NAME="foo" HREF="bar">text</A> works just fine.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 2.7.2. APPLET - Java applet ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
Appearance: <APPLET CODE=string HEIGHT=n. WIDTH=n.> </APPLET>
Attributes: CODEBASE=URL, CODE=string, NAME=string, ALT=string,
ALIGN=left|right|top|middle|bottom, HEIGHT=n., WIDTH=n.,
HSPACE=n., VSPACE=n.
Contents: PARAM and TT, I, B, U, STRIKE, EM, STRONG, DFN, CODE, SAMP,
KBD, VAR, CITE, APPLET, BASEFONT, BR, MAP, INPUT, SELECT,
TEXTAREA and plain text.
May occur in: DIV, CENTER, BLOCKQUOTE, FORM, TH, TD, DT, DD, LI, P, H1,
H2, H3, H4, H5, H6, ADDRESS, TT, I, B, U, STRIKE, EM,
STRONG, DFN, CODE, SAMP, KBD, VAR, CITE, FONT, APPLET,
CAPTION.
The APPLET tag is used to include Java applets. The CODE attribute indicates
the location of the class of the applet itself. CODEBASE can be used to
specify an absolute URL for the applet, similar to the BASE element for HTML
documents. Other classes for this applet will be searched at the location
indicated in CODEBASE. If this is not specified, the current URL will be used
for the location. The NAME attribute gives the name of the applet.
Just like with IMG, WIDTH and HEIGHT are used to specify the width and height
of the applet's window, and HSPACE and VSPACE control horizontal and vertical
spacing around the applet. ALIGN sets the horizontal or vertical alignment for
the applet.
Arguments to the applet can be specified with the PARAM tag, which goes inside
the APPLET tag.
The ALT text may contain text which should be displayed if the applet cannot
be run, but you should use the contents of APPLET instead. In here you may use
markup, so you can provide a better alternative than with the ALT text.
Notes
Not all browsers support Java applets, and those that do often allow the
user to disable it.
Always provide alternative text, so your visitors get something when they
can't see the applet.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 2.7.3. AREA - Client-side imagemap hotspot ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
Appearance: <AREA SHAPE=x HREF=URL COORDS=string ALT=string>
Attributes: SHAPE=rect|circle|poly|default, COORDS=string,
NOHREF|HREF=URL, ALT=string
Contents: None (Empty).
May occur in: MAP.
Inside the MAP tag, each "hotzone" in the client-side imagemap is defined with
an AREA tag. The HREF attribute specifies the URL for the destination that
should be chosen if this area was selected. If you specify NOHREF instead,
this area won't do anything.
SHAPE and COORDS define the actual region. SHAPE can be a rectangle, circle,
or polygon, and COORDS should contain a set of coordinates describing that
shape. This is done with a comma separated list of numbers, enclosed in
quotes. If SHAPE is set to DEFAULT, no coordinates need to be specified. The
default area is what will be chosen if no others match. The syntax for COORDS
depends on what shape you choose.
rect - rectangle
A rectangle has four coordinates. The first specifies the top left
corner, and the second the bottom right corner of the rectangle. For
example, <AREA SHAPE=rect COORDS="0,0,9,9"> would specify a
rectangle of 10x10 pixels, starting in the top left corner of the
image.
circle - circle
A circle is defined by its center and radius. The COORDS attribute
first specifies the coordinates of the center, and then the radius
of the circle, in pixels. For example, <AREA SHAPE=circle
COORDS="10,10,5"> would specify a circle with radius 5 at location
(10,10) in the image.
poly - polygon
A polygon is built up by a list of coordinates. They are all
connected in the order you present, and the last coordinate pair is
connected to the first. This way you can build arbitrary figures.
For example, <AREA SHAPE=poly COORDS="10,50,15,20,20,50"> would
specify a triangle, with edge locations (10,50), (15,20) and
(20,50).
default - default
The default location doesn't have any coordinates, and it should be
used only once in the map. It is used to indicate what should happen
if the user selects one of the coordinates which are not defined in
any of the other elements.
The ALT text is used by text browsers to present the URLs in the imagemap in a
more readable fashion. If you leave those off, the browser can only display
the "bare" URLs. The ALT text is required if you want your document to be
valid.
Notes
Coordinates are specified in X,Y order: COORDS="1,0,10,19" means from
X=1, Y=0 to X=10, Y=19. The top left corner is (0,0).
If you have an area which should not do anything, not even go to the URL
specified in the default area, use NOHREF.
Just like with IMG, there can be no markup inside the ALT attribute.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 2.7.4. BASEFONT - Default font size ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
Appearance: <BASEFONT SIZE=n.>
Attributes: SIZE=n.
Contents: None (Empty).
May occur in: DIV, CENTER, BLOCKQUOTE, FORM, TH, TD, DT, DD, LI, P, H1,
H2, H3, H4, H5, H6, ADDRESS, TT, I, B, U, STRIKE, EM,
STRONG, DFN, CODE, SAMP, KBD, VAR, CITE, FONT, APPLET,
CAPTION.
The BASEFONT tag is used to suggest a default font size. FONT tags using a
relative font size will use the value set here. The SIZE attribute is an
integer value ranging from 1 to 7. The base font size applies to the normal
and preformatted text but not to headings, except where these are modified
using the FONT element with a relative font size.
Notes
Do not use FONT or BASEFONT to manipulate the font appearance, use BIG
and SMALL for local changes, and style sheets as a more general solution.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 2.7.5. BR - Forced line break ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
Appearance: <BR>
Attributes: CLEAR=left|all|right|none
Contents: None (Empty).
May occur in: DIV, CENTER, BLOCKQUOTE, FORM, TH, TD, DT, DD, LI, P, H1,
H2, H3, H4, H5, H6, ADDRESS, TT, I, B, U, STRIKE, EM,
STRONG, DFN, CODE, SAMP, KBD, VAR, CITE, FONT, APPLET,
CAPTION.
The BR tag is used to force line breaks within text. Normally, linebreaks are
treated as a space by browsers (except inside the PRE tag). The optional CLEAR
attribute is used when you have an IMG image in your text. If that image uses
ALIGN=LEFT or ALIGN=RIGHT, the text will flow around it. If you have text you
want below the image, you can do this with <BR CLEAR=LEFT> or CLEAR=RIGHT to
force scrolling down to a clear left or right margin, respectively. Using
CLEAR=ALL will scroll down until both marings are clear. CLEAR=NONE is the
default, and does nothing.
Notes
Some people use multiple BR tags to force whitespace. This is not
required by the specs, so it may not work in all browsers.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 2.7.6. FONT - Font appearance ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
Appearance: <FONT> </FONT>
Attributes: SIZE=string, COLOR=#RRGGBB
Contents: TT, I, B, U, STRIKE, EM, STRONG, DFN, CODE, SAMP, KBD, VAR,
CITE, APPLET, BASEFONT, BR, MAP, INPUT, SELECT, TEXTAREA and
plain text.
May occur in: DIV, CENTER, BLOCKQUOTE, FORM, TH, TD, DT, DD, LI, P, H1,
H2, H3, H4, H5, H6, ADDRESS, TT, I, B, U, STRIKE, EM,
STRONG, DFN, CODE, SAMP, KBD, VAR, CITE, FONT, APPLET,
CAPTION.
The FONT tag can be used to change the appearance of the current block, in
terms of size and color. The SIZE attribute can either take an absolute value,
ranging from 1 (smallest) to 7 (largest), or a relative value. Using the
latter will change the font relative to the current font size. For example,
<FONT SIZE="+1"> will make the font size one step bigger.
The COLOR attribute takes a hex value, which is the RGB-notation of the
desired color. You can also use a color name, although the names are less
widely supported than the codes. See the section on BODY for a more detailed
explanation on how to specify colors.
Notes
Avoid making extreme font changes if possible. They can make a document
hard to read. If possible, use BIG instead of <FONT SIZE="+1"> and SMALL
instead of <FONT SIZE="-1">.
The color attribute is not very widely supported, so do not rely on it.
None of the browsers which support FONT allow their users to disable it.
It is possible to disable body colors, so if you use FONT COLOR to change
font colors and the visitor has overriden your body colors, the text may
wind up invisible.
Do not use the FONT tag to emulate headers. Indexers rely on the six
header elements to generate an overview of a document, and they will not
be able to index your document if you use FONT instead. FONT should be
used only as an enhancement of the presentation.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 2.7.7. IMG - Inline images ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
Appearance: <IMG SRC=URL>
Attributes: SRC=URL, ALT=string, ALIGN=left|right|top|middle|bottom,
HEIGHT=n., WIDTH=n., BORDER=n., HSPACE=n., VSPACE=n.,
USEMAP=URL, ISMAP
Contents: None (Empty).
May occur in: DIV, CENTER, BLOCKQUOTE, FORM, TH, TD, DT, DD, LI, P, H1,
H2, H3, H4, H5, H6, ADDRESS, TT, I, B, U, STRIKE, EM,
STRONG, DFN, CODE, SAMP, KBD, VAR, CITE, FONT, APPLET,
CAPTION.
The IMG tag is used to insert images within text. These are often called
"inline" images. Note that the IMG tag is not a block tag by itself, so it
must be used only within a block element. The location of the image file
should be specified in the SRC attribute. It can be a relative or an absolute
URL. When the image cannot be displayed for whatever reason, the browser
should display the ALT text instead. The WIDTH and HEIGHT attributes should
contain the image's dimensions. This allows a browser to lay out the page in
advance, as it now knows where the text below the image should be drawn.
ALIGN controls the alignment of the image with respect to the text. Using a
value of LEFT or RIGHT will make the image line up against the left or right
margin, and text will flow around it. To force text below such an aligned
image, use BR with the CLEAR attribute. The values TOP, MIDDLE and BOTTOM
specify where any text following the image should be put. If more than one
line follows after the image, it will be put below the image.
VSPACE and HSPACE get a numeric value, indicating the number of pixels that
should be left free around the image. VSPACE covers vertical spacing and
HSPACE the horizontal spacing.
The BORDER attribute is used when the image is a link. It indicates that the
browser should draw a border of the indicated size around the image to show
that it is a link. It's most often used as BORDER=0 to turn it off. This has
the disadvantage that the image must make it very clear that it's a hyperlink.
ISMAP and USEMAP are used for imagemaps. The ISMAP attribute specifies that
the link that this image is in goes to an imagemap program on the server, so
the browser can send the coordinates of the selected location to the server.
USEMAP is used for a so-called client-side imagemap. It specifies the URL of
the imagemap information. Support for this is limited, especially if the URL
points to a different document rather than an inline anchor. See the section
on the MAP tag for more information about client-side imagemaps.
Notes
Most browsers only support GIF and JPEG file types for inline images.
The ALT text may not contain markup, other than entities. Not all
browsers support entities in ALT text, so be careful.
Although the ALT attribute is not required, it is good practice to add
it. It should replace the image's meaning, and not just provide a
description of the image! If the image is purely decorational, use ALT=""
or a decorative ALT text like "* " if possible.
Using WIDTH and HEIGHT with incorrect values, or with percentage values
is not valid. Some browsers (most notably Netscape) resize the image to
the indicated size, but this often gives very poor results. Other
browsers simply ignore the WIDTH and HEIGHT attributes in such a case.
Browsers which do not draw boxes around hyperlinked images will not honor
the BORDER attribute.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 2.7.8. MAP - Client-side imagemap ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
Appearance: <MAP NAME=string> </MAP>
Attributes: NAME=string
Contents: AREA.
May occur in: DIV, CENTER, BLOCKQUOTE, FORM, TH, TD, DT, DD, LI, P, H1,
H2, H3, H4, H5, H6, ADDRESS, TT, I, B, U, STRIKE, EM,
STRONG, DFN, CODE, SAMP, KBD, VAR, CITE, FONT, APPLET,
CAPTION.
When you use a client-side imagemap, the information on the "hot spots"
(clickable areas) in the image is defined here. Every selectable area should
be mentioned in an AREA tag inside the MAP tag. The NAME attribute on the MAP
tag assigns a name to the imagemap. The URL for the client-side imagemap
should point to this.
For example, if you have a map named "foo", you could reference to it with
<IMG SRC="map.gif" USEMAP="#foo"> if the image was on the same page.
Notes
Client-side imagemaps are not widely supported yet, so try to offer a
textual alternative or also use a server-side imagemap. This can be done
by putting the IMG tag with the USEMAP attribute inside an A and by
adding the ISMAP attribute.
Having the imagemap data in a separate file is not as widely supported as
inlined data.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 2.7.9. PARAM - Parameters for Java applet ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
Appearance: <PARAM NAME=x VALUE=y>
Attributes: NAME=string VALUE=string
Contents: None (Empty).
May occur in: APPLET.
The PARAM element is used to provide "command-line" arguments to a Java
applet, which is embedded in a document with the APPLET element. It has two
attributes: NAME specifies the name of the argument, and VALUE specifies the
value for this argument.
Notes
In a Java applet, the names of arguments are treated in a case-sensitive
manner, so make sure you get the case right in the PARAM tag.
Anyone can take the source of your Java page and change the values you
supply for your parameters. Make sure the applet can handle this.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 2.7.10. STRIKE - Strike-through text ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
Appearance: <STRIKE> </STRIKE>
Attributes: None.
Contents: TT, I, B, U, STRIKE, EM, STRONG, DFN, CODE, SAMP, KBD, VAR,
CITE, APPLET, BASEFONT, BR, MAP, INPUT, SELECT, TEXTAREA and
plain text.
May occur in: DIV, CENTER, BLOCKQUOTE, FORM, TH, TD, DT, DD, LI, P, H1,
H2, H3, H4, H5, H6, ADDRESS, TT, I, B, U, STRIKE, EM,
STRONG, DFN, CODE, SAMP, KBD, VAR, CITE, FONT, APPLET,
CAPTION.
The STRIKE tag specifies that the enclosed text should be rendered in a
strike-through appearance. Usually this is done with a line through the middle
of the text.
Notes
Since this tag is new, support for it is not universal. If you absolutely
require strikethrough text, you will have to use an image.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 2.8. Form elements ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
With forms, the user can enter data and send it to a program on the server.
This program can then process the data and send a certain request back. The
program to process the form, as well as the method to send the data to it, are
specified using the FORM element. The ACTION attribute indicates the processing
script, and the METHOD attribute indicates the method: GET or POST. Forms may
not be nested, but you can have multiple forms on a document.
INPUT - Input field, button, etc.
SELECT - Selection list
- OPTION - Selection list option
TEXTAREA - Input area
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 2.8.1. INPUT - Input field ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
Appearance: <INPUT TYPE=x NAME=y>
Attributes:
TYPE=text|password|checkbox|radio|submit|reset|file|hidden|image,
NAME=string, VALUE=string, CHECKED, SIZE=n., MAXLENGTH=n.,
SRC=URL, ALIGN=top|middle|bottom|left|right
Contents: None (Empty).
May occur in: DIV, CENTER, BLOCKQUOTE, FORM, TH, TD, DT, DD, LI, P, H1,
H2, H3, H4, H5, H6, ADDRESS, TT, I, B, U, STRIKE, EM,
STRONG, DFN, CODE, SAMP, KBD, VAR, CITE, FONT, APPLET,
CAPTION, but must be inside a FORM.
The INPUT tag is probably the most useful tag inside forms. It can generate
buttons, input fields and checkboxes. In all cases, the NAME attribute must be
set.
TYPE=text
This generates a input field, where the user can enter up
to MAXLENGTH characters. The SIZE attribute lists the
length of the input field (if the user enters more
characters, the text will scroll). The VALUE attribute
specifies the initial value for the input field.
TYPE=password
Same as TYPE=text, but the text will be hidden by "*" or
similar characters. It is still sent in the clear to the
server, though.
TYPE=checkbox
Produces a checkbox. It has two states, on and off. When
it is on when the form is submitted, it will be sent as
"name=on", otherwise it is ignored altogether. If you use
CHECKED, it will come up checked (selected) initially.
TYPE=radio
Produces a radio button. A radio button always exists in a
group. All members of this group should have the same NAME
attribute, and different VALUEs. The VALUE of the selected
radio button will be sent to the server. You must specify
CHECKED on exactly one radio button, which then will come
up selected initially.
TYPE=submit
Produces a button, which when pressed sends the contents
of the form to the server. You can have more than one
submit button in the form. Each should have a different
NAME. The name and value of the pressed button will be
sent to the server as well. The value of the VALUE
attribute is typically used as text on the submit button.
TYPE=reset
Also produces a button, which will restore the form to its
original state if pressed. The value of the VALUE
attribute is typically used as text on the reset button.
TYPE=file
Allows the user to upload a file. It is still very new, so
it is not very widely supported. It is typically presented
as an input box with a button to start browsing the local
hard disk. This way, a user can specify one or more
filename(s) to upload.
TYPE=hidden
Allows you to embed information in the form which you do
not want changed. This can be useful if the document is
generated by a script and you need to store state
information. NAME and VALUE of this input field will be
sent to the server without modifications.
TYPE=image
Functions similar to a submit button, but uses an image
instead. The ALIGN attribute controls the alignment of the
image. The coordinates of the selected region will also be
sent to the server, in the form of "NAME.x=n.&NAME.y=n.".
A text browser will treat it as identical to a normal
submit button.
Notes
Do not expect that if you set MAXLENGTH, you will get no more than so
many characters. Anyone can modify his local copy of your form to enter
as many characters as he wants.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 2.8.2. OPTION - Selection list option ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
Appearance: <OPTION> [</OPTION>]
Attributes: VALUE=string, SELECTED
Contents: Plain text.
May occur in: SELECT.
The OPTION tag is used inside a SELECT selection list to indicate an option.
You may not use markup in an option. All options listed will be displayed in a
list or drop-down box, and the user can select one or more from the list. The
VALUE of each option should be unique.
If you specify the SELECTED attribute, this option will appear selected when
the form comes up initially.
Notes
Pre-selecting more than one item should only be done if the SELECT tag
has the MULTIPLE attribute defined.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 2.8.3. SELECT - Selection list ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
Appearance: <SELECT NAME=string> </SELECT>
Attributes: NAME=string, SIZE=n., MULTIPLE
Contents: OPTION.
May occur in: DIV, CENTER, BLOCKQUOTE, FORM, TH, TD, DT, DD, LI, P, H1,
H2, H3, H4, H5, H6, ADDRESS, TT, I, B, U, STRIKE, EM,
STRONG, DFN, CODE, SAMP, KBD, VAR, CITE, FONT, APPLET,
CAPTION, but must be inside a FORM.
The SELECT tag is used inside forms to generate a list of items from which the
user can select one or more. Each item is listed in an OPTION tag. The value
of the selected OPTION tag is assigned to the NAME of the SELECT tag, and both
are sent to the server when the form is submitted.
The SIZE attribute indicates how many items are visible at once. If set to
one, you will get a drop-down list. If it's more than one, you will get a
scrollable list. If the MULTIPLE attribute is selected, the user can select
more than one item from the list.
Notes
Exactly how a user can select more than one item at once is dependant on
his platform, so do not include "instructions" on how to do this. They
may be wrong and can cause a lot of confusion.
If you use MULTIPLE, set the SIZE to more than one. This makes it easier
to select more than one item.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 2.8.4. TEXTAREA - Input area ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
Appearance: <TEXTAREA NAME=string, ROWS=n., COLS=n.> </TEXTAREA>
Attributes: NAME=string, ROWS=n., COLS=n.
Contents: Plain text.
May occur in: DIV, CENTER, BLOCKQUOTE, FORM, TH, TD, DT, DD, LI, P, H1,
H2, H3, H4, H5, H6, ADDRESS, TT, I, B, U, STRIKE, EM,
STRONG, DFN, CODE, SAMP, KBD, VAR, CITE, FONT, APPLET,
CAPTION, but must be inside a FORM.
The TEXTAREA tag, used inside FORMs, sets up an area in which the user can
type text. This text will be sent to the server when the form is submitted.
The user can enter more than one line (as opposed to <INPUT TYPE=text> which
only permits one line), although he will have to break lines himself.
The NAME attribute assigns the text area a name, used by the script which
processes the form. ROWS and COLS are used to specify the height and width of
the text area, in number of characters.
To supply default text for the text area, put it inside the TEXTAREA tag. You
may not use markup for this default value.
Notes
Not all browsers send the linebreaks that users type (if they do so at
all), so your script may have to rewrap the text itself.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 2.9. List elements ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
HTML knows three major types of lists: ordered, unordered and "definition"
lists. The former two differ only in the labeling of each list item; ordered
lists are numbered and unordered lists are bulleted.
A definition list is similar to an unordered list, except in that it uses two
elements per item: DT marks up the term to be defined, and DD provides its
definition. These are the only two elements that may appear inside DL. A
definition list typically appears without bullets.
UL - Unordered list
OL - Ordered list
DIR - Directory list
MENU - Menu item list
LI - List item
DL - Definition list
- DT - Definition term
- DD- Definition
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 2.9.1. DD - Definition ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
Appearance: <DD> [</DD>]
Attributes: None.
Contents: P, UL, OL, DIR, MENU, PRE, DL, DIV, CENTER, BLOCKQUOTE, HR,
TABLE, ADDRESS and TT, I, B, U, STRIKE, EM, STRONG, DFN,
CODE, SAMP, KBD, VAR, CITE, APPLET, BASEFONT, BR, MAP,
INPUT, SELECT, TEXTAREA and plain text.
May occur in: DL.
The DD tag is used inside a DL definition list to provide the definition of
the text in the DT tag. It may contain block elements but also plain text and
markup. The end tag is optional, as it's always clear from the context where
the tag's contents ends.
A typical rendering is indented, one line below the DT, but this is not
guaranteed.
Notes
Some people use this tag out of its proper context (DL only) to achieve
an "indent" in text. Don't do this, it is not valid and not guaranteed to
work.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 2.9.2. DIR - Directory list ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
Appearance: <DIR> </DIR>
Attributes: COMPACT
Contents: LI.
May occur in: BODY, DIV, CENTER, BLOCKQUOTE, TH, TD, DD, LI.
The DIR element is similar to the UL element. It represents a list of short
items, typically up to 20 characters each. Items in a directory list may be
arranged in columns, typically 24 characters wide.
Notes
It is not permitted to use a block elements, list elements or TABLE in a
LI inside a MENU or DIR.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 2.9.3. DL - Definition list ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
Appearance: <DL> </DL>
Attributes: COMPACT
Contents: DT, DD.
May occur in: BODY, DIV, CENTER, BLOCKQUOTE, TH, TD, DD, LI.
DL is used to provide a list of items with associated definitions. Every item
should be put in a DT, and its definition goes in the DD directly following
it. This list is typically rendered without bullets of any kind.
While it is legal to have a DL with only DD or DT tags, it doesn't make much
sense (what good is a definition without a term?) and you shouldn't expect it
to get rendered as a normal list.
Notes
DL may not contain plain text or any tag other than DT or DD.
Do not use DL to create an indented section of text. This is not
guaranteed to work and it is syntactically invalid HTML.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 2.9.4. DT - Definition term ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
Appearance: <DT> [</DT>]
Attributes: None.
Contents: TT, I, B, U, STRIKE, EM, STRONG, DFN, CODE, SAMP, KBD, VAR,
CITE, APPLET, BASEFONT, BR, MAP, INPUT, SELECT, TEXTAREA and
plain text.
May occur in: DL.
The DT tag is used inside DL. It marks up a term whose definition is provide
by the next DD. The DT tag may only contain text-level markup.
Notes
Although it is legal, using a DT without a corresponding DD tag is quite
pointless.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 2.9.5. LI - List item ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
Appearance: <LI> [</LI>]
Attributes: TYPE=disc|square|circle when in UL, TYPE=1|a|A|i|I when in
OL, VALUE=n.
Contents: P, UL, OL, DIR, MENU, PRE, DL, DIV, CENTER, BLOCKQUOTE, HR,
TABLE, ADDRESS and TT, I, B, U, STRIKE, EM, STRONG, DFN,
CODE, SAMP, KBD, VAR, CITE, APPLET, BASEFONT, BR, MAP,
INPUT, SELECT, TEXTAREA and plain text.
May occur in: UL, OL, DIR, MENU.
The LI element is used to mark list items within a list. When the list used is
OL, ordered list, the LI element will be rendered with a number. The
appearance of that number can be controlled with the TYPE attribute.
Similarly, inside an unordered list UL the type of bullet that is displayed
can be controlled with TYPE. DIR and MENU can't be controlled this way, as
they are not required to be bulleted or numbered. For ordered lists, you can
also reset the sequence with the VALUE attribute.
The TYPEs for ordered lists should give the following appearance:
1 - Arabic numbers (default) (1, 2, 3, 4, ...)
a - Alphanumeric, lowercase (a, b, c, d, ...)
A - Alphanumeric, uppercase (A, B, C, D, ...)
i - Roman numbers, lowercase (i, ii, iii, iv, ...)
I - Roman numbers, uppercase (I, II, III, IV, ...)
Notes
The attributes on LI are new with HTML 3.2, and so not supported by all
browsers yet.
Using LI outside its proper context to get a bullet in the text is not
guaranteed to work. A browser is free to ignore such an out-of-context
item.
When the LI element is used inside MENU or DIR, it is not permitted to
include block elements, list elements or TABLEs in the LI's contents.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 2.9.6. MENU - Menu item list ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
Appearance: <MENU> </MENU>
Attributes: COMPACT
Contents: LI.
May occur in: BODY, DIV, CENTER, BLOCKQUOTE, TH, TD, DD, LI.
The MENU item produces a list like UL, but it should be rendered more compact.
Not all browsers make this distinction, and some render it without a bullet at
all.
Notes
It is not permitted to use a block elements, list elements or TABLE in a
LI inside a MENU or DIR.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 2.9.7. OL - Ordered list ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
Appearance: <OL> </OL>
Attributes: TYPE=1|a|A|i|I, START=n., COMPACT
Contents: LI
May occur in: BODY, DIV, CENTER, BLOCKQUOTE, TH, TD, DD, LI.
The OL tag marks up an ordered list of items. Each item should be marked up
with a LI, and it will be displayed with a number in front of it. The
appearance of the number can be controlled with the TYPE attribute:
1 - Arabic numbers (default) (1, 2, 3, 4, ...)
a - Alphanumeric, lowercase (a, b, c, d, ...)
A - Alphanumeric, uppercase (A, B, C, D, ...)
i - Roman numbers, lowercase (i, ii, iii, iv, ...)
I - Roman numbers, uppercase (I, II, III, IV, ...)
The START attribute indicates where the list should start. The COMPACT
attribute indicates that the list contains only short list items, so it may be
rendered in a more compact way. This is currently not widely supported.
Notes
If you want a list with bullets rather than numbers, use UL.
Not all browsers support TYPE and START, so do not assume that they will
work for your visitor.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 2.9.8. UL - Unordered list ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
Appearance: <UL> </UL>
Attributes: TYPE=disc|square|circle, COMPACT
Contents: LI.
May occur in: BODY, DIV, CENTER, BLOCKQUOTE, TH, TD, DD, LI.
The UL element indicates an unordered list. Every item in a list is marked
with LI, and usually appears with a bullet of some sort in front of it. If you
need numbering, use OL for an ordered list.
The type of bullet can be suggested with the TYPE attribute. You have three
possible styles: "disc" for a closed bullet, "square" for an open square and
"circle" for an open bullet. The COMPACT attribute is used to indicate that
the list items are short, so the browser can render the list more compact. For
example, it could put more than one item on a line.
Notes
Do not put anything but LI list items inside an UL.
The COMPACT attribute is not widely implemented.
Not all browsers support the TYPE attribute, so if you use it, make sure
the list still "works" without it.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 2.10. Table elements. ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
Tables are used to present tabular information. In HTML, tables are
constructed as a series of rows. Before the first row, the CAPTION element
provides a caption for the table.
CAPTION - Table caption
TR - Table row
TH - Header cell
TD - Table cell
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 2.10.1. CAPTION - Table caption ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
Appearance: <CAPTION> </CAPTION>
Attributes: ALIGN=top|bottom
Contents: TT, I, B, U, STRIKE, EM, STRONG, DFN, CODE, SAMP, KBD, VAR,
CITE, APPLET, BASEFONT, BR, MAP, INPUT, SELECT, TEXTAREA and
plain text.
May occur in: TABLE.
The CAPTION tag is used to provide a caption for a TABLE. This caption can
either appear above or below the table. This can be indicated with the ALIGN
attribute. It is usually centered with respect to the table itself, and
usually appears in bold or is emphasized in some other way.
The tag should appear directly below the TABLE tag, before the first TR.
Notes
Although you can use all text-level markup inside a CAPTION, it should be
brief, so don't include images or large amounts of text in it.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 2.10.2. TABLE - HTML Tables ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
Appearance: <TABLE> </TABLE>
Attributes: ALIGN=left|center|right, WIDTH=n.|p%, BORDER[=n.],
CELLSPACING=n., CELLPADDING=n.
Contents: One CAPTION, TR.
May occur in: BODY, DIV, CENTER, BLOCKQUOTE, TH, TD, DD, LI.
An HTML table starts with an optional caption followed by one or more rows.
Each row consists of one or more cells, which can be either header or data
cells. Cells can overlap across rows and columns.
The ALIGN attribute controls the alignment of the table itself, but not of the
individual cells. This can be set either in the TR element for an entire row,
or in the TD and TH elements for individual cells. The WIDTH attribute can be
a pixel width or a percentage. It indicates the suggested width of the table,
although the browser can ignore this if it is not possible. A "100%" value
means the table will span across the entire browser window.
You can get a border around the table with the BORDER attribute. If you use
BORDER without a value, it defaults to a width of one. Otherwise the border is
drawn as wide as you specify. You cannot widen or shrink the lines between
table cells or rows.
However, you can increase the whitespace inside a table. The CELLPADDING
attribute indicates how many pixels there should be between a cell's contents
and the border. CELLSPACING indicates how much whitespace (in pixels) there
should be between individual cells.
As an example, here is a table from the HTML 3.0 draft:
<TABLE BORDER>
<CAPTION>A test table with merged cells</CAPTION>
<TR><TH ROWSPAN=2><TH COLSPAN=2>Average
<TH ROWSPAN=2>other<BR>category<TH>Misc
<TR><TH>height<TH>weight
<TR><TH ALIGN=LEFT>males<TD>1.9<TD>0.003
<TR><TH ALIGN=LEFT ROWSPAN=2>females<TD>1.7<TD>0.002
</TABLE>
This could appear as follows, in a text browser:
A test table with merged cells
/--------------------------------------------------\
| | Average | other | Misc |
| |-------------------| category |--------|
| | height | weight | | |
|-----------------------------------------|--------|
| males | 1.9 | 0.003 | | |
|-----------------------------------------|--------|
| females | 1.7 | 0.002 | | |
\--------------------------------------------------/
Notes
Some browsers (in particular, all versions of Netscape) do not honor the
ALIGN attribute on a table. For these browsers, enclose the entire table
in a CENTER or <DIV ALIGN=CENTER> tag.
Avoid using pixel widths for a table. They force that the browser window
is sized to a particular width to see the entire table, which is not
always desirable, let alone possible.
Tables are often used for page layout purposes. This is not recommended,
since it totally screws up the display for browsers which do not support
tables, and it also often gives awkward results on small screens.
The HTML 3 draft did not include the values for the BORDER attribute, so
browsers which use this table model might draw a border around your table
when you use BORDER=0.
An empty table cell is typically drawn differently than a non-empty cell.
If you need a table cell with non content, but with the same appareance
as a non-empty cell, put " " in the cell.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 2.10.3. TD - Table cell ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
Appearance: <TD> [</TD>]
Attributes: ROWSPAN=n., COLSPAN=n., NOWRAP, ALIGN=left|right|center,
VALIGN=top|middle|bottom|baseline, WIDTH=n., HEIGHT=n.
Contents: H1, H2, H3, H4, H5, H6, P, UL, OL, DIR, MENU, PRE, DL, DIV,
CENTER, BLOCKQUOTE, HR, TABLE, ADDRESS, as well as TT, I, B,
U, STRIKE, EM, STRONG, DFN, CODE, SAMP, KBD, VAR, CITE,
APPLET, BASEFONT, BR, MAP, INPUT, SELECT, TEXTAREA and plain
text.
May occur in: TR.
The TD tag is used to mark up individual cells inside a table row. It may
contain almost all tags, including nested tables. If the cell is a label of
some sort, use TH instead of TD.
The NOWRAP attribute indicates the contents of the current cell should not be
wrapped. You must use BR in the cell to force line breaks to prevent the
entire cell from showing up as just one line.
The ROWSPAN and COLSPAN attributes indicate how many rows or columns this cell
overlaps. If you use these attributes, make sure you count correctly or you
can get some very weird results.
The ALIGN and VALIGN attributes control the horizontal and vertical alignment
of the current cell. ALIGN can be set for left, right or centered cells.
VALIGN indicates that the table cell's contents should appear at the top, the
middle or the bottom of the row. The BASELINE value indicates that all cells
in this row should share the same baseline for the first line of text. Note
that align and valign attributes for a cell override the values set for the
row.
The WIDTH and HEIGHT attributes can be used to suggest a width and height for
this cell. This should be a value in pixels. Setting different widths for
multiple cells in the same column, or different heights for multiple cells in
one row can cause unexpected effects.
For an example on how to construct tables, please see the section on the TABLE
tag.
Notes
While it's not strictly required, it is good practice to close each table
cell explicitly. It makes your table easier to read.
If you include a table inside a table cell, be sure to close all cells
and rows. It is not required, but some browsers get the nested tables
wrong and render them incorrectly.
An empty cell is usually rendered differently than a cell with just
whitespace inside it. This especially shows if you have a border defined
for your table.
If you use images in a table cell, be sure to specify the WIDTH and
HEIGHT attributes in the IMG tag. This allows the browser to determine
the size of the cell in advance, so it can draw the table before the
image is loaded. Otherwise, the table will not appear until the image has
been loaded. This can mean a considerable delay before your page
displays.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 2.10.4. TH - Header cell ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
Appearance: <TH> [</TH>]
Attributes: ROWSPAN=n., COLSPAN=n., NOWRAP, ALIGN=left|right|center,
VALIGN=top|middle|bottom|baseline, WIDTH=n., HEIGHT=n.
Contents: H1, H2, H3, H4, H5, H6, P, UL, OL, DIR, MENU, PRE, DL, DIV,
CENTER, BLOCKQUOTE, HR, TABLE, ADDRESS, as well as TT, I, B,
U, STRIKE, EM, STRONG, DFN, CODE, SAMP, KBD, VAR, CITE,
APPLET, BASEFONT, BR, MAP, INPUT, SELECT, TEXTAREA and plain
text.
May occur in: TR.
Like the TD tag, a TH is used for a table cell. However, TH should be used
when the cell's contents is a heading of some sort, for example, when the text
is a label for a row of column.
See the section on TD for an explanation of the various attributes.
For an example on how to construct tables, please see the section on the TABLE
tag.
Notes
While it's not strictly required, it is good practice to close each table
cell explicitly. It makes your table easier to read.
If you include a table inside a table cell, be sure to close all cells
and rows. It is not required, but some browsers get the nested tables
wrong and render them incorrectly.
An empty cell is usually rendered differently than a cell with just
whitespace inside it. This especially shows if you have a border defined
for your table.
If you use images in a table cell, be sure to specify the WIDTH and
HEIGHT attributes in the IMG tag. This allows the browser to determine
the size of the cell in advance, so it can draw the table before the
image is loaded. Otherwise, the table will not appear until the image has
been loaded. This can mean a considerable delay before your page
displays.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 2.10.5. TR - Table row ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
Appearance: <TR> [</TR>]
Attributes: ALIGN=left|right|center, VALIGN=top|middle|bottom|baseline
Contents: TH, TD.
May occur in: TABLE.
HTML tables are constructed as a sequence of rows. Each row of table cells
should be enclosed in a TR tag. The end tag is optional, since it is usually
obvious to see where a row ends - where the new row begins, or where the
entire table ends.
The ALIGN and VALIGN attributes control the horizontal and vertical alignment
of the entire row. ALIGN can be set for left, right or centered cells. VALIGN
indicates that the table cell's contents should appear at the top, the middle
or the bottom of the row. The BASELINE value indicates that all cells in this
row should share the same baseline for the first line of text.
For an example on how to construct tables, see the section on the TABLE tag.
Notes
While it's not strictly required, it is good practice to close each table
row explicitly. It makes your table easier to read.
If you include a table inside a table cell, be sure to close all cells
and rows. If you don't, some browsers may get the nested tables wrong and
render it incorrectly.
ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ 3. About the WDG and copyright information ΓòÉΓòÉΓòÉ
The Web Design Group was founded in 1996 to promote the creation of Websites
that are accessible by all users, regardless of platform, browser or other
requirements. One of the earliest efforts was the publishing of the Wilbur
Reference, a complete overview of all HTML 3.2 elements. This reference has now
been published in several books, and is used in at least five HTML editors.
To make things easier for HTML authors, there is also an 'offline' version of
the reference available. Currently, there are Windows help files, OS/2 INF
files and an archive with HTML sources available for downloading.
This reference is free for personal use. It may be redistributed in unaltered
form, provided there is no money charged for the reference and it is made clear
that the reference is available on the World Wide Web, on the URL
http://www.htmlhelp.com/reference/wilbur/
Distribution of the reference in any form (including, but not limited to, the
Windows help file, the OS/2 INF or HLP version) in a commercial product of any
kind requires prior permission from its copyright holder. The WDG requests that
companies or individuals who want to bundle the reference with their product
send a free, fully licensed and registered (if appliciable) version of the
product to each WDG member. The same applies to books.
OS/2 developers might find it interesting to know that there is also a "help"
version of this reference available, which can be used for context-sensitive
help in all OS/2 PM programs. This version is available upon request.
For any questions, requests, suggestions and bug reports, please contact the
author and copyright holder of this reference at galactus@htmlhelp.com (Arnoud
"Galactus" Engelfriet).