Basic Computer Notions Introduction to HTML

Next Introduction Separation of form and content Tags Identify file contents as HTML 5 of 49 Head and body Head Head (cont'd) Head (cont'd) Head (cont'd) Body Paragraphs Paragraphs (cont'd) Emphasis Emphasis (cont'd) Emphasis (cont'd) Headings Lists Lists (cont'd) Lists (cont'd) Lists (cont'd) Address Line break Horizontal rule Links Links (cont'd) Links (cont'd) Links (cont'd) Links (cont'd) Links (cont'd) Links (cont'd) Links (cont'd) Links (cont'd) Images Images (cont'd) Images (cont'd) Images (cont'd) Images (cont'd) Links to images Links to images (cont'd) Links to images (cont'd) Links to other media Embedded objects Tables Frames Summary of elements Checking syntax Learning more about HTML Style guides for creating Web pages

Identify file contents as HTML (cont'd)

Elements, specified by tags, are organized hierarchically.

The entire file contents (excluding the DOCTYPE line) should be tagged as HTML:

<html>
 ...
</html>

It is recommended that the default text-processing language of the Web page be specified in the <html> tag, e.g.,
<html lang="en-CA"> for Canadian English.
This can help guide searching, text-to-speech output, etc.


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R. Funnell

Last modified: Sat, 2007 Mar 10 15:45:22

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