Created by Elian Tejada
about 8 years ago
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Question | Answer |
HTML | HTML (Hypertext Markup Language) is the set of markup symbols or codes inserted in a file intended for display on a World Wide Web browser page. The markup tells the Web browser how to display a Web page's words and images for the user. |
HTML ejemplo | <HTML> <HEAD> <TITLE>Un Titulo para el Browser de turno </TITLE> </HEAD> <BODY> <!-- Aqui va todo lo chachi --> <H1>Otro título, esta vez más largo. </H1> <P> <IMG SRC= "./felix.gif "ALIGN= "MIDDLE " ALT= "EL Gato Felix ">Hoola. |
Head | The <head> element is a container for metadata (data about data) and is placed between the <html> tag and the <body> tag. HTML metadata is data about the HTML document. Metadata is not displayed. Metadata typically define the document title, character set, styles, links, scripts, and other meta information. The following tags describe metadata: <title>, <style>, <meta>, <link>, <script>, and <base>. |
Title | The <title> tag is required in all HTML documents and it defines the title of the document. The <title> element: defines a title in the browser toolbar provides a title for the page when it is added to favorites displays a title for the page in search-engine results. |
body | The <body> tag defines the document's body. The <body> element contains all the contents of an HTML document, such as text, hyperlinks, images, tables, lists, etc. |
h1 | The <h1> to <h6> tags are used to define HTML headings. <h1> defines the most important heading. <h6> defines the least important heading. |
p | Setting the style of an HTML element, can be done with the style attribute. The HTML style attribute has the following syntax: <tagname style="property:value;"> |
br | Use the <hr> tag to define a thematic change in the content: <h1>HTML</h1> <p>HTML is a language for describing web pages.....</p> <hr> <h1>CSS</h1> <p>CSS defines how to display HTML elements.....</p> |
img | The <img> tag defines an image in an HTML page. The <img> tag has two required attributes: src and alt. Note: Images are not technically inserted into an HTML page, images are linked to HTML pages. The <img> tag creates a holding space for the referenced image. Tip: To link an image to another document, simply nest the <img> tag inside <a> tags. <img src="smiley.gif" alt="Smiley face" height="42" width="42"> |
a | The <a> tag defines a hyperlink, which is used to link from one page to another. The most important attribute of the <a> element is the href attribute, which indicates the link's destination. By default, links will appear as follows in all browsers: An unvisited link is underlined and blue A visited link is underlined and purple An active link is underlined and red |
bgcolor | The bgcolor attribute specifies the background color of a document. |
text | In the previous chapter, you learned about the HTML style attribute. HTML also defines special elements for defining text with a special meaning. HTML uses elements like <b> and <i> for formatting output, like bold or italic text. |
marquee | he HTML <marquee> element is used to insert a scrolling area of text. |
hr | The <hr> tag defines a thematic break in an HTML page (e.g. a shift of topic). The <hr> element is used to separate content (or define a change) in an HTML page. |
ol | The <ol> tag defines an ordered list. An ordered list can be numerical or alphabetical. Use the <li> tag to define list items. |
ul | The <ul> tag defines an unordered (bulleted) list. Use the <ul> tag together with the <li> tag to create unordered lists. |
li | The <li> tag defines a list item. The <li> tag is used in ordered lists(<ol>), unordered lists (<ul>), and in menu lists (<menu>). |
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