DIR Return Create A Forum - Home
---------------------------------------------------------
LuckVintage Technical Support
HTML https://luckvintage.createaforum.com
---------------------------------------------------------
*****************************************************
DIR Return to: Coding
*****************************************************
#Post#: 120--------------------------------------------------
What is HTML?
By: LuckVintage Date: November 22, 2017, 6:06 pm
---------------------------------------------------------
Firstly, HTML is short for "HyperText Markup Language". That may
sound scary, but it simply means it is a language for describing
web-pages using ordinary text. HTML is not a complex programming
language.
HTML Files
Every web page is actually a HTML file. Each HTML file is just a
plain-text file, but with a .html file extension instead of
.txt, and is made up of many HTML tags as well as the content
for a web page.
A web site will often contain many html files that link to each
other. You can edit HTML files with your favourite editor.
HTML Tags
HTML tags are the hidden keywords within a web page that define
how your web browser must format and display the content.
Most tags must have two parts, an opening and a closing part.
For example, <html> is the opening tag and </html> is the
closing tag. Note that the closing tag has the same text as the
opening tag, but has an additional forward-slash ( / )
character. I tend to interperet this as the "end" or "close"
character.
There are some tags that are an exception to this rule, and
where a closing tag is not required. The <img> tag for showing
images is one example of this.
Each HTML file must have the essential tags for it to be valid,
so that web browsers can understand it and display it correctly.
The rest of the HTML file can contain as little or as many tags
as you want to display your content.
Tag Attributes
Attributes allow you to customise a tag, and are defined within
the opening tag, for example:
<img src="image1.jpg"> or <p align="center"> ... </p>
Attributes are often assigned a value using the equals sign,
such as border="0" or width="50%", but there are some that only
need to be declared in the tag like this: <hr noshade>.
Most attributes are optional for most tags, and are only used
when you want to change something about the default way a tag is
displayed by the browser. However, some tags such as the <img>
tag has required attributes such as src and alt which are needed
in order for the browser to display the web page properly.
*****************************************************