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HTML Elements List
Index
A,
ABBREV,
ACRONYM,
ADDRESS,
APP,
APPLET,
AREA,
AU,
B,
BANNER,
BASE,
BASEFONT,
BDO,
BGSOUND,
BIG,
BLINK,
BLOCKQUOTE,
BODY,
BQ,
BR,
CAPTION,
CENTER,
CITE,
CODE,
COL,
COLGROUP,
CREDIT,
DD,
DEL,
DFN,
DIR,
DIV,
DL,
DT,
EM,
EMBED,
FN,
FIG,
FONT,
FORM,
FRAME,
FRAMESET,
H1,
H2,
H3,
H4,
H5,
H6,
HEAD,
HP,
HR,
HTML,
I,
IMG,
INPUT,
INS,
ISINDEX,
KBD,
LANG,
LH,
LI,
LINK,
LISTING,
MAP,
MARQUEE,
MENU,
META,
NEXTID,
NOBR,
NOEMBED,
NOFRAMES,
NOTE,
OL,
OPTION,
OVERLAY,
P,
PARAM,
PERSON,
PLAINTEXT,
PRE,
Q,
S,
SAMP,
SELECT,
SMALL,
SPAN,
STRIKE,
STRONG,
SUB,
SUP,
TAB,
TABLE,
TBODY,
TD,
TEXTAREA,
TFOOT,
TH,
THEAD,
TITLE,
TR,
TT,
U,
UL,
VAR,
WBR,
XMP
Element Groups
To shorten the lists in each element to describe the "Elements Allowed
Within..." and "Allowed In Content Of..." various elements are defined
by RFC 1866 as members of a group. These group names are used throughout
the RFC 1866. Since group names can be defined to contain other group names,
this mechanism makes nesting and recursion more obvious. Note that these
element groups only deal with entities defined in RFC 1866 and do not include
any of the entities in proposed extensions.
-
block
-
Contains the groups block.forms,
list,
preformatted
and the entities DL
and P
The tables proposal defines the TABLE
element as a member of this group block
-
block.forms
-
Contains the entities BLOCKQUOTE,
FORM
and ISINDEX
-
body.content
-
Is allowed to contain the groups block,
heading,
text
and the entities HR
and ADDRESS
It is recommended that it contain only the groups block,
heading
and the entities HR,
ADDRESS
and IMG
This recommended change in the members of this group means that all
text within a body should be enclosed in some kind of block. This means
that
<h1>Heading<h1>
<p>Text ...
is recommended over
<h1>Heading<h1>
Text ...
-
font
-
Contains the entities TT,
B
and I
-
heading
-
Contains the entities H1,
H2,
H3,
H4,
H5
and H6
-
list
-
Contains the entities UL,
OL,
DIR
and MENU
Note that it does not contain DL
which is identified separately.
-
phrase
-
Contains the entities EM,
STRONG,
CODE,
SAMP,
KBD,
VAR
and CITE
-
preformated
-
Is allowed to contain the entities PRE,
XMP
and LISTING
The last two entities are deprecated and this group should contain
only the entity PRE
-
text
-
Contains the groups phrase
and font
and the entities A,
IMG
and BR
and parsed character data. Parsed character data is any valid character
data after the data has been parsed and all special
character entities have been replaced with their character data.
The internationalization proposal also includes in group text
the entities BDO,
Q,
SPAN,
SUB,
SUP
A
-
Description
-
The A element brackets (or anchors) a piece of text (and/or image) which
is identified as a hypertext link. The A element must have either an HREF
attribute or a NAME attribute. The HREF attribute identifies a destination
URL,
and the bracketed text is rendered as a hypertext link to the URL.
Browsers will display the contents of an A element with an HREF attribute
in a special manner to indicate that if the contents are selected, the
browser will execute that hypertext link. The NAME attribute identifies
a destination tag, and the bracketed text is thereby identified as an available
hypertext target within this document. Browsers do not display the
contents of an A element with a NAME attribute in any special way. However,
an A element with an HREF attribute can now be constructed by using the
document URL suffixed with #name. This will load the document,
but will position the display starting at the location of this NAME tag.
An A element with an HREF attribute can also be constructed to jump directly
to this destination tag within the same document by a URL consisting solely
of #name The presence of REL=relation in document
A with HREF to document/object B identifies a relationship that B has to
A that A recognizes/authorizes/verifies. The presence of REV=relation
of the identical relation in document B with HREF to document/object
A identifies a desired/expected/claimed relationship that B has to A, but
must be verified by checking with A.
-
Minimum Attributes
-
<A HREF="..." >characters... </A>
or
-
<A NAME="..." >characters... </A>
-
All Possible Attributes
-
<A HREF="..." NAME="..." REL="..." REV="..." URN="..." TITLE="..."
METHODS="..." LANG="..." DIR=ltr|rtl CHARSET="..." ID="..." CLASS="..."
MD="..." TARGET="..." SHAPE="...">characters... </A>
-
Elements Allowed Within...
-
members of groups heading
text
but not element <A>
-
Allowed In Content Of...
-
Any element that permits members of group text
-
Variations
-
The LANG, DIR and CHARSET attributes are introduced with the internationalization
proposal. The CHARSET attribute is a hint as to the expected character
set used by the hyperlink. Earlier proposals suggest changing the NAME
attribute to ID, declaring the NAME attribute as obsolete, and adding an
ID attribute for various elements including the paragraph and heading elements.
With the ID, MD, and CLASS attributes as part of the style sheet proposal,
this is likely to change. At present REV and REL are rarely used or supported,
and are Level 1 attributes, but are of growing interest to automated document
environments. These relationships are more commonly identified in the HEAD
of the document using the LINK
element. REL and REV can be either a comma-separated or white space separated
set of relationship(s) of the HREF link. One proposal suggests that comma
imply "or" and white space imply "and" for a list of values. These relationships
and their semantics were originally proposed to be registered with an HTML
authority, which was described at http://www.w3.org/hypertext/WWW/MarkUp/RegistrationAuthority.html,
but that link no longer responds. The entire topic of link relationships
is under active discussion and change. Early examples of relationship names
are UseIndex, UseGlossary, Annotation, Reply, Embed, Precedes, Subdocument,
Present, Search, Supersedes, History, Made, Owns, Approves, Supports, Refutes,
Includes, Interested. URN is for a Universal Resource Number, and
is not currently used or supported, and is a Level 1 attribute. RFC 1866
describes it as a preferred, more persistent identifier than the value
of HREF. TITLE is little used or supported, and is a Level 1 attribute,
but is expected to be the title of the HREF document. RFC 1866 suggests
TITLE can be displayed as a margin note or on a small box while the mouse
is over the anchor. (ed. I am unaware of any browser that has implemented
this feature.) METHODS is little used or supported, but is expected to
be a white-space-separated list of HTTP METHODS supported by the object
and accessible to the user. RFC 1866 suggests that the content of the A
element may be rendered differently depending upon the HTTP method. TARGET
is a Netscape 2.0 extension to define a window name for use by the retrieved
hyperlink. If the named window is not already open, Netscape 2.0 will open
a new window and assign it that name. See also the FRAME
element for naming a window. SHAPE is proposed to provide a mechanism to
define multiple A elements and corresponding "hotzones" within the proposed
FIG
element, to perform the equivalent function of ISMAP without the need for
writing a responding cgi-bin program. For an alternate proposal, see the
MAP
element. A is a Level 0 element.
ABBREV
-
Description
-
The ABBREV element changes the character rendering of the contents of the
element to logically represent abbreviations.
-
Minimum Attributes
-
<ABBREV>characters... </ABBREV>
-
All Possible Attributes
-
<ABBREV LANG="..." DIR=ltr|rtl ID="..." CLASS="...">characters...
</ABBREV>
-
Elements Allowed Within...
-
-In progress, to be determined-
-
Allowed In Content Of...
-
-In progress, to be determined-
-
Variations
-
The ABBREV element is a Version 3 proposed element. All character definition
elements are Level 2.
ACRONYM
-
Description
-
The ACRONYM element changes the character rendering of the contents of
the element to logically represent acronyms.
-
Minimum Attributes
-
<ACRONYM>characters... </ACRONYM>
-
All Possible Attributes
-
<ACRONYM LANG="..." DIR=ltr|rtl ID="..." CLASS="...">characters...
</ACRONYM>
-
Elements Allowed Within...
-
-In progress, to be determined-
-
Allowed In Content Of...
-
-In progress, to be determined-
-
Variations
-
The ACRONYM element is a Version 3 proposed element. All character definition
elements are Level 2.
ADDRESS
-
Description
-
The ADDRESS element defines a separated multi-line set of text to be rendered
for address information.
-
Minimum Attributes
-
<ADDRESS>characters... </ADDRESS>
-
All Possible Attributes
-
<ADDRESS LANG="..." DIR=ltr|rtl ALIGN=center|left|right|justify
ID="..." CLASS="..." CLEAR=left|right|all|"..." NOWRAP>characters... </ADDRESS>
-
Elements Allowed Within...
-
members of group text
or element <P>
-
Allowed In Content Of...
-
Any element that permits members of group body.content
-
Variations
-
ADDRESS text is typically rendered in italics, and may be indented. The
LANG and DIR attributes are introduced with the internationalization proposal.
The internationalization proposal also includes ALIGN=center|left|right|justify
The CLEAR and NOWRAP attributes are proposed in Version 3. ADDRESS is a
Level 0 element.
-
Sandia Requirements
-
An ADDRESS element is required to identify a "point-of-contact". For details,
see the Sandia
Requirements.
APP
See the element APPLET
APPLET
-
Description
-
The APPLET element replaced the APP element as the mechanism to identify
and invoke a JAVA(tm) application. A browser that understands this element
will ignore everything in the content of the APPLET element except the
PARAM elements. Browsers that do not understand this element should ignore
it and the PARAM elements and instead process the content of the element.
Thus the content is the alternate HTML if the application is not invoked.
CODE is the name of the file that contains the compiled Applet subclass.
This name is relative to the base URL of the applet and cannot be an absolute
URL. WIDTH and HEIGHT give the initial width and height (in pixels) of
the applet display area. CODEBASE specifies the base URL of the applet.
ALT specifies parsed character data to be displayed if the brower understands
the APPLET tag but can't/won't run them. NAME specifies a name for the
applet instance, which allows applets on the same page to commuicate with
each other. ALIGN specifies the display alignment. VSPACE and HSPACE specify
the reserved space around the applet (in pixels).
-
Minimum Attributes
-
<APPLET CODE="..." WIDTH="..." HEIGHT="...">characters... </APPLET>
-
All Possible Attributes
-
<APPLET CODE="..." WIDTH="..." HEIGHT="..." CODEBASE="..." ALT="..."
NAME="..." ALIGN=left|right|top|texttop|middle|absmiddle|baseline|bottom|absbottom
VSPACE="..." HSPACE="...">characters... </APPLET>
-
Elements Allowed Within...
-
<PARAM>
and any other elements which would have been allowed at this point
in the document.
-
Allowed In Content Of...
-
-In progress, to be determined-
-
Variations
-
The APPLET element is a proposed extension for JAVA(tm) applications, and
is a Netscape 2.0 extension.
AREA
-
Description
-
The AREA element specifies a single area of an image which, if selected,
will link to the hyperlink identified by HREF. If multiple AREA elements
in the same MAP define overlapping areas, the first encountered takes precedence.
-
Minimum Attributes
-
<AREA COORDS="...">
-
All Possible Attributes
-
<AREA COORDS="..." SHAPE=rect|circle|polygon HREF="..." NOHREF ALT="...">
-
Elements Allowed Within...
-
AREA has no end tag and therefore has no content.
-
Allowed In Content Of...
-
<MAP>
-
Variations
-
The AREA element is part of a proposed enhancement to provide client-side
image maps. COORDS describes the position of an area (in pixels) of the
image in comma-separated x,y coordinates where the upper-left corner is
"0,0". For SHAPE=rect (the default), it is "left,top,right,bottom". For
SHAPE=circle, it is "center_x,center_y,radius". For SHAPE=polygon, it is
successive x,y vertices of the polygon. If the first and last coordinates
are not the same, then a segment is inferred to close the polygon. The
NOHREF indicates that this region should generate no links. The ALT attribute
specifies optional parsed character data to describe the area which could
be displayed by a text-only browser as a substitute for the image. AREA
is an extension in Netscape 2.0, but the only SHAPE recognized is "rect",
and ALT is not defined.
AU
-
Description
-
The AU element changes the character rendering of the contents of the element
to logically represent the name of an author.
-
Minimum Attributes
-
<AU>characters... </AU>
-
All Possible Attributes
-
<AU LANG="..." DIR=ltr|rtl ID="..." CLASS="...">characters... </AU>
-
Elements Allowed Within...
-
-In progress, to be determined-
-
Allowed In Content Of...
-
-In progress, to be determined-
-
Variations
-
The AU element is a Version 3 proposed element. All character definition
elements are Level 2.
B
-
Description
-
The B element changes the physical rendering of the contents of the element
to a bold font.
-
Minimum Attributes
-
<B>characters... </B>
-
All Possible Attributes
-
<B LANG="..." DIR=ltr|rtl ID="..." CLASS="...">characters... </B>
-
Elements Allowed Within...
-
members of group text
-
Allowed In Content Of...
-
Any element that permits members of group font
-
Variations
-
Browsers who do not have bold may render in some other manner. RFC 1866
states that <B> content must be rendered as distinct from <I> content.
The LANG and DIR attributes are introduced with the internationalization
proposal. All character definition elements are Level 2.
BANNER
-
Description
-
The BANNER element is proposed for corporate logos, navigation aids, disclaimers
and other information which shouldn't be scrolled with the rest of the
document.
-
Minimum Attributes
-
<BANNER>characters... </BANNER>
-
All Possible Attributes
-
<BANNER LANG="..." DIR=ltr|rtl ID="..." CLASS="...">characters...
</BANNER>
-
Elements Allowed Within...
-
-In progress, to be determined-
-
Allowed In Content Of...
-
<BODY>
-
Variations
-
This is a proposed Version 3 element.
BASE
-
Description
-
The BASE element provides the absolute URL
base to be used for any relative URL links in this document. It must be
a complete file name, and is usually the original URL of this document.
If this file is moved, having the BASE set to the original URL eliminates
the need to also move all the documents which are identified by relative
URL links in this document.
-
Minimum Attributes
-
<BASE HREF="...">
-
All Possible Attributes
-
<BASE HREF="..." TARGET="...">
-
Elements Allowed Within...
-
Allowed In Content Of...
-
<HEAD>
-
Variations
-
This is a Level 0 element. Netscape 2.0 defines the TARGET attribute to
define a default named target window for every link in a document that
does not have an explicit TARGET attribute.
BASEFONT
-
Description
-
Change the document base font size to one of the seven defined sizes. The
default is 3.
-
Minimum Attributes
-
<BASEFONT SIZE=1|2|3|4|5|6|7>
-
All Possible Attributes
-
<BASEFONT SIZE=1|2|3|4|5|6|7>
-
Elements Allowed Within...
-
-In progress, to be determined-
-
Allowed In Content Of...
-
-In progress, to be determined-
-
Variations
-
The BASEFONT element is a Netscape extension.
BDO
-
Description
-
The BDO element is a directional override feature needed to deal with unusual
pieces of text in which directionality cannot be resolved from context
in an unambiguous fashion. It requires the DIR attribute. The meaning of
DIR is different on BDO than on inline text markup elements. For BDO the
DIR attribute is a bidi override, forcing the directionnality of even those
characters that have strong directionnality. On inline elements, DIR indicates
a new directional embedding level, affecting mostly the neutrals and the
overall layout.
-
Minimum Attributes
-
<BDO DIR=ltr|rtl>characters... </BDO>
-
All Possible Attributes
-
<BDO DIR=ltr|rtl LANG="...">characters... </BDO>
-
Elements Allowed Within...
-
members of group text
-
Allowed In Content Of...
-
Any element that permits members of group text
-
Variations
-
The BDO element is a proposed element as part of the enhancement to deal
with internationalization of HTML.
BGSOUND
-
Description
-
The BGSOUND element will cause an audio file to be presented as background
to the document.
-
Minimum Attributes
-
<BGSOUND SRC="...">
-
All Possible Attributes
-
<BGSOUND SRC="..." LOOP="...">
-
Elements Allowed Within...
-
The BGSOUND element is defined as having no content.
-
Allowed In Content Of...
-
-In progress, to be determined-
-
Variations
-
The BGSOUND element is a MS Internet Explorer 2.0 enhancement. SRC specifies
the URL of the audio file to be played. LOOP specifies how many times the
sound will be displayed while the HTML document is displayed, and can either
be a number or the string "infinite". The default for LOOP is one. Considerable
opposition to the use of this element has been expressed on the Web, especially
the use of LOOP=infinite, since users currently have no way to disable
the audio.
BIG
-
Description
-
The BIG element changes the physical rendering of the contents of the element
to a bigger font than normal text, if practical.
-
Minimum Attributes
-
<BIG>characters... </BIG>
-
All Possible Attributes
-
<BIG LANG="..." DIR=ltr|rtl ID="..." CLASS="...">characters... </BIG>
-
Elements Allowed Within...
-
-In progress, to be determined-
-
Allowed In Content Of...
-
-In progress, to be determined-
-
Variations
-
The BIG element is proposed in Version 3, and is implemented as a Netscape
2.0 enhancement. All character definition elements are Level 2.
BLINK
-
Description
-
The BLINK element changes the physical rendering of the contents of the
element to a blinking font.
-
Minimum Attributes
-
<BLINK>characters... </BLINK>
-
All Possible Attributes
-
<BLINK>characters... </BLINK>
-
Elements Allowed Within...
-
-In progress, to be determined-
-
Allowed In Content Of...
-
-In progress, to be determined-
-
Variations
-
This element is a Netscape 1.1 enhancement and many browsers ignore this
element. Many users find the use of this element annoying. It should be
restricted to short term use for new information. Netscape 1.1N permits
users to disable the rendering of this element.
BLOCKQUOTE
-
Description
-
The BLOCKQUOTE element defines a separated multi-line set of text to be
rendered as quoted text.
-
Minimum Attributes
-
<BLOCKQUOTE> </BLOCKQUOTE>
-
All Possible Attributes
-
<BLOCKQUOTE LANG="..." DIR=ltr|rtl ALIGN=center|left|right|justify>
</BLOCKQUOTE>
-
Elements Allowed Within...
-
members of group body.content
-
Allowed In Content Of...
-
Any element that permits members of group block.forms
-
Variations
-
RFC 1866 states the contents of the BLOCKQUOTE element is typically rendered
slightly indented both left and right, and/or italic font. It also states
that a single-font browser rendering may display the contents with a vertical
line of ">" characters down the left margin to indicate quotation in the
Internet mail style. The LANG and DIR attributes are introduced with the
internationalization proposal. The internationalization proposal also includes
ALIGN=center|left|right|justify Version 3 proposes replacing the
BLOCKQUOTE element with the BQ
element. BLOCKQUOTE is a Level 0 element.
BODY
-
Description
-
The BODY element contains all the content of the document, as opposed
to the HEAD,
which contains information about the document. All displayable elements
should be within the content of the BODY.
-
Minimum Attributes
-
All Possible Attributes
-
<BODY LANG="..." DIR=ltr|rtl ID="..." CLASS="..." BACKGROUND="..."
BGCOLOR="..." BGPROPERTIES=fixed TEXT="#rrggbb" LINK="#rrggbb" VLINK="#rrggbb"
ALINK="#rrggbb"> </BODY>
-
Elements Allowed Within...
-
members of group body.content
-
Allowed In Content Of...
-
<HTML>
-
Variations
-
The HTML, HEAD, and BODY elements were introduced with RFC 1866, and are
currently optional, but are considered Level 0 elements. The LANG and DIR
attributes are introduced with the internationalization proposal. Version
3 proposes the attribute BACKGROUND. Netscape 1.1 and MS Internet Explorer
2.0 include the BACKGROUND attribute, which is a URL to point to an image
to be reproduced to fill the background of the document. Netscape 1.1 and
MS Internet Explorer 2.0 both document the BGCOLOR extension. Netscape
requires an "#rrggbb" number, while Internet Explorer also accepts the
following color names: Black, Maroon, Green, Olive, Navy, Purple, Teal,
Gray, Silver, Red, Lime, Yellow, Blue, Fuchsia, Aqua, White. The TEXT,
LINK, VLINK, and ALINK attributes are Netscape 1.1 extensions, and also
appear to work with MS Internet Explorer 2.0. BGPROPERTIES is an MS Internet
Explorer 2.0 extension and currently only accepts the value of "fixed"
which provides a watermark (non-scrolling) background image.
-
Sandia Requirements
-
The HTML, HEAD and BODY elements are required.
BQ
-
Description
-
The BQ element defines a multi-line set of text to be rendered as quoted
text. The content of the BQ element may optionally contain the CREDIT
element.
-
Minimum Attributes
-
<BQ> </BQ>
-
All Possible Attributes
-
<BQ LANG="..." DIR=ltr|rtl ID="..." CLASS="..." CLEAR=left|right|all|"..."
NOWRAP> </BQ>
-
Elements Allowed Within...
-
<CREDIT>
-others to be determined-
-
Allowed In Content Of...
-
<BQ>
-others to be determined-
-
Variations
-
The BQ element is proposed in Version 3 as a replacement for the BLOCKQUOTE
element. Version 3 does not indicate the typical rendering of the contents
of the BQ element, but does indicate that it may not imply text separation.
BR
-
Description
-
The BR element breaks for a new line, but does not produce separation of
text.
-
Minimum Attributes
-
<BR>
-
All Possible Attributes
-
<BR CLEAR=left|right|all|"..." ID="..." CLASS="...">
-
Elements Allowed Within...
-
The BR element is defined as having no content.
-
Allowed In Content Of...
-
Any element that permits members of group text
-
Variations
-
The CLEAR attribute is a Netscape 1.1 extension and was added to force
the line break to clear possible floating graphic images. The standard
tables proposal expects the presence of this attribute since it expects
text to flow around a table, if possible, but does not standardize the
attribute's existence as part of the proposal. Version 3 includes CLEAR,
and proposes the remaining attributes. The BR element is Level 0.
CAPTION
-
Description
-
The CAPTION element is used to label a table or figure. The ALIGN attribute
specifies on which outside edge to place the caption.
-
Minimum Attributes
-
<CAPTION>characters... </CAPTION>
-
All Possible Attributes
-
<CAPTION ALIGN=top|bottom|left|right LANG="..." DIR=ltr|rtl ID="..."
CLASS="...">characters... </CAPTION>
-
Elements Allowed Within...
-
-In progress, to be determined-
-
Allowed In Content Of...
-
<FIG>
<TABLE>
-
Variations
-
The CAPTION element was originally proposed in Version 3 and is part of
the current table proposal. This element is an extension in Netscape 1.1.
CENTER
-
Description
-
All contents within the CENTER element is to be centered between the current
left and right margin.
-
Minimum Attributes
-
<CENTER>characters... </CENTER>
-
All Possible Attributes
-
<CENTER>characters... </CENTER>
-
Elements Allowed Within...
-
-In progress, to be determined-
-
Allowed In Content Of...
-
<A>
-In progress, to be determined-
-
Variations
-
The CENTER element is a Netscape 1.1 extension. It was provided as an alternative
to the HTML+ and Version 3 ALIGN="center" proposed new attribute
for all the text block elements such as the <P> paragraph and
<H?> header elements and the new <DIV> element.
Both RFC 1866 and the current Version 3 specification only include the
ALIGN attribute, not the CENTER element, and Netscape 2.0 has added the
ALIGN="center" attribute.
CITE
-
Description
-
The CITE element changes the character rendering of the contents of the
element to logically represent a citation.
-
Minimum Attributes
-
<CITE>characters... </CITE>
-
All Possible Attributes
-
<CITE LANG="..." DIR=ltr|rtl ID="..." CLASS="...">characters...
</CITE>
-
Elements Allowed Within...
-
members of group text
-
Allowed In Content Of...
-
Any element that permits members of group phrase
-
Variations
-
This is typically rendered in italics. The LANG and DIR attributes are
introduced with the internationalization proposal. All character definition
elements are Level 2.
CODE
-
Description
-
The CODE element changes the character rendering of the contents of the
element to logically represent computer code. It is intended for short
words or phrases. PRE is recommended for multiple-line listings.
-
Minimum Attributes
-
<CODE>characters... </CODE>
-
All Possible Attributes
-
<CODE LANG="..." DIR=ltr|rtl ID="..." CLASS="...">characters...
</CODE>
-
Elements Allowed Within...
-
members of group text
-
Allowed In Content Of...
-
Any element that permits members of group phrase
-
Variations
-
This is usually rendered in a fixed-width font. The LANG and DIR attributes
are introduced with the internationalization proposal. All character definition
elements are Level 2.
COL
-
Description
-
The COL element specifies column based defaults for table properties.
-
Minimum Attributes
-
<COL>
-
All Possible Attributes
-
<COL LANG="..." DIR=ltr|rtl ID="..." CLASS="..." SPAN=nn WIDTH="..."
ALIGN=left|center|right|justify|char CHAR="." CHAROFF="..." VALIGN=top|middle|bottom|baseline>
-
Elements Allowed Within...
-
COL has no end element, therefore it has no content.
-
Allowed In Content Of...
-
COLGROUP
TABLE
-
Variations
-
The COL element is part of the new proposed standard tables structure.
It is not widely implemented in existing browsers. The order of placement
of a series of COL elements within the TABLE content (or within a COLGROUP)
is significant, and describes the columns in the TABLE DIR presentation
order, first to last. SPAN is a positive integer that specifies how many
columns this element applies to, defaulting to one. SPAN=0 implies all
columns from the current column up to and including the last column. WIDTH
is a decimal number which specifies the width of each column in the span.
The default units is pixels, but may be specified by a suffix on the number.
The standard defined units suffixes include: pt=points, pi=picas,
in=inches, cm=centimeters, mm=millimeters, em=em
units, px=screen pixels. In addition, the special suffix of an
asterisk may be used to specify a number to be used as a multiplier of
a "standard" column width. This is used to specify the widths of columns
proportionately relative to each other. If a number does not accompany
the asterisk it defaults to one. Specifying WIDTH="0*" forces the column
to its minimum width. ALIGN and VALIGN define the alignment of text within
a table cell. If ALIGN=char, CHAR specifies the alignment character which
defaults to the decimal point for the current language. CHAROFF is a decimal
number that specifies the offset for the alignment character from the beginning
of the table cell in the DIR direction. Units may be specified using the
standard defined units suffixes plus the special suffix of the percent
sign indicating the percentage of offset within the cell from the beginning
of the cell.
COLGROUP
-
Description
-
The COLGROUP element defines a group of one or more columns and specifies
the defaults for all the columns in this group.
-
Minimum Attributes
-
<COLGROUP>
-
All Possible Attributes
-
<COLGROUP LANG="..." DIR=ltr|rtl ALIGN=left|center|right|justify|char
ID="..." CLASS="..." CHAR="." CHAROFF="..." VALIGN=top|middle|bottom|baseline>characters...
</COLGROUP>
-
Elements Allowed Within...
-
COL
-
Allowed In Content Of...
-
TABLE
-
Variations
-
The COLGROUP element is part of the new proposed standard tables structure.
It is not widely implemented in existing browsers. The end tag is optional
and is inferred when a new COLGROUP is encountered or the THEAD or TBODY
element of TABLE. The order of placement of a series of COLGROUP elements
within the TABLE content is significant, and describes the columns in the
TABLE DIR presentation order, first to last. ALIGN and VALIGN define the
alignment of text within a table cell. If ALIGN=char, CHAR specifies the
alignment character which defaults to the decimal point for the current
language. CHAROFF is a decimal number that specifies the offset for the
alignment character from the beginning of the table cell in the DIR direction.
The default units is pixels, but may be specified by a suffix on the number.
The standard defined units suffixes include: pt=points, pi=picas,
in=inches, cm=centimeters, mm=millimeters, em=em
units, px=screen pixels. In addition, the special suffix of the
percent sign may be used to indicate the percentage of offset within the
cell from the beginning of the cell.
CREDIT
-
Description
-
The CREDIT element is used to name the source of a block quotation or figure.
-
Minimum Attributes
-
<CREDIT>characters... </CREDIT>
-
All Possible Attributes
-
<CREDIT LANG="..." DIR=ltr|rtl ID="..." CLASS="...">characters...
</CREDIT>
-
Elements Allowed Within...
-
-In progress, to be determined-
-
Allowed In Content Of...
-
<BQ>
<FIG>
-
Variations
-
The CREDIT element is proposed in Version 3. Version 3 does not indicate
the typical rendering for the contents of the CREDIT element, nor whether
that rendering should be different or separated from the enclosing block
quotation or figure.
DD
-
Description
-
The DD element identifies the separated multi-line definition item in a
DL definition list. In a DL list a DD should always be preceded by at least
one DT element.
-
Minimum Attributes
-
<DD>characters...
-
All Possible Attributes
-
<DD LANG="..." DIR=ltr|rtl>characters... </DD>
-
Elements Allowed Within...
-
members of groups block
text
-
Allowed In Content Of...
-
<DL>
-
Variations
-
This is typically rendered as normal text, indented. Most browsers assume
that the contents of the element ends when it encounters a <DT>
or another <DD> or the </DL> element to end the
list, and thus do not require the ending tag. The LANG and DIR attributes
are introduced with the internationalization proposal. All list elements
are Level 0.
DEL
-
Description
-
The DEL element changes the character rendering of the contents of the
element to logically represent deleted text, for instance in modifications
in legal documents.
-
Minimum Attributes
-
<DEL>characters... </DEL>
-
All Possible Attributes
-
<DEL LANG="..." DIR=ltr|rtl ID="..." CLASS="...">characters... </DEL>
-
Elements Allowed Within...
-
-In progress, to be determined-
-
Allowed In Content Of...
-
-In progress, to be determined-
-
Variations
-
The DEL element is a Version 3 proposed element. While this will typically
be rendered by strikethru characters, the DEL element is preferred over
using the S or STRIKE elements. All character definition elements are Level
2.
DFN
-
Description
-
The DFN element changes the character rendering of the contents of the
element to logically represent a defining instance of a term.
-
Minimum Attributes
-
<DFN>characters... </DFN>
-
All Possible Attributes
-
<DFN LANG="..." DIR=ltr|rtl ID="..." CLASS="...">characters... </DFN>
-
Elements Allowed Within...
-
-In progress, to be determined-
-
Allowed In Content Of...
-
-In progress, to be determined-
-
Variations
-
The DFN element is not widely implemented, but is usually rendered bold
or bold italic. It is a Version 3 proposed element and was in an earlier
Version 2 proposal. The RFC 1866 describes it and recognizes it as existing
practice but does not include it in the standardized elements.
DIR
-
Description
-
The DIR element defines an unordered list consisting of a number of single-line
<LI> elements.
-
Minimum Attributes
-
<DIR></DIR>
-
All Possible Attributes
-
<DIR COMPACT LANG="..." DIR=ltr|rtl ALIGN=center|left|right|justify>
</DIR>
-
Elements Allowed Within...
-
element <LI>
but not any member of group block
-
Allowed In Content Of...
-
Any element that permits members of group list
-
Variations
-
This list type is not commonly implemented, and is often rendered identically
to UL. RFC 1866 specifies that the content of the LI element of the DIR
list is usually less than 20 characters in length. These may be arranged
in columns across the page, each column typically as 24 characters wide.
Specifying <UL PLAIN WRAP=HORIZ> is proposed in Version 3 as
a replacement for the DIR element. The exclusion in RFC 1866 of group block
within DIR implies (among other things) that DIR can contain no nested
lists, nor any paragraphs even though the LI element normally would allow
this. Some browsers do not enforce this exclusion. The LANG and DIR attributes
are introduced with the internationalization proposal. The internationalization
proposal also includes ALIGN=center|left|right|justify All list
elements are Level 0.
DIV
-
Description
-
The DIV element is proposed to be used with the CLASS attribute to represent
different kinds of containers, e.g. chapter, section, abstract, or appendix.
-
Minimum Attributes
-
<DIV>characters... </DIV>
-
All Possible Attributes
-
<DIV LANG="..." DIR=ltr|rtl ALIGN=left|center|right|justify ID="..."
CLASS="..." NOWRAP CLEAR=left|right|all|"...">characters... </DIV>
-
Elements Allowed Within...
-
-In progress, to be determined-
-
Allowed In Content Of...
-
<BODY>
-
Variations
-
This is a proposed Version 3 element. <DIV ALIGN=center> is
the proposed replacement for the non-standard CENTER
element. This is a Netscape 2.0 extension but it only recognizes ALIGN=left|right|center.
DL
-
Description
-
The DL element defines a definition list. Each item in the list is expected
to have two parts, identified by the <DT> and <DD>
elements.
-
Minimum Attributes
-
<DL></DL>
-
All Possible Attributes
-
<DL COMPACT LANG="..." DIR=ltr|rtl ID="..." CLASS="..." CLEAR=left|right|all|"...">
</DL>
-
Elements Allowed Within...
-
<LH>
<DT>
<DD>
-
Allowed In Content Of...
-
Any element that permits members of group block
-
Variations
-
The COMPACT attribute suggests rendering the list in a physically compact
way, but is not implemented by many browsers. RFC 1866 suggests that the
attribute be used if the list items are small and/or the entire list is
large, and may cause the elimination of blank lines between DT/DD pairs.
The LANG and DIR attributes are introduced with the internationalization
proposal. Version 3 proposes the CLEAR attribute. To obtain a specific
look, it has been the practice to construct a DL with DD elements but empty
or missing DT elements. Missing DT elements violates the standard. Version
3 proposes a new NOTE
element as the preferred alternative to achieve the effect desired. All
list elements are Level 0.
DT
-
Description
-
The DT element identifies the separated term item in a DL definition list.
Multiple DT elements may exist prior to a single DD element. In a DL list
a DD should always be preceded by at least one DT element.
-
Minimum Attributes
-
<DT>characters...
-
All Possible Attributes
-
<DT LANG="..." DIR=ltr|rtl>characters... </DT>
-
Elements Allowed Within...
-
members of group text
-
Allowed In Content Of...
-
<DL>
-
Variations
-
This is typically rendered in a bold font, but not indented. Most browsers
assume that the contents of the element ends when it encounters a <DD>
or another <DT> or the </DL> element to end the
list, and thus do not require the ending tag. The LANG and DIR attributes
are introduced with the internationalization proposal. All list elements
are Level 0.
EM
-
Description
-
The EM element changes the character rendering of the contents of the element
to logically emphasize the text.
-
Minimum Attributes
-
<EM>characters... </EM>
-
All Possible Attributes
-
<EM LANG="..." DIR=ltr|rtl ID="..." CLASS="...">characters... </EM>
-
Elements Allowed Within...
-
members of group text
-
Allowed In Content Of...
-
Any element that permits members of group phrase
-
Variations
-
Usually rendered in italics. RFC 1866 states that <EM> content must
be rendered as distinct from <STRONG> content. The LANG and DIR attributes
are introduced with the internationalization proposal. All character definition
elements are Level 2.
EMBED
-
Description
-
The EMBED element defines a container that allows the insertion of arbitrary
objects directly into an HTML page. Embedded objects are supported by application-specific
plug-ins. EMBED is defined to allow arbitrary attributes.
-
Minimum Attributes
-
<EMBED SRC="...">
-
All Possible Attributes
-
<EMBED SRC="..." HEIGHT="..." WIDTH="..." attribute_1="..." attribute_2="..."
...>characters... </EMBED>
-
Elements Allowed Within...
-
<NOEMBED>
-
Allowed In Content Of...
-
-In progress, to be determined-
-
Variations
-
The EMBED element is a Netscape 2.0 extension. Netscape gives as examples
of plug-in applications: WebFX by Paper Software for viewing VRML (Virtual
Reality Modeling Language) worlds, Adobe Acrobat for PDF documents, and
Macromedia Director and Apple QuickTime for multimedia. Netscape's examples
do not include the ending element, but their documentation does not specify
what would imply the end of the EMBED content if the ending element is
absent. The concept of arbitrary undefined attributes violates the underlying
SGML standard of HTML. Change is expected in this element. See also the
APPLET
element. The Netscape documentation does not currently define the units
for HEIGHT and WIDTH but examples would imply that they are pixels. The
object's image will be scaled to fit the specified height/width. Embedded
plug-in applications may be activated by double-clicking their image.
FIG
-
Description
-
The FIG element is an advanced form of the IMG
element to define an image, with optional overlays, text elements and "hotzones",
to be inserted within a document. The structure of the contents of the
FIG element expects a series of optional overlay images defined by OVERLAY
elements, followed by an optional CAPTION element, followed by text to
be presented as an alternative to the image(s) and which may contain normal
text elements as well as hypertext links defined by A elements with SHAPE
attributes to identify "hotzones" on the image, finally completed by an
optional CREDIT element.
-
Minimum Attributes
-
<FIG SRC="..."></FIG>
-
All Possible Attributes
-
<FIG SRC="..." LANG="..." DIR=ltr|rtl ID="..." CLASS="..." CLEAR=left|right|all|"..."
NOFLOW MD="..." ALIGN=left|right|center|justify|bleedleft|bleedright WIDTH=value
HEIGHT=value UNITS="..." IMAGEMAP="..."></FIG>
-
Elements Allowed Within...
-
<OVERLAY>
<CAPTION>
<CREDIT>
-In progress, to be determined- (ed: all normal markup
elements?)
-
Allowed In Content Of...
-
-In progress, to be determined-
-
Variations
-
The FIG element is proposed in Version 3 as a sophisticated alternative
to the IMG element, especially to enhance the capabilities of the ALT text
for non-graphical presentations of HTML documents, as well as a way to
accomplish the common use of the ISMAP attribute of the IMG element without
the need for a responding cgi-bin program.
FN
-
Description
-
The FN element logically identifies text to be presented as a footnote.
The reference location for the footnote is expected to be an A element
whose HREF attribute references the ID of the FN element.
-
Minimum Attributes
-
<FN ID="...">characters... </FN>
-
All Possible Attributes
-
<FN LANG="..." DIR=ltr|rtl ID="..." CLASS="...">characters... </FN>
-
Elements Allowed Within...
-
-In progress, to be determined-
-
Allowed In Content Of...
-
-In progress, to be determined-
-
Variations
-
The FN element is a Version 3 proposed element. Version 3 specifies that
when practical, the browser should render the FN element as pop-up notes.
Version 3 does not specify an expected rendering when the footnote text
is simply displayed where it occurs in the document. However, Version 3
does state that the FN element does not imply text separation. Therefore,
common practice expects that the contents of the FN element would begin
with a markup element which produces separation, e.g. the P element.
FONT
-
Description
-
The FONT element changes the font size of the following characters to one
of the seven defined sizes, or plus or minus from the document BASEFONT
size.
-
Minimum Attributes
-
<FONT SIZE=[+|-]1|2|3|4|5|6|7>
-
All Possible Attributes
-
<FONT SIZE=[+|-]1|2|3|4|5|6|7 COLOR="..." FACE="...">
-
Elements Allowed Within...
-
-In progress, to be determined-
-
Allowed In Content Of...
-
-In progress, to be determined-
-
Variations
-
The FONT element with the SIZE attribute is a Netscape 1.1 and MS Internet
2.0 extension. Netscape 2.0 and MS Internet Explorer 2.0 added the COLOR
attribute. Netscape requires an "#rrggbb" number, while Internet Explorer
also accepts the following color names: Black, Maroon, Green, Olive,
Navy, Purple, Teal, Gray, Silver, Red, Lime, Yellow, Blue, Fuchsia, Aqua,
White. The FACE attribute is a MS Internet Explorer 2.0 extension
to specify a font style, but the permitted values are not defined.
FORM
-
Description
-
The FORM element creates a fill-out form. The browser permits the user
to enter information in the fields of the form and sends this information
to a cgi-bin script on a server identified as a URL
by the ACTION attribute. METHOD=GET (the default) appends the input information
to the ACTION URL which on most receiving systems becomes the value of
the environment variable QUERY_STRING. METHOD=POST (the preferred)
sends the input information in a data body which is available on stdin
with the data length set in the environment variable CONTENT_LENGTH.
Form data is a stream of name=value pairs separated by the &
character. Each name=value pair is URL encoded, i.e. spaces are changed
into the plus character and some characters are encoded into hexadecimal.
At least one of the following is expected inside the FORM contents: INPUT,
SELECT, TEXTAREA.
-
Minimum Attributes
-
<FORM></FORM>
-
All Possible Attributes
-
<FORM ACTION="..." METHOD=GET|POST ENCTYPE="..." LANG="..." DIR=ltr|rtl
ACCEPT-CHARSET="..." SCRIPT="..."> </FORM>
-
Elements Allowed Within...
-
members of group body.content
and elements <INPUT>
<SELECT>
<TEXTAREA>
but not element <FORM>
-
Allowed In Content Of...
-
Any element that permits members of group block.forms
-
Variations
-
The original definition of FORM only defined the default value of application/x-www-form-urlencoded
for the ENCTYPE attribute. RFC 1867 adds the value of multipart/form-data
for this attribute to permit a FORM to upload one or more files in addition
to the FORM data. METHOD=POST is required with this value of ENCTYPE. This
file upload extension is implemented in Netscape 2.0. Most current browsers
only handle ACTION for the http: access type, but proposals for
handling the mailto: access type are being discussed. The LANG,
DIR, and ACCEPT-CHARSET attributes are introduced with the internationalization
proposal. The ACCEPT-CHARSET attribute is to provide a hint as to the character
set or sets that the receiving URL is prepared to handle. Version 3 proposes
the SCRIPT attribute to specify a URL which contains a limited syntax script
to be downloaded to the browser for execution to preprocess the FORM output
before sending it to the ACTION destination. This SCRIPT proposal may change
as part of the new proposals concerning APPLET and EMBED. All elements
concerning FORM are Level 2.
FRAME
-
Description
-
The FRAME element defines a single frame in a frameset. The SRC attribute
value is the URL of the document to be displayed in this frame. A FRAME
element without a SRC is displayed as blank space. The NAME element assigns
a name to the frame to be used as a target of hyperlinks. (See the A
element) The SCROLLING attribute is used to define whether the frame should
have a scrollbar, and defaults to the value "auto". Presence of the NORESIZE
attribute prevents the frame from being resized by the user.
-
Minimum Attributes
-
<FRAME>
-
All Possible Attributes
-
<FRAME SRC="..." NAME="..." MARGINWIDTH="..." MARGINHEIGHT="..."
SCROLLING=yes|no|auto NORESIZE>
-
Elements Allowed Within...
-
The FRAME element is defined as having no content.
-
Allowed In Content Of...
-
<FRAMESET>
-
Variations
-
The FRAME element is a Netscape 2.0 enhancement for defining multiple windows
for viewing a document. Netscape 2.0 reserves the following values for
the NAME attribute: _blank, _self, _parent, _top. These values
must begin with the underbar character and have the following respective
meanings: new unnamed window, load in the same window, load in the parent
window (if none use self), load in the top window (if none use self). Netscape
2.0 defines the units for MARGINWIDTH and MARGINHEIGHT as pixels.
FRAMESET
-
Description
-
The FRAMESET element is used instead of the BODY element. It is used in
an HTML document whose sole purpose is to define the layout of the sub-HTML
documents, or Frames, that will make up the page. The ROWS and COLS values
are comma-separated lists describing the row-heights and column-widths
of the Frames.
-
Minimum Attributes
-
<FRAMESET>characters... </FRAMESET>
-
All Possible Attributes
-
<FRAMESET ROWS="..." COLS="...">characters... </FRAMESET>
-
Elements Allowed Within...
-
<FRAME>
<FRAMESET>
<NOFRAMES>
-
Allowed In Content Of...
-
<HTML>
-
Variations
-
The FRAMESET element is a Netscape 2.0 enhancement. Netscape 2.0 restricts
the ROWS and COLS values to integers with an optional suffix to define
the units. Default units are pixels. A percentsign suffix indicates the
value is a percentage between 1 and 100. A suffix of an asterisk may be
used to specify a number to be used as a multiplier of a "standard" width/height.
This is used to specify the widths/heights of Frames proportionately relative
to each other. If a number does not accompany the asterisk it defaults
to one.
H1
-
Description
-
The H1 element identifies text to be separated and displayed as the most
prominent header.
-
Minimum Attributes
-
<H1>characters... </H1>
-
All Possible Attributes
-
<H1 LANG="..." DIR=ltr|rtl ALIGN=left|center|right|justify ID="..."
CLASS="..." CLEAR=left|right|all|"..." SEQNUM=nnn SKIP=nnn DINGBAT=entity-name
SRC="..." MD="..." NOWRAP>characters... </H1>
-
Elements Allowed Within...
-
members of group text
-
Allowed In Content Of...
-
Any element that permits members of group heading
-
Variations
-
RFC 1866 recommends that a document use the header elements in order, without
breaks, beginning with H1. (ed: I have not identified a browser
that enforces this.) The LANG and DIR attributes are introduced with the
internationalization proposal. The internationalization proposal also includes
ALIGN=center|left|right|justify Netscape 2.0 implements ALIGN=center|left|right
The ID attribute was proposed in HTML+ and Version 3 to replace the NAME
attribute in the A element to establish internal hyperlink destinations.
With the expected use of ID for style sheets, this is likely to change.
All other attributes are proposed in Version 3. RFC 1866 states typical
rendering is bold, very large font, centered; when printed causes a page
break. Headings are Level 0 elements.
H2
-
Description
-
The H2 element identifies text to be separated and displayed less prominently
than H1 but more prominently than H3.
-
Minimum Attributes
-
<H2>characters... </H2>
-
All Possible Attributes
-
<H2 LANG="..." DIR=ltr|rtl ID="..." CLASS="..." ALIGN=left|center|right|justify
CLEAR=left|right|all|"..." SEQNUM=nnn SKIP=nnn DINGBAT=entity-name SRC="..."
MD="..." NOWRAP>characters... </H2>
-
Elements Allowed Within...
-
members of group text
-
Allowed In Content Of...
-
Any element that permits members of group heading
-
Variations
-
RFC 1866 recommends that a document use the header elements in order, without
breaks, beginning with H1. (ed: I have not identified a browser
that enforces this.) The LANG and DIR attributes are introduced with the
internationalization proposal. The internationalization proposal also includes
ALIGN=center|left|right|justify Netscape 2.0 implements ALIGN=center|left|right
The ID attribute was proposed in HTML+ and Version 3 to replace the NAME
attribute in the A element to establish internal hyperlink destinations.
With the expected use of ID for style sheets, this is likely to change.
All other attributes are proposed in Version 3. RFC 1866 states typical
rendering is bold, large font, flush left. Headings are Level 0 elements.
H3
-
Description
-
The H3 element identifies text to be separated and displayed less prominently
than H2 but more prominently than H4.
-
Minimum Attributes
-
<H3>characters... </H3>
-
All Possible Attributes
-
<H3 LANG="..." DIR=ltr|rtl ALIGN=left|center|right|justify ID="..."
CLASS="..." CLEAR=left|right|all|"..." SEQNUM=nnn SKIP=nnn DINGBAT=entity-name
SRC="..." MD="..." NOWRAP>characters... </H3>
-
Elements Allowed Within...
-
members of group text
-
Allowed In Content Of...
-
Any element that permits members of group heading
-
Variations
-
RFC 1866 recommends that a document use the header elements in order, without
breaks, beginning with H1. (ed: I have not identified a browser
that enforces this.) The LANG and DIR attributes are introduced with the
internationalization proposal. The internationalization proposal also includes
ALIGN=center|left|right|justify Netscape 2.0 implements ALIGN=center|left|right
The ID attribute was proposed in HTML+ and Version 3 to replace the NAME
attribute in the A element to establish internal hyperlink destinations.
With the expected use of ID for style sheets, this is likely to change.
All other attributes are proposed in Version 3. RFC 1866 states typical
rendering is italic, large font, slightly indented. Headings are Level
0 elements.
H4
-
Description
-
The H4 element identifies text to be separated and displayed less prominently
than H3 but more prominently than H5.
-
Minimum Attributes
-
<H4>characters... </H4>
-
All Possible Attributes
-
<H4 LANG="..." DIR=ltr|rtl ALIGN=left|center|right|justify ID="..."
CLASS="..." CLEAR=left|right|all|"..." SEQNUM=nnn SKIP=nnn DINGBAT=entity-name
SRC="..." MD="..." NOWRAP>characters... </H4>
-
Elements Allowed Within...
-
members of group text
-
Allowed In Content Of...
-
Any element that permits members of group heading
-
Variations
-
RFC 1866 recommends that a document use the header elements in order, without
breaks, beginning with H1. (ed: I have not identified a browser
that enforces this.) The LANG and DIR attributes are introduced with the
internationalization proposal. The internationalization proposal also includes
ALIGN=center|left|right|justify Netscape 2.0 implements ALIGN=center|left|right
The ID attribute was proposed in HTML+ and Version 3 to replace the NAME
attribute in the A element to establish internal hyperlink destinations.
With the expected use of ID for style sheets, this is likely to change.
All other attributes are proposed in Version 3. RFC 1866 states typical
rendering is bold, normal font, indented more than H3. Headings are Level
0 elements.
H5
-
Description
-
The H5 element identifies text to be separated and displayed less prominently
than H4 but more prominently than H6.
-
Minimum Attributes
-
<H5>characters... </H5>
-
All Possible Attributes
-
<H5 LANG="..." DIR=ltr|rtl ALIGN=left|center|right|justify ID="..."
CLASS="..." CLEAR=left|right|all|"..." SEQNUM=nnn SKIP=nnn DINGBAT=entity-name
SRC="..." MD="..." NOWRAP>characters... </H5>
-
Elements Allowed Within...
-
members of group text
-
Allowed In Content Of...
-
Any element that permits members of group heading
-
Variations
-
RFC 1866 recommends that a document use the header elements in order, without
breaks, beginning with H1. (ed: I have not identified a browser
that enforces this.) The LANG and DIR attributes are introduced with the
internationalization proposal. The internationalization proposal also includes
ALIGN=center|left|right|justify Netscape 2.0 implements ALIGN=center|left|right
The ID attribute was proposed in HTML+ and Version 3 to replace the NAME
attribute in the A element to establish internal hyperlink destinations.
With the expected use of ID for style sheets, this is likely to change.
All other attributes are proposed in Version 3. By default, Netscape uses
a font size for H5 that is smaller than default text. For most other browsers,
the font size for all headers is at least as large as the default text.
RFC 1866 states typical rendering is italic, normal font, indented as H4.
Headings are Level 0 elements.
H6
-
Description
-
The H6 element identifies text to be separated and displayed less prominently
than H5 but more prominently than default text.
-
Minimum Attributes
-
<H6>characters... </H6>
-
All Possible Attributes
-
<H6 LANG="..." DIR=ltr|rtl ALIGN=left|center|right|justify ID="..."
CLASS="..." CLEAR=left|right|all|"..." SEQNUM=nnn SKIP=nnn DINGBAT=entity-name
SRC="..." MD="..." NOWRAP>characters... </H6>
-
Elements Allowed Within...
-
members of group text
-
Allowed In Content Of...
-
Any element that permits members of group heading
-
Variations
-
RFC 1866 recommends that a document use the header elements in order, without
breaks, beginning with H1. (ed: I have not identified a browser
that enforces this.) The LANG and DIR attributes are introduced with the
internationalization proposal. The internationalization proposal also includes
ALIGN=center|left|right|justify Netscape 2.0 implements ALIGN=center|left|right
The ID attribute was proposed in HTML+ and Version 3 to replace the NAME
attribute in the A element to establish internal hyperlink destinations.
With the expected use of ID for style sheets, this is likely to change.
All other attributes are proposed in Version 3. By default, Netscape uses
a font size for H6 that is smaller than default text. For most other browsers,
the font size for all headers is at least as large as the default text.
RFC 1866 states typical rendering is bold, normal font, not indented. Headings
are Level 0 elements.
HEAD
-
Description
-
The HEAD contains general information about the document. None of the elements
authorized to exist in the contents of the HEAD are displayed; the displayed
material is found within the BODY.
-
Minimum Attributes
-
All Possible Attributes
-
<HEAD LANG="..." DIR=ltr|rtl> </HEAD>
-
Elements Allowed Within...
-
<TITLE>
<ISINDEX>
<BASE>
<META>
<LINK>
<NEXTID>
-
Allowed In Content Of...
-
<HTML>
-
Variations
-
The HTML, HEAD, and BODY elements were introduced with RFC 1866, and are
currently optional, but are considered Level 0 elements. RFC 1866 recommends
against permitting the NEXTID element in HEAD. The LANG and DIR attributes
are introduced with the internationalization proposal. Version 3 proposes
the new elements of RANGE and STYLE as allowed within a HEAD.
-
Sandia Requirements
-
The HTML, HEAD and BODY elements are required.
HPn
-
Description
-
The HP set of elements, with n=1,2,... provided a mechanism to highlight
the characters in a phrase with one of a set of browser defined highlight
mechanisms.
-
Minimum Attributes
-
<HPn>characters... </HPn>
-
All Possible Attributes
-
<HPn>characters... </HPn>
-
Variations
-
HPn was an early idea about highlighting but is seldom used or implemented.
RFC 1866 does not include these elements, and these elements should be
considered obsolete.
HR
-
Description
-
The HR element produces a divider between sections of text.
-
Minimum Attributes
-
<HR>
-
All Possible Attributes
-
<HR DIR=ltr|rtl ALIGN=left|right|center|justify ID="..." CLASS="..."
CLEAR=left|right|all|"..." SRC="..." MD="..." SIZE=number WIDTH=number|percent
NOSHADE>
-
Elements Allowed Within...
-
The HR element is defined as having no content.
-
Allowed In Content Of...
-
Any element that permits members of group body.content
-
Variations
-
RFC 1866 states that the HR element is typically rendered as a full width
horizontal rule or equivalent graphic. The DIR attribute is introduced
with the internationalization proposal since DIR can have meaning in those
cases where the horizontal rule is not full width. The internationalization
proposal also includes ALIGN=center|left|right|justify The CLEAR,
SRC, and MD attributes are proposed in Version 3. SRC is proposed to specify
a custom image for the rule. Some browsers draw the line only within the
current text margins (which may be indented on left and/or right due to
lists, etc.) SIZE, WIDTH, ALIGN, and NOSHADE attributes are Netscape extensions,
but Netscape 2.0 only implements ALIGN=center|left|right The HR
element is Level 0.
HTML
-
Description
-
The HTML element is intended to bracket the entire HTML text in the document.
All other HTML elements are inside the start and end of the HTML element.
-
Minimum Attributes
-
All Possible Attributes
-
<HTML VERSION="..." LANG="..." DIR=ltr|rtl> </HTML>
-
Elements Allowed Within...
-
<HEAD>
<BODY>
<PLAINTEXT>
-
Allowed In Content Of...
-
The element HTML is the outermost element and should not be nested inside
any element. RFC 1866 introduced the VERSION attribute. The LANG and DIR
attributes are introduced with the internationalization proposal.
-
Variations
-
The HTML, HEAD, and BODY elements were introduced with RFC 1866, and are
currently optional, but are considered Level 0 elements. RFC 1866 identifies
the presence of the PLAINTEXT element within the HTML content as deprecated.
-
Sandia Requirements
-
The HTML, HEAD and BODY elements are required.
I
-
Description
-
The I element changes the physical rendering of the contents of the element
to an italics (or slanted) font.
-
Minimum Attributes
-
<I>characters... </I>
-
All Possible Attributes
-
<I LANG="..." DIR=ltr|rtl ID="..." CLASS="...">characters... </I>
-
Elements Allowed Within...
-
members of group text
-
Allowed In Content Of...
-
Any element that permits members of group font
-
Variations
-
Browsers who do not have italics may render in some other manner. RFC 1866
states that <B> content must be rendered as distinct from <I> content.
The LANG and DIR attributes are introduced with the internationalization
proposal. All character definition elements are Level 2.
IMG
-
Description
-
The IMG element allows an image file to be inserted within an HTML document
along with the text. The ALT attribute defines parsed character data that
will be displayed if the image is not or cannot be displayed by the browser.
The SRC attribute identifies a URL
for retrieving the image. The ISMAP attribute is only meaningful if the
IMG element is within the contents of an A element, and a responding cgi-bin
program has been established at the URL identified by the HREF attribute
of the A element. If a single A element spans both an image and text, the
cgi-bin program will receive the HREF input values, if any, if the text
is selected, or the x,y cursor pixel coordinates relative to 0,0 as the
the upper-left corner of the image if the image is selected.
-
Minimum Attributes
-
<IMG SRC="...">
-
All Possible Attributes
-
<IMG SRC="..." ALT="..." ISMAP LANG="..." DIR=lrt|rtl ID="..." CLASS="..."
MD="..." ALIGN=bottom|middle|top|left|right|texttop|absmiddle|baseline|absbottom
HEIGHT=value WIDTH=value UNITS="..." BORDER=value LOWSRC="..." HSPACE=value
VSPACE=value USEMAP="..." DYNSRC="..." START=fileopen|mouseover CONTROLS
LOOP=number|INFINITE|-1 LOOPDELAY=number>
-
Elements Allowed Within...
-
The IMG element is defined as having no content.
-
Allowed In Content Of...
-
Any element that permits members of group text
-
Variations
-
The attributes BORDER, HEIGHT, WIDTH, HSPACE, VSPACE, and LOWSRC are Netscape
1.1 extensions. The attributes DYNSRC, START, CONTROLS, LOOP, and LOOPDELAY
are MS Internet Explorer 2.0 extensions. The LANG and DIR attributes are
introduced with the internationalization proposal and relate to the value
of the ALT attribute. Version 3 proposes adding the WIDTH and HEIGHT attributes.
RFC 1866 defines only bottom|middle|top as values for the ALIGN
attribute. The additional values for the ALIGN attribute are Netscape extensions,
and include the capability to define floating images. Version 3 proposes
adding only the (left|right) values for ALIGN to identify images
that imply that text can float around the image. Some image capable browsers
will display the ALT text until the full image is retrieved. RFC 1866 states
that Level 0 conformance must accept the element, but Level 1 conformance
is required before it displays the image. Version 3 proposes the UNITS
attribute for use by the WIDTH and HEIGHT attributes to define units other
than pixels. RFC 1866 states that an IMG element with an ISMAP element
must only exist in the content of an A element with an HREF attribute.
Version 3 proposes a FIG
element as an advanced alternative to the IMG element, for more sophisticated
multi-part overlay images, more control over text that is the equivalent
of ALT, and with a proposed SHAPE attribute on the A element a method to
perform the common use of the ISMAP attribute without the need for a responding
cgi-bin program. The USEMAP is part of an alternate proposal for client-side
image mapes. It is implemented as a Netscape 2.0 extension. USEMAP specifies
a URL with a "#NAME" suffix to identify a file and MAP name, and is used
with the MAP element. DYNSRC is defined by MS Internet Explorer 2.0 as
the address of a video clip or VRML world to be displayed if your browser
is capable, otherwise display SRC. START is defined by MS Internet Explorer
2.0 as when the videoclip or VRML world is to be displayed. If START=mouseover,
the SRC image is displayed until the mouse cursor is over that image. CONTROLS
is defined by MS Internet Explorer 2.0 as displaying a set of controls
under the animation. LOOP is defined by MS Internet Explorer 2.0 as how
many times a video clip will loop when activated. If LOOP=-1 or
LOOP=INFINITE, it will loop indefinately. LOOPDELAY is defined
by MS Internet Explorer 2.0 as how long, in milliseconds, a video clip
will wait between replays.
-
Sandia Requirements
-
The ALT attribute and a value describing the image is required. If known,
the BORDER, HEIGHT, and WIDTH attributes are recommended as they improve
download performance on some browsers. If used, the HEIGHT and WIDTH attributes
shall specify the actual size of the stored image in pixels.
INPUT
-
Description
-
The INPUT element is used to specify a simple input field as part of the
contents in a FORM element. TYPE=text is default. NAME
defines the symbolic name of the field returned to the server on submission
and must be present for all but TYPE=submit|reset. For TYPE=checkbox|radio,
multiple INPUT elements may have the same NAME value. TYPE=radio
insures that exactly one choice amongst INPUT elements with the same NAME
value is selected at all times. VALUE is used to specify a default.
For TYPE=text|password VALUE defines default text to be returned,
which normally is null. For TYPE=password the value should be
obscured as it is entered. For TYPE=checkbox|radio VALUE defines
the value returned when the checkbox or radio is selected, which defaults
to "on" For TYPE=submit|reset VALUE defines the label for the
pushbutton. Multiple TYPE=submit should have different NAME values
to identify which submission button was selected. CHECKED defaults
the specific checkbox or radio INPUT to selected. For TYPE=radio
the default element checked is the first among those with the same NAME
value. TYPE=image defines an image, whose URLis
identified by the SRC attribute, which, when clicked, performs the form
submission and sends the X,Y coordinates of the click, similar to ISMAP
in the IMG element. SIZE and MAXLENGTH are only used
with TYPE=text|password. SIZE is the physical size of
the displayed input field expressed in characters or characters,rows. MAXLENGTH
is the maximum number of characters that are accepted as input.
-
Minimum Attributes
-
<INPUT>
-
All Possible Attributes
-
<INPUT TYPE="text | password | checkbox | radio | submit | reset
| hidden | image | file | range | scribble | jot" LANG="..." DIR=ltr|rtl
ID="..." CLASS="..." NAME="..." VALUE="..." SRC="..." CHECKED SIZE="..."
MAXLENGTH=number ALIGN=top|middle|bottom|left|right ACCEPT="..." DISABLED
ERROR="..." MIN=number MAX=number MD="...">
-
Elements Allowed Within...
-
The INPUT element is defined as having no content.
-
Allowed In Content Of...
-
<FORM>
-
Variations
-
RFC 1866 defines the TYPE attribute values of text|password|checkbox|radio|submit|reset|hidden|image
The <TEXTAREA>
element should be used instead of this INPUT element for multiline input
areas. TYPE=hidden VALUE="..." is recognized by some browsers,
and is used to submit fixed information not entered by the user. Note that
RFC 1866 sets a max limit of 1024 characters on VALUE. RFC 1866 only defines
ALIGN=top|middle|bottom
RFC 1867 defines a mechanism for FORM-based file upload. It defines
the value file for the TYPE attribute and defines a new ACCEPT
attribute. Specifying TYPE=file permits attaching one or more
local files to the submitted output. The browser may permit the user to
specify multiple file names in response to a single INPUT element with
TYPE=file ACCEPT is a list of media types or type patterns allowed
for input. The valid ACCEPT values and meaning of those values is platform
dependent. The value for the VALUE attribute specifies a default file name.
The browser must ask for confirmation before sending any file based on
the default file name. A value for the SIZE attribute of "width,height"
would specify a default filename width for the input display and height
sufficient to show some number of files. A value for the MAXLENGTH attribute
specifies a maximum Content-Length (in bytes) which the responding server
is likely to accept for transferred files. Including an INPUT element with
TYPE=file requires also specifying ENCTYPE="multipart/form-data"
METHOD=post on the enclosing FORM element. If the FORM does not specify
this ENCTYPE, the behavior is unspecified and the file transfer is likely
to be rejected by the responding server. Netscape 2.0 implements FORM-based
file upload.
The LANG and DIR attributes are introduced with the internationalization
proposal. Version 3 proposes the additional TYPE attribute values of range|scribble.
A beta version of Netscape includes a TYPE attribute value of jot
which is similar to scribble. Version 3 proposes the additional
DISABLED, ERROR, MIN, MAX, and MD attributes. The Version 3 proposed TYPE=range
uses the proposed MIN and MAX attributes to specify limits to numeric (real
or integer) input. The proposed default value is halfway between MIN and
MAX. The Version 3 proposed TYPE=scribble is to allow the user
to scribble with a pointing device on top of the image specified with the
SRC attribute. The Version 3 proposed DISABLED attribute would display
this INPUT, but prohibit user entry/modification. The Version 3 proposed
ERROR attribute defines text to be displayed in the event that the entered
value for this INPUT is invalid. All elements concerning FORM are Level
2.
INS
-
Description
-
The INS element changes the character rendering of the contents of the
element to logically represent inserted text, for instance in modifications
in legal documents.
-
Minimum Attributes
-
<INS>characters... </INS>
-
All Possible Attributes
-
<INS LANG="..." DIR=ltr|rtl ID="..." CLASS="...">characters... </INS>
-
Elements Allowed Within...
-
-In progress, to be determined-
-
Allowed In Content Of...
-
-In progress, to be determined-
-
Variations
-
The INS element is a Version 3 proposed element. All character definition
elements are Level 2.
ISINDEX
-
Description
-
This element appears to be a precursor to the <FORM> element
which has more features. When placed in the BODY of the document, it requires
the ACTION attribute to point to a cgi-bin program which can handle the
query, and produces a simple INPUT field with a prompt of: "This is
a searchable index. Enter search keywords:" When placed in the HEAD
of the document, it informs the browser that the document is an index document
and can be examined using a keyword search. The ISINDEX element is usually
generated automatically by a server-side script.
-
Minimum Attributes
-
<ISINDEX>
-
All Possible Attributes
-
<ISINDEX LANG="..." DIR=ltr|rtl ACTION="..." PROMPT="...">
-
Elements Allowed Within...
-
The ISINDEX element is defined as having no content.
-
Allowed In Content Of...
-
the element <HEAD>
and any element that permits members of the group block.forms
-
Variations
-
ISINDEX is a Level 0 element. The new, more sophisticated FORM
element is now used more widely. The LANG and DIR attributes are introduced
with the internationalization proposal. Version 3 proposes the PROMPT attribute.
The PROMPT attribute is a Netscape extension.
KBD
-
Description
-
The KBD element changes the character rendering of the contents of the
element to logically represent text entered as keyboard input.
-
Minimum Attributes
-
<KBD>characters... </KBD>
-
All Possible Attributes
-
<KBD LANG="..." DIR=ltr|rtl ID="..." CLASS="...">characters... </KBD>
-
Elements Allowed Within...
-
members of group text
-
Allowed In Content Of...
-
Any element that permits members of the group phrase
-
Variations
-
While intended to be distinguishable from CODE, so that input and output
would be different, most browsers render this the same as CODE, simply
as a fixed-width font. The LANG and DIR attributes are introduced with
the internationalization proposal. All character definition elements are
Level 2.
LANG
-
Description
-
The LANG element is used to change the default LANG context for subsequent
elements from the current default. A LANG attribute on an element overrides
this default LANG context for the content of that particular element.
-
Minimum Attributes
-
<LANG>characters... </LANG>
-
All Possible Attributes
-
<LANG ID="..." CLASS="...">characters... </LANG>
-
Elements Allowed Within...
-
-In progress, to be determined-
-
Allowed In Content Of...
-
-In progress, to be determined-
-
Variations
-
The LANG element is a Version 3 proposed element. All character definition
elements are Level 2.
LH
-
Description
-
The LH element defines a list header used as a title for a list. Browsers
can use this in place of the full list when a mechanism is provided to
fold and unfold nested lists.
-
Minimum Attributes
-
<LH>characters... </LH>
-
All Possible Attributes
-
<LH LANG="..." DIR=ltr|rtl ID="..." CLASS="...">characters... </LH>
-
Elements Allowed Within...
-
-In progress, to be determined-
-
Allowed In Content Of...
-
<DL>
<OL>
<UL>
-
Variations
-
The LH element is proposed in Version 3 as an optional element at the beginning
of some lists. It is expected that browsers may render this element in
a different style/font than the list itself.
LI
-
Description
-
The LI element defines a list item. It is rendered differently depending
upon the list within which it appears.
-
Minimum Attributes
-
<LI>characters...
-
All Possible Attributes
-
<LI LANG="..." DIR=ltr|rtl ALIGN=center|left|right|justify within
UL TYPE=disk|circle|square within OL TYPE=A|a|I|i|i
within OL VALUE=n>characters...</LI>
-
Elements Allowed Within...
-
members of groups text
block
-
Allowed In Content Of...
-
<DIR>
<MENU>
<OL>
<UL>
-
Variations
-
The LANG and DIR attributes are introduced with the internationalization
proposal. The internationalization proposal also includes ALIGN=center|left|right|justify
The TYPE and VALUE attributes are Netscape extensions. The validity of
their presence and possible values depends on the particular list entity
of which this is a list item. Most browsers assume the list item ends with
the beginning of the next list item or the end of the list and do not require
the closing tag </LI> All list elements are Level 0.
LINK
-
Description
-
The LINK element is used to indicate a relationship between this document
and other documents or objects. Multiple LINK elements may exist in a document.
A LINK in document A with an HREF to document/object B with REL=relation
identifies a relationship that B has to A that A recognizes/authorizes/verifies.
A LINK in document B with an HREF to document/object A with REV=relation
that is the identical relation identifies a desired/expected/claimed
relationship of B to document/object A, but must be verified by checking
with A. For further description of the LINK attributes, see the A
element.
-
Minimum Attributes
-
<LINK HREF="..." >
-
All Possible Attributes
-
<LINK HREF="..." REL="..." REV="..." LANG="..." DIR=ltr|rtl CHARSET="..."
URN="..." TITLE="..." METHODS="..." >
-
Elements Allowed Within...
-
The LINK element is defined as having no content.
-
Allowed In Content Of...
-
<HEAD>
-
Variations
-
The LANG, DIR and CHARSET attributes are introduced with the internationalization
proposal. The CHARSET attribute is a hint as to the expected character
set used by the hyperlink. Some browsers will expect a LINK REV relationship
of "made" to be a "mailto:name@e-mail_address" to facilitate sending comments
to the person that made the document. Contrary to the specification of
the standard, this seems to only work if "made" is the only relationship
in that LINK element. In addition to those mentioned with the A
element, Version 3 reserves some relations for REL that are expected to
be used for document specific toolbars. Currently these include Home,
ToC, Index, Glossary, Copyright, Up, Next, Previous, Help, Bookmark.
Version 3 also discusses relations for a document banner and style sheets.
LINK is a Level 0 element.
-
Sandia Requirements
-
A LINK element in the HEAD to identify the owner of the document responsible
for its accuracy is required by Sandia's automated Web tools:
<LINK REV="owns" TITLE="Full Name" HREF="mailto:owner-e-mail@sandia.gov">
LINK elements are also recommended to identify other individuals and
their relationships to this document. The REV value of made should
be used to identify the author of the document. Suggested values for REV
in additional LINK elements are: approves, editor, publisher.
Large documents which are separated into smaller HTML subdocuments should
use the LINK element with the REL attribute to identify these relationships.
The parent document should identify all subdocuments by:
<LINK REL="Subdocument" TITLE="Subdoc Name" HREF="link-url">
The subdocument may identify its parent by:
<LINK REV="Subdocument" TITLE="Maindoc Name" HREF="link-url">
Any Sandia document which is part of a set of HTML subdocuments which
form a sequence or hierarchy should include two specific LINK elements
identifying the REL values of next and previous. Only
one next and one previous relationship may be specified
in a document.
Any of the other document relationships mentioned in this Reference
Manual may also be used.
LISTING
-
Description
-
The LISTING element defined a separated multi-line set of text to be rendered
as it exists in the source document with the same line breaks.
-
Minimum Attributes
-
<LISTING>characters... </LISTING>
-
All Possible Attributes
-
<LISTING WIDTH="..." >characters... </LISTING>
-
Elements Allowed Within...
-
The only markup recognized is the LISTING ending element.
-
Allowed In Content Of...
-
Any element that permits members of group block
-
Variations
-
Most browsers use fixed-width characters for LISTING text. This element
existed in Version 0 and has been replaced by the <PRE> element.
RFC 1866 states that the content of the LISTING element should be rendered
so that at least 132 characters fit on a line. RFC 1866 has declared LISTING
as deprecated and some current browsers no longer recognize it.
MAP
-
Description
-
The MAP element is used to name and describe a client-side image map. This
is a set of areas defined on an image which can be selected for hyperlinks.
NAME defines the map name to be used with the USEMAP attribute on an IMG
element.
-
Minimum Attributes
-
<MAP NAME="..."></MAP>
-
All Possible Attributes
-
<MAP NAME="..."></MAP>
-
Elements Allowed Within...
-
<AREA>
-
Allowed In Content Of...
-
-In progress, to be determined-
-
Variations
-
The MAP element is part of a proposed enhancement to provide client-side
image maps. It is implemented in Netscape 2.0.
MARQUEE
-
Description
-
The MARQUEE element defines an area in which visual scrolling will be used
to display the content of the element.
-
Minimum Attributes
-
<MARQUEE>characters... </MARQUEE>
-
All Possible Attributes
-
<MARQUEE ALIGN=top|middle|bottom BEHAVIOR=scroll|slide|alternate
BGCOLOR=#rrggbb|colorname DIRECTION=left|right HEIGHT=number|number% HSPACE=number
LOOP=number|INFINITE|-1 SCROLLAMOUNT=number SCROLLDELAY=number VSPACE=number>characters...
</MARQUEE>
-
Elements Allowed Within...
-
-In progress, to be determined-
-
Allowed In Content Of...
-
-In progress, to be determined-
-
Variations
-
The MARQUEE element is a MS Internet Explorer 2.0 enhancement. Based on
the description it might be assumed that only parsed character data may
be in the content of the MARQUEE element. The ALIGN attribute defines the
location of the text within the marquee. The BEHAVIOR attribute determines
whether the text will scroll completely in and completely off
(the default), slide in and stay, or bounce between alternate
sides of the marquee. The BGCOLOR attribute defines the background color
for the marquee, which is specified as an "#rrggbb" number, or the following
color names: Black, Maroon, Green, Olive, Navy, Purple, Teal, Gray,
Silver, Red, Lime, Yellow, Blue, Fuchsia, Aqua, White. The DIRECTION
attribute specifies the direction towards which the text should flow. The
HEIGHT attribute specifies the height of the marquee, either in pixels
or with a percentsign character suffix to define a percentage of the entire
screen height. The HSPACE and VSPACE attributes are specified in pixels
and define the amount to separate the marquee from surrounding text. The
LOOP attribute specifies how many times the text will loop. If LOOP=-1
or LOOP=INFINITE, the text will loop indefinately. The SCROLLAMOUNT
specifies the number of pixels and the SCROLLDELAY specifies the number
of milliseconds between each successive draw of the marquee text.
MENU
-
Description
-
The MENU element defines an unordered list consisting of a number of separated
multi-line <LI> elements which may or may not be marked by
a bullet or similar symbol.
-
Minimum Attributes
-
<MENU></MENU>
-
All Possible Attributes
-
<MENU COMPACT LANG="..." DIR=ltr|rtl ALIGN=center|left|right|justify>
</MENU>
-
Elements Allowed Within...
-
element <LI>
but not any member of group block
-
Allowed In Content Of...
-
Any element that permits members of group list
-
Variations
-
This list type is often rendered identically to UL. RFC 1866 states that
while similar to the UL element, MENU is typically rendered in a more compact
manner. The COMPACT attribute of the UL element is more often used than
this MENU element. The exclusion in RFC 1866 of group block within
MENU implies (among other things) that MENU can contain no nested lists,
nor any paragraphs even though the LI element normally would allow this.
Some browsers do not enforce this exclusion. The LANG and DIR attributes
are introduced with the internationalization proposal. The internationalization
proposal also includes ALIGN=center|left|right|justify By adding
the PLAIN attribute to eliminate the bullets to the UL
element, Version 3 proposes to remove the MENU element. All list elements
are Level 0.
META
-
Description
-
The META element is used within the HEAD element to embed document meta-information
not defined by other HTML elements. Such information may be extracted by
servers/browsers. The HTTP-EQUIV attribute binds the element to an HTTP
response header. If not present, the NAME attribute should be used to identify
this meta-information and it should not be used within an HTTP response
header. If the NAME attribute is not present, the name can be assumed equal
to the value of HTTP-EQUIV. The CONTENT attribute defines the meta-information
content to be associated with the given name and/or HTTP response header.
-
Minimum Attributes
-
<META CONTENT="..." >
-
All Possible Attributes
-
<META HTTP-EQUIV="..." NAME="..." CONTENT="..." URL="..." >
-
Elements Allowed Within...
-
The META element is defined as having no content.
-
Allowed In Content Of...
-
<HEAD>
-
Variations
-
The META element was introduced in RFC 1866 and is a Level 1 element. RFC
1866 specifies that a series of META elements with the same name is equivalent
to a single element with the combined contents concatenated as a comma-separated
list. One proposal for specific information in the META element involves
including a PICS
label. The URL attribute is a Netscape extension. Netscape 1.1 has
added a automatic refresh capability using the META element by setting
the HTTP-EQUIV attribute to "REFRESH", the CONTENT attribute to
a number of seconds, and the URL attribute to the file to load which defaults
to reloading the same file. Netscape 1.1 also recognizes placing the URL
inside the quotes which define the CONTENT value by using a semicolon following
the number of seconds, then the URL=http://... text.
-
Sandia Requirements
-
Two META elements are required to identify specific information for Sandia's
automated Web tools.
<META NAME="REVIEW" CONTENT="DD MMM YYYY">
<META HTTP-EQUIV="KEYWORDS" CONTENT="key1, key2, key3">
For large documents split into multiple HTML subdocuments, these META
elements should only be included in the HTML document that is the parent
of all the subdocuments, usually the Introduction or Table of Contents
document.
NEXTID
-
Description
-
The single attribute N= provides the next available identifier
for use by automatic hypertext editors. If the NEXTID element is manually
entered, it should be alphabetical to avoid conflict with such editors.
-
Minimum Attributes
-
<NEXTID N="..." >
-
All Possible Attributes
-
<NEXTID N="..." >
-
Elements Allowed Within...
-
The NEXTID element is defined as having no content.
-
Allowed In Content Of...
-
<HEAD>
-
Variations
-
RFC 1866 recommends that NEXTID not be used. NEXTID is a Level 0 element.
NOBR
-
Description
-
All text between the start and end of the NOBR elements cannot
have line breaks inserted between them.
-
Minimum Attributes
-
<NOBR>characters... </NOBR>
-
All Possible Attributes
-
<NOBR>characters... </NOBR>
-
Elements Allowed Within...
-
-In progress, to be determined-
-
Allowed In Content Of...
-
-In progress, to be determined-
-
Variations
-
The NOBR element is a Netscape 1.1 extension.
NOEMBED
-
Description
-
The NOEMBED element defines content within EMBED content that is to be
ignored by browsers that can activiate the EMBED plug-in application. Browsers
that can't/won't activate the EMBED plug-in but that understand the EMBED/NOEMBED
elements or browsers that do not understand the EMBED/NOEMBED elements
will display the NOEMBED content.
-
Minimum Attributes
-
<NOEMBED>characters... </NOEMBED>
-
All Possible Attributes
-
<NOEMBED>characters... </NOEMBED>
-
Elements Allowed Within...
-
-In progress, to be determined-
-
Allowed In Content Of...
-
<EMBED>
-
Variations
-
The NOEMBED element is a Netscape 2.0 enhancement to support application
specific plug-ins.
NOFRAMES
-
Description
-
The NOFRAMES element defines content within FRAMESET content that is to
be ignored by browsers that can define Frames. Browsers that can't/won't
define Frames but that understand the FRAMESET/NOFRAMES elements or browsers
that do not understand the FRAMESET/NOFRAMES elements will display the
NOFRAMES content.
-
Minimum Attributes
-
<NOFRAMES>characters... </NOFRAMES>
-
All Possible Attributes
-
<NOFRAMES>characters... </NOFRAMES>
-
Elements Allowed Within...
-
-In progress, to be determined-
-
Allowed In Content Of...
-
<FRAMESET>
-
Variations
-
The NOFRAMES element is a part of the Netscape 2.0 enhancement to define
multiple Frames for viewing documents. It appears that Netscape 2.0 permits
any element of group body.content
in the content of the NOFRAMES element.
NOTE
-
Description
-
The NOTE element changes the rendering of the contents of the element to
logically represent separated notational text. The SRC attribute specifies
an image to appear preceding the note.
-
Minimum Attributes
-
<NOTE>characters... </NOTE>
-
All Possible Attributes
-
<NOTE LANG="..." DIR=ltr|rtl ID="..." CLASS="..." CLEAR=left|right|all|"..."
SRC="..." MD="..."</NOTE>
-
Elements Allowed Within...
-
-In progress, to be determined-
-
Allowed In Content Of...
-
-In progress, to be determined-
-
Variations
-
The NOTE element is a Version 3 proposed element. It is expected to typically
be rendered indented, without a preceding bullet, symbol, or other graphic.
Accompanying style guides are expected to define renderings associated
with specific CLASS values. NOTE, CAUTION, and WARNING are expected values
for the CLASS attribute.
OL
-
Description
-
The OL element defines an ordered list consisting of a number of separated
multi-line <LI> elements, and ordered numerically in some way.
-
Minimum Attributes
-
<OL></OL>
-
All Possible Attributes
-
<OL COMPACT LANG="..." DIR=ltr|rtl ALIGN=center|left|right|justify
ID="..." CLASS="..." CLEAR=left|right|all|"..." CONTINUE SEQNUM=value START=value
TYPE=A|a|I|i|1></OL>
-
Elements Allowed Within...
-
<LH>
<LI>
-
Allowed In Content Of...
-
Any element that permits members of the group list
-
Variations
-
The LANG and DIR attributes are introduced with the internationalization
proposal. The internationalization proposal also includes ALIGN=center|left|right|justify
Version 3 proposes the CLEAR attribute. The CONTINUE attribute is proposed
by Version 3 to continue the numbering from where the previous OL list
left off. The SEQNUM attribute is proposed by Version 3 to define a starting
number for the list. START is a Netscape extension to do the same thing
as SEQNUM. The TYPE attribute is a Netscape extension. Version 3 proposes
using associated style sheets and the CLASS attribute to handle these,
and other, options to numbering style. All list elements are Level 0.
OPTION
-
Description
-
The OPTION element identifies a choice in a SELECT element, which in turn
is part of the contents of a FORM element. SELECTED specifies that this
option is selected by default. If SELECT allows MULTIPLE, then multiple
options may be SELECTED. If the VALUE attribute it not present and the
OPTION is selected, the OPTION contents is returned upon submission of
the FORM. If the VALUE attribute is present and the OPTION is selected,
the value of the VALUE attribute is returned instead of the contents.
-
Minimum Attributes
-
<OPTION>characters...
-
All Possible Attributes
-
<OPTION SELECTED VALUE="..." LANG="..." DIR=ltr|rtl ID="..." CLASS="..."
DISABLED ERROR="..." SHAPE="..." >characters... </OPTION>
-
Elements Allowed Within...
-
The OPTION element may only contain parsed character data.
-
Allowed In Content Of...
-
<SELECT>
-
Variations
-
The DISABLED attribute was part of an early Version 2 proposal, but is
not defined in RFC 1866. It is defined in Version 3, and would display
this OPTION, but prohibit user selection/deselection. RFC 1866 sets a max
limit of 1024 characters on VALUE. Version 3 proposes the ERROR and SHAPE
attributes. The Version 3 proposed ERROR attribute defines text to be displayed
in the event that selectiing this OPTION is invalid. The Version 3 proposed
SHAPE attribute defines the shape of the "hotspot" on the imgage defined
by the SRC attribute of the surrounding SELECT element. The proposed values
of SHAPE are: "default", "circle x,y,r", "rect x,y,w,h",
and "polygon x1,y1,x2,y2,...". All elements concerning FORM are
Level 2.
OVERLAY
-
Description
-
The OVERLAY element is used to overlay one or more images on top of a FIG
image. The X and Y attributes identify the offsets from the top left of
the FIG where the top left of the overlay will be placed.
-
Minimum Attributes
-
<OVERLAY SRC="...">
-
All Possible Attributes
-
<OVERLAY SRC="..." MD="..." UNITS=pixels|en X=value Y=value WIDTH=value
HEIGHT=value IMAGEMAP="...">
-
Elements Allowed Within...
-
The OVERLAY element is defined as having no content.
-
Allowed In Content Of...
-
<FIG>
-
Variations
-
The OVERLAY element is proposed in Version 3 as part of the FIG
construct. It is designed to take advantage of the caching system of most
browsers for a series of similar images which may only differ by an overlay
and the rest is already in cache.
P
-
Description
-
The P element is used to denote a paragraph break, and separates two blocks
of text. Many other elements automatically imply a text separation, such
as headings, list elements, blockquotes, etc.
-
Minimum Attributes
-
<P>characters...
-
All Possible Attributes
-
<P ALIGN=center|left|right|justify|indent WRAP=on|off NOWRAP CLEAR=left|right|all|"..."
LANG="..." DIR=ltr|rtl ID="..." CLASS="...">characters... </P>
-
Elements Allowed Within...
-
members of group text
-
Allowed In Content Of...
-
Any element that permits members of group block
-
Variations
-
In Version 1, the <P> element was a separator and the </P>
element was not defined. RFC 1866 changed the concept to a container and
introduced the optional </P> element. The LANG and DIR attributes
are introduced with the internationalization proposal. HTML+ introduced
the ALIGN attribute and is the only proposal to mention the indent
value. The internationalization proposal includes ALIGN=center|left|right|justify
Netscape 2.0 implements ALIGN=center|left|right and MS Internet
Explorer 2.0 implements ALIGN=center|left|right|justify Version
3 does not currently include indent as an option for ALIGN. The
CLEAR attribute is proposed in Version 3 to deal with text able to float
around an image defined with the IMG element. HTML+ introduced the ID
attribute to replace the NAME attribute in the A element to establish internal
hyperlink destinations. With the expected use of ID for style sheets, this
is likely to change. HTML+ proposed WRAP to turn off automatic word wrap,
making it possible to leave text as it appears in the source. Version 3
replaces the WRAP attribute and values with the NOWRAP attribute. The P
element is Level 0.
PARAM
-
Description
-
The PARAM element is a mechanism to define general purpose parameters to
be passed to APPLET applications. NAME is the name of the parameter and
VALUE will be obtained by the applet with the getParameter() method.
-
Minimum Attributes
-
<PARAM NAME="..." VALUE="...">
-
All Possible Attributes
-
<PARAM NAME="..." VALUE="...">
-
Elements Allowed Within...
-
The PARAM element is defined as having no content.
-
Allowed In Content Of...
-
<APPLET>
-
Variations
-
The PARAM element is a proposed extension for JAVA(tm) applications.
PERSON
-
Description
-
The PERSON element changes the character rendering of the contents of the
element to logically represent the name of people to allow these to be
extracted automatically by indexing programs.
-
Minimum Attributes
-
<PERSON>characters... </PERSON>
-
All Possible Attributes
-
<PERSON LANG="..." DIR=ltr|rtl ID="..." CLASS="...">characters...
</PERSON>
-
Elements Allowed Within...
-
-In progress, to be determined-
-
Allowed In Content Of...
-
-In progress, to be determined-
-
Variations
-
The PERSON element is a Version 3 proposed element. All character definition
elements are Level 2.
PLAINTEXT
-
Description
-
The PLAINTEXT element defined a separated multi-line set of text to be
rendered as it exists in the source document with the same line breaks.
It was designed to ignore all subsequent HTML tags. Therefore, it was always
last in a document, allowing the remainder of the document to be presented
as text.
-
Minimum Attributes
-
<PLAINTEXT>characters... </PLAINTEXT>
-
All Possible Attributes
-
<PLAINTEXT WIDTH="..." LANG="..." DIR=ltr|rtl>characters... </PLAINTEXT>
-
Elements Allowed Within...
-
Only the PLAINTEXT ending element is recognized as an element inside of
PLAINTEXT content, all else is treated as character data.
-
Allowed In Content Of...
-
<HTML>
-
Variations
-
Most browsers use fixed-width characters for PLAINTEXT text. A few browsers
accepted the ending element, which meant that the ending element could
not exist in the text. The RFC 1866 DTD specifies that the ending element
can exist and implies that a browser should recognize the ending element
but accept everything else as just text. It also prohibits it from being
nested inside any element but the outer HTML element itself. Comments in
RFC 1866 state that PLAINTEXT has no ending element and all characters
after the start element are data. This element existed in Version 0 and
has been replaced by the <PRE> element. RFC 1866 has declared
PLAINTEXT as deprecated and some current browsers no longer recognize it.
The LANG and DIR attributes are introduced with the internationalization
proposal.
PRE
-
Description
-
The PRE element defines a separated multi-line set of text to be rendered
as it exists in the source document with the same line breaks and spaces.
Normal text removes multiple spaces and line breaks in the source.
-
Minimum Attributes
-
<PRE>characters... </PRE>
-
All Possible Attributes
-
<PRE WIDTH=number LANG="..." DIR=ltr|rtl ID="..." CLASS="..." CLEAR=left|right|all|"..."
>characters... </PRE>
-
Elements Allowed Within...
-
elements <A>
<HR>
<BR>
and parsed character data
-
Allowed In Content Of...
-
Any entity that permits members of group block
-
Variations
-
RFC 1866 states that the content of PRE is intended to be formatted with
a monospaced font. For backwards compatibility with some existing documents,
RFC 1866 encourages browsers to accept the <P> element in the PRE content
and treat it as if it were the <BR> element. While RFC 1866 states that
within PRE content the tab character should position to the next 8 character
boundary, it recommends that HTML documents not contain the tab character.
Version 3 encourages using the proposed TAB
element instead. The LANG and DIR attributes are introduced with the internationalization
proposal. One typical use of PRE has been for tables, but the Version 3
TABLE
element is proposed to fulfill that requirement. The CLEAR attribute is
proposed in Version 3. RFC 1866 states that the attribute WIDTH specifies
the maximum number of characters for a line. Some browsers have interpreted
this as specifying the minimum number of characters that the browser should
try to insure are displayed on a single line, possibly by selecting a smaller
font size. Many browsers ignore the WIDTH attribute, and Version 3 is discussing
the possibility of removing it. The PRE element is Level 0.
Q
-
Description
-
The Q element changes the character rendering of the contents of the element
to logically represent a short quotation.
-
Minimum Attributes
-
<Q>characters... </Q>
-
All Possible Attributes
-
<Q LANG="..." DIR=ltr|rtl ID="..." CLASS="...">characters... </Q>
-
Elements Allowed Within...
-
members of group text
-
Allowed In Content Of...
-
Any element that permits members of group text
-
Variations
-
The Q element was a Version 3 proposed element and is part of the internationalization
proposal. It is intended to be shown enclosed in the kind of quotations
marks appropriate to the LANG language context. All character definition
elements are Level 2.
S
-
Description
-
The S element changes the physical rendering of the contents of the element
to a font with a strikeout line through the letters.
-
Minimum Attributes
-
<S>characters... </S>
-
All Possible Attributes
-
<S LANG="..." DIR=ltr|rtl ID="..." CLASS="...">characters... </S>
-
Elements Allowed Within...
-
-In progress, to be determined-
-
Allowed In Content Of...
-
-In progress, to be determined-
-
Variations
-
The S element is proposed in Version 3. This replaces the STRIKE element
which was in a early Version 2 proposal but is not in RFC 1866. All character
definition elements are Level 2.
SAMP
-
Description
-
The SAMP element changes the character rendering of the contents of the
element to logically represent a sequence of literal characters.
-
Minimum Attributes
-
<SAMP>characters... </SAMP>
-
All Possible Attributes
-
<SAMP LANG="..." DIR=ltr|rtl ID="..." CLASS="...">characters...
</SAMP>
-
Elements Allowed Within...
-
members of group text
-
Allowed In Content Of...
-
Any element that permits members of the group phrase
-
Variations
-
This is usually rendered with a fixed-width font. The LANG and DIR attributes
are introduced with the internationalization proposal. All character definition
elements are Level 2.
SELECT
-
Description
-
The SELECT element defines a menu of a series of selectable input in a
FORM, each identified with the OPTION element. At least one OPTION element
is expected within the SELECT contents. NAME is the symbolic name of the
field returned to the server on submission. SIZE determines the number
of OPTIONS physically visible when the browser displays the FORM. The default
selection will be the first OPTION in the SELECT contents. The MULTIPLE
attribute, if present, allows multiple selections, and causes no OPTION
to be the default.
-
Minimum Attributes
-
<SELECT NAME="...">characters... </SELECT>
-
All Possible Attributes
-
<SELECT NAME="..." SIZE=value MULTIPLE LANG="..." DIR=ltr|rtl ID="..."
CLASS="..." ALIGN=top|middle|bottom|left|right DISABLED ERROR="..." SRC="..."
MD="..." WIDTH=value HEIGHT=value UNITS=pixels|em>characters... </SELECT>
-
Elements Allowed Within...
-
element <OPTION>
Note that the elements <INPUT>
<SELECT>
<TEXTAREA>
are expressly prohibited by RFC 1866 from being nested within the
SELECT element content
-
Allowed In Content Of...
-
<FORM>
-
Variations
-
The ERROR attribute without a value was first introduced in an early Version
2 proposal but is not in RFC 1866. The LANG and DIR attributes are introduced
with the internationalization proposal. Version 3 proposes the ALIGN, DISABLED,
ERROR (with a value), SRC, MD, WIDTH, HEIGHT, and UNITS attributes. The
Version 3 proposed DISABLED attribute would display this menu, but prohibit
user entry/modification. The Version 3 proposed ERROR attribute defines
text to be displayed in the event that the current selections for this
menu are invalid. Version 3 proposes a SRC attribute to identify a URL
for an image to be displayed instead of the OPTION texts for this menu,
with each OPTION element identifying its "hotspot" on this image. If SRC
is present, the texts would only be used for non-graphical browsers. All
elements concerning FORM are Level 2.
SMALL
-
Description
-
The SMALL element changes the physical rendering of the contents of the
element to a smaller font than normal text, if practical.
-
Minimum Attributes
-
<SMALL>characters... </SMALL>
-
All Possible Attributes
-
<SMALL LANG="..." DIR=ltr|rtl ID="..." CLASS="...">characters...
</SMALL>
-
Elements Allowed Within...
-
-In progress, to be determined-
-
Allowed In Content Of...
-
-In progress, to be determined-
-
Variations
-
The SMALL element is proposed in Version 3. This element is a Netscape
2.0 extension. All character definition elements are Level 2.
SPAN
-
Description
-
The SPAN element is a generic container to set language characteristics
for its content.
-
Minimum Attributes
-
<SPAN>characters... </SPAN>
-
All Possible Attributes
-
<SPAN LANG="..." DIR=ltr|rtl>characters... </SPAN>
-
Elements Allowed Within...
-
members of group text
-
Allowed In Content Of...
-
Any element that permits members of group text
-
Variations
-
The SPAN element is a part of the internationalization proposal.
STRIKE
-
Description
-
The STRIKE element changes the physical rendering of the contents of the
element to a font with a strikeout line through the letters.
-
Minimum Attributes
-
<STRIKE>characters... </STRIKE>
-
All Possible Attributes
-
<STRIKE>characters... </STRIKE>
-
Elements Allowed Within...
-
-In progress, to be determined-
-
Allowed In Content Of...
-
-In progress, to be determined-
-
Variations
-
This was an early Version 2 proposed element but is not in RFC 1866. (ed:
This appears to be an undocumented extension which works in Netscape 1.1.
Anyone try this with other browsers?) This is replaced in Version 3 with
the <S>
element.
STRONG
-
Description
-
The STRONG element changes the character rendering of the contents of the
element to logically strengthen the text.
-
Minimum Attributes
-
<STRONG>characters... </STRONG>
-
All Possible Attributes
-
<STRONG LANG="..." DIR=ltr|rtl ID="..." CLASS="...">characters...
</STRONG>
-
Elements Allowed Within...
-
members of group text
-
Allowed In Content Of...
-
Any element that permits members of group phrase
-
Variations
-
This is usually rendered as bold. RFC 1866 states that <EM> content
must be rendered as distinct from <STRONG> content. <STRONG> is intended
to be stronger than <EM>. The LANG and DIR attributes are introduced
with the internationalization proposal. All character definition elements
are Level 2.
SUB
-
Description
-
The SUB element changes the physical rendering of the contents of the element
to a subscripted position.
-
Minimum Attributes
-
<SUB>characters... </SUB>
-
All Possible Attributes
-
<SUB LANG="..." DIR=ltr|rtl ID="..." CLASS="...">characters... </SUB>
-
Elements Allowed Within...
-
parsed character data
-
Allowed In Content Of...
-
Any element that permits members of group text
-
Variations
-
The SUB element was in an early Version 2 proposal and is part of the internationalization
proposal, but is not in RFC 1866. No font size change was implied in Version
2 nor is any specified as part of the internationalization proposal since
it may not make sense in non-English languages. The internationalization
proposal explicitly restricts the content to parsed character data to prevent
nesting of SUB and SUP. This element is a Netscape 2.0 extension which
renders the text in a slightly smaller font. All character definition elements
are Level 2.
SUP
-
Description
-
The SUP element changes the physical rendering of the contents of the element
to a superscripted position.
-
Minimum Attributes
-
<SUP>characters... </SUP>
-
All Possible Attributes
-
<SUP LANG="..." DIR=ltr|rtl ID="..." CLASS="...">characters... </SUP>
-
Elements Allowed Within...
-
parsed character data
-
Allowed In Content Of...
-
Any element that permits members of group text
-
Variations
-
The SUP element was in an early Version 2 proposal and is part of the internationalization
proposal, but is not in RFC 1866. No font size change was implied in Version
2 nor is any specified as part of the internationalization proposal since
it may not make sense in non-English languages. The internationalization
proposal explicitly restricts the content to parsed character data to prevent
nesting of SUB and SUP. This element is a Netscape 2.0 extension which
renders the text in a slightly smaller font. All character definition elements
are Level 2.
TAB
-
Description
-
The TAB element aligns the following text according to a defined horizontal
position. A TAB position can be defined by the ID attribute. Text is positioned
using the TO and/or ALIGN attributes, or the INDENT attribute.
-
Minimum Attributes
-
<TAB>characters...
-
All Possible Attributes
-
<TAB ID="..." INDENT=ens TO="..." ALIGN=left|center|right|decimal
DP="...">characters...
-
Elements Allowed Within...
-
-In progress, to be determined-
-
Allowed In Content Of...
-
-In progress, to be determined-
-
Variations
-
The TAB element is proposed in Version 3.
TABLE
-
Description
-
The TABLE element defines a series of rows of table cell elements. The
contents of the TABLE element contains a sequence of elements which describe
various parts of the table. The order in the sequence is important and
consists of: at most one CAPTION
element, possibly some COL
or possibly some COLGROUP
elements, at most one THEAD
element, at most one TFOOT
element, and finally at least one TBODY
element or at least one TR
element.
-
Minimum Attributes
-
<TABLE></TABLE>
-
All Possible Attributes
-
<TABLE LANG="..." DIR=ltr|rtl ID="..." CLASS="..." ALIGN=left|right|center|justify|bleedleft|bleedright
WIDTH="..." COLS=number BORDER="..." FRAME=void|above|below|hsides|lhs|rhs|vsides|box|border
RULES=none|basic|rows|cols|all CELLSPACING="..." CELLPADDING="..." CLEAR=left|right|all|"..."
NOFLOW UNITS=en|relative|pixels COLSPEC="..." DP="..." NOWRAP></TABLE>
-
Elements Allowed Within...
-
<CAPTION>
<COL>
<COLGROUP>
<THEAD>
<TFOOT>
<TBODY>
<TR>
-
Allowed In Content Of...
-
Any element that permits members of group block
-
Variations
-
The TABLE element is part of a comprehensive new proposed standard tables
structure. It is partially implemented in some browsers. The proposal has
undergone numerous changes. Some broswers implemented features in early
versions of the proposal which did not survive in the final proposal. Consistent
with the nature of HTML, the proposal defines the logical contents of cells
and their row/column location, rather than a physical layout which is left
as a function of the browser. Details of the appearence of the table, along
with the size of margins around cells, even perhaps ruling and shading,
might be controlled by associated style sheets, proposed in Version 3.
The current proposal expects text to flow around a table, if possible.
It suggests using the BR element with a CLEAR attribute after the table
element if the author wishes to avoid text flowing along side the table.
Although the CLEAR attribute is not currently a standardized part of HTML,
the tables proposal does not include text to standardize the attribute's
existence.
The ALIGN attribute specifies the table position relative to the
window. The WIDTH attribute specifies the entire table width, and defaults
to 100%. The default units is pixels, but may be specified by a suffix
on the number. The standard defined units suffixes include: pt=points,
pi=picas, in=inches, cm=centimeters, mm=millimeters,
em=em units, px=screen pixels. In addition the suffix
of a percentsign may be used to specify the percentage width of the space
between the current left and right margins. The COLS attribute specifies
the total number of columns in the table and aids the browser in determining
the initial display and layout of the table. The BORDER attribute controls
frame width around the table and FRAME defines which parts of the frame
to include. For BORDER, the default units is pixels, but may be specified
by one of the standard defined units suffixes. BORDER=0 implies FRAME=none,
and BORDER without a value implies FRAME=border. The RULES attribute defines
the presence or absence of rulings between all rows and columns in this
table. The CELLSPACING attribute defines spacing between cells and CELLPADDING
defines spacing within cells.
The TABLE element has been partially implemented in Netscape 1.1 and
MS Internet Explorer 2.0. The COL, COLGROUP, THEAD, and TFOOT elements
are new and not yet implemented. The FRAME and RULES attributes are new
and not yet implemented. The values justify|bleedleft|bleedright
for the ALIGN attribute are Netscape 1.1 extensions. The attribute COLSPEC
was from an earlier version of the proposal and is replaced by the COL
and COLGROUP elements. The attribute DP is from an earlier version of the
proposal and was used with a value of decimal on the ALIGN attribute.
It has been replaced with the CHAR and CHAROFF attributes used when ALIGN=char
which are defined for all table grouping elements except TABLE. The attributes
CLEAR, NOFLOW, UNITS, and NOWRAP are Netscape 1.1 extensions. Netscape
1.1 defines WIDTH as having a value of either a number of pixels or a number
followed by a percentsign to define a desired width of the table which
may be overridden by the browser. It defines percentsign to specify the
percentage of the entire window, instead of the current margins.
TBODY
-
Description
-
The TBODY element encloses a series of table row definitions and specifies
the defaults for all the rows in this group. Table rows are grouped inside
the TABLE
content into at most one THEAD,
at most one TFOOT,
and at least one TBODY sections, in that order. Depending on the capabilities
of the browser, this sectioning can be used to repeat table head and foot
rows when breaking tables across page boundaries, or to provide fixed headers
above and footers below a scrollable body panel, or other similar rendering
schemes.
-
Minimum Attributes
-
<TBODY>
-
All Possible Attributes
-
<TBODY LANG="..." DIR=ltr|rtl ID="..." CLASS="..." ALIGN=left|right|center|justify|char
CHAR="..." CHAROFF="..." VALIGN=top|middle|bottom|baseline>characters...</TBODY>
-
Elements Allowed Within...
-
TR
-
Allowed In Content Of...
-
TABLE
-
Variations
-
The TBODY element is a part of the latest table proposal. This TBODY element
is new and not widely implemented. Both the starting and ending elements
are optional for this element. This implies that a TABLE with only one
TBODY does not require the TBODY element since the first TR element not
inside a THEAD or TFOOT but inside a TABLE will imply the TBODY content.
This also allows this proposal to be backwards compatible with existing
documents which have a simple TABLE element whose content consists of only
a series of row and data elements.
The table proposal states that a browser may display ALIGN=justify
the same as the default ALIGN=left if it lacks support for text
justification. The CHAR and CHAROFF attributes are used when ALIGN=char.
CHAR specifies a single character to be used for alignment, and defaults
to the decimal point in the current language. CHAROFF specifies the offset,
in the DIR direction, to the first occurrence of the CHAR character on
each line. If a line doesn't include the CHAR character, it is to end at
the CHAROFF position. The default value for CHAROFF is either 50% or whatever
will cause the CHAR characters in all cells with a declared CHAR in a column
to align. The default units is pixels, but may be specified by a suffix
on the number. The standard defined units suffixes include: pt=points,
pi=picas, in=inches, cm=centimeters, mm=millimeters,
em=em units, px=screen pixels. In addition the suffix
of a percentsign may be used to specify the percentage offset within the
cell. The VALIGN attribute defines the vertical alignment of the cell contents.
The ALIGN, CHAR and CHAROFF attribute values may be inherited from other
table elements in the following order: cells < columns < column groups
< rows < row groups < default. The VALIGN, LANG and DIR attribute
values may be inherited from other table elements in the following order:
cells < rows < row groups < columns < column groups < table
< default.
TD
-
Description
-
The TD element defines a data cell as part of the TABLE construct. Both
TH and TD elements can exist in any one of the three table sections: THEAD,
TFOOT, or TBODY.
-
Minimum Attributes
-
<TD>
-
All Possible Attributes
-
<TD LANG="..." DIR=ltr|rtl ID="..." CLASS="..." AXIS="..." AXES="..."
NOWRAP ROWSPAN=value COLSPAN=value ALIGN=left|right|center|justify|char|decimal
CHAR="..." CHAROFF="..." DP="..." VALIGN=top|middle|bottom|baseline WIDTH=value
BGCOLOR="...">characters...</TD>
-
Elements Allowed Within...
-
members of group body.content
-
Allowed In Content Of...
-
TR
-
Variations
-
The TD element is part of the proposed TABLE construct. A browser is to
assume the table cell ends with the beginning of the next table cell or
the beginning of another table row or the end of the enclosing TABLE, THEAD,
TFOOT, or TBODY element and thus a closing tag is not required. This element
is an extension in Netscape 1.1 and MS Internet Explorer 2.0.
The values justify|char for the ALIGN attribute are new
and are not widely implemented. The table proposal states that a browser
may display ALIGN=justify the same as the default ALIGN=left
if it lacks support for text justification. The AXIS and AXES attributes
for cells provide a means for defining concise labels for cells, either
for speech rendering, or for database field names. The attribute AXIS defaults
to the cell contents. The AXES is a comma separated list of axis names
which together identify the row and column headers that pertain to this
cell. The NOWRAP attribute will suppress word wrap in the cell. The ROWSPAN
and COLSPAN attributes define the integer number of rows and columns spanned
by the cell. A value of zero for either implies the cell spans from this
cell to the end of the table. The attribute DP is from an earlier version
of the proposal and was used with a value of decimal on the ALIGN
attribute. It has been replaced with the CHAR and CHAROFF attributes used
when ALIGN=char. CHAR specifies a single character to be used
for alignment, and defaults to the decimal point in the current language.
CHAROFF specifies the offset, in the DIR direction, to the first occurrence
of the CHAR character on each line. If a line doesn't include the CHAR
character, it is to end at the CHAROFF position. The default value for
CHAROFF is either 50% or whatever will cause the CHAR characters in all
cells with a declared CHAR in a column to align. The default units is pixels,
but may be specified by a suffix on the number. The standard defined units
suffixes include: pt=points, pi=picas, in=inches,
cm=centimeters, mm=millimeters, em=em units,
px=screen pixels. In addition the suffix of a percentsign may
be used to specify the percentage offset within the cell. The VALIGN attribute
defines the vertical alignment of the cell contents. The ALIGN, CHAR and
CHAROFF attribute values may be inherited from other table elements in
the following order: cells < columns < column groups < rows <
row groups < default. The VALIGN, LANG and DIR attribute values may
be inherited from other table elements in the following order: cells <
rows < row groups < columns < column groups < table < default.
The WIDTH attribute is a Netscape extension. The BGCOLOR attribute is
a MS Internet Explorer 2.0 extension. Internet Explorer accepts either
an "#rrggbb" number or the following color names: Black, Maroon, Green,
Olive, Navy, Purple, Teal, Gray, Silver, Red, Lime, Yellow, Blue, Fuchsia,
Aqua, White.
TEXTAREA
-
Description
-
The TEXTAREA element is used to specify a multiline input field as part
of the contents in a FORM element. NAME defines the symbolic name
of the field returned to the server on submission. The characters between
the opening and closing tags define the text to be initially displayed
in the textarea, and the default text to be returned, normally null. Only
ASCII text is allowed as characters, and newlines are respected. ROWS
and COLS define the physical size of the displayed input field
in numbers of characters.
-
Minimum Attributes
-
<TEXTAREA NAME="..." ROWS="..." COLS="..."> </TEXTAREA>
-
All Possible Attributes
-
<TEXTAREA NAME="..." ROWS="..." COLS="..." LANG="..." DIR=ltr|rtl
ID="..." CLASS="..." WRAP=off|virtual|physical ALIGN=top|middle|bottom|left|right
DISABLED ERROR="...">characters... </TEXTAREA>
-
Elements Allowed Within...
-
Only parsed character data is expected in the content of the TEXTAREA element.
Note that the elements <INPUT>
<SELECT>
<TEXTAREA>
are expressly prohibited by RFC 1866 from being nested within the
TEXTAREA element content
-
Allowed In Content Of...
-
<FORM>
-
Variations
-
The LANG and DIR attributes are introduced with the internationalization
proposal. The WRAP attribute is a Netscape 2.0 extension and controls word
wrapping inside the TEXTAREA. The value off is default and lines
are sent exactly as typed. The value virtual wraps in the display
but are sent exactly as typed. The value physical wraps in the
display and sends new-lines at the wrap points as if new-lines had been
entered. The early Version 3 proposal added the ALIGN, DISABLED, and ERROR
attributes. The Version 3 proposed DISABLED attribute would display this
TEXTAREA, but prohibit user entry/modification. The Version 3 proposed
ERROR attribute defines text to be displayed in the event that the entered
value for this TEXTAREA is invalid. All elements concerning FORM are Level
2.
TFOOT
-
Description
-
The TFOOT element encloses a series of table row definitions and specifies
the defaults for all the rows in this group. Table rows are grouped inside
the TABLE
content into at most one THEAD,
at most one TFOOT, and at least one TBODY
sections, in that order. Depending on the capabilities of the browser,
this sectioning can be used to repeat table head and foot rows when breaking
tables across page boundaries, or to provide fixed headers above and footers
below a scrollable body panel, or other similar rendering schemes.
-
Minimum Attributes
-
<TFOOT>
-
All Possible Attributes
-
<TFOOT LANG="..." DIR=ltr|rtl ID="..." CLASS="..." ALIGN=left|right|center|justify|char
CHAR="..." CHAROFF="..." VALIGN=top|middle|bottom|baseline>characters...</TFOOT>
-
Elements Allowed Within...
-
TR
-
Allowed In Content Of...
-
TABLE
-
Variations
-
The TFOOT element is a part of the latest table proposal. This TFOOT element
is new and not widely implemented. The ending element is optional for this
element and may be implied when the TBODY element is encountered.
The table proposal states that a browser may display ALIGN=justify
the same as the default ALIGN=left if it lacks support for text
justification. The CHAR and CHAROFF attributes are used when ALIGN=char.
CHAR specifies a single character to be used for alignment, and defaults
to the decimal point in the current language. CHAROFF specifies the offset,
in the DIR direction, to the first occurrence of the CHAR character on
each line. If a line doesn't include the CHAR character, it is to end at
the CHAROFF position. The default value for CHAROFF is either 50% or whatever
will cause the CHAR characters in all cells with a declared CHAR in a column
to align. The default units is pixels, but may be specified by a suffix
on the number. The standard defined units suffixes include: pt=points,
pi=picas, in=inches, cm=centimeters, mm=millimeters,
em=em units, px=screen pixels. In addition the suffix
of a percentsign may be used to specify the percentage offset within the
cell. The VALIGN attribute defines the vertical alignment of the cell contents.
The ALIGN, CHAR and CHAROFF attribute values may be inherited from other
table elements in the following order: cells < columns < column groups
< rows < row groups < default. The VALIGN, LANG and DIR attribute
values may be inherited from other table elements in the following order:
cells < rows < row groups < columns < column groups < table
< default.
TH
-
Description
-
The TH element defines a header cell as part of the TABLE construct. The
browser should render the table to cause some difference between TH elements
and TD elements. Both TH and TD elements can exist in any one of the three
table sections: THEAD, TFOOT, or TBODY.
-
Minimum Attributes
-
<TH>
-
All Possible Attributes
-
<TH LANG="..." DIR=ltr|rtl ID="..." CLASS="..." AXIS="..." AXES="..."
NOWRAP ROWSPAN=value COLSPAN=value ALIGN=left|right|center|justify|char|decimal
CHAR="..." CHAROFF="..." DP="..." VALIGN=top|middle|bottom|baseline WIDTH=value
BGCOLOR="...">characters...</TH>
-
Elements Allowed Within...
-
members of group body.content
-
Allowed In Content Of...
-
TR
-
Variations
-
The TH element is part of the proposed TABLE construct. A browser is to
assume the table cell ends with the beginning of the next table cell or
the beginning of another table row or the end of the enclosing TABLE, THEAD,
TFOOT, or TBODY element and thus a closing tag is not required. This element
is an extension in Netscape 1.1 and MS Internet Explorer 2.0. Most browsers
typically render the TH element in bold font, but otherwise identical to
TD elements.
The values justify|char for the ALIGN attribute are new
and are not widely implemented. The table proposal states that a browser
may display ALIGN=justify the same as the default ALIGN=left
if it lacks support for text justification. The AXIS and AXES attributes
for cells provide a means for defining concise labels for cells, either
for speech rendering, or for database field names. The attribute AXIS defaults
to the cell contents. The AXES is a comma separated list of axis names
which together identify the row and column headers that pertain to this
cell. The NOWRAP attribute will suppress word wrap in the cell. The ROWSPAN
and COLSPAN attributes define the integer number of rows and columns spanned
by the cell. A value of zero for either implies the cell spans from this
cell to the end of the table. The attribute DP is from an earlier version
of the proposal and was used with a value of decimal on the ALIGN
attribute. It has been replaced with the CHAR and CHAROFF attributes used
when ALIGN=char. CHAR specifies a single character to be used
for alignment, and defaults to the decimal point in the current language.
CHAROFF specifies the offset, in the DIR direction, to the first occurrence
of the CHAR character on each line. If a line doesn't include the CHAR
character, it is to end at the CHAROFF position. The default value for
CHAROFF is either 50% or whatever will cause the CHAR characters in all
cells with a declared CHAR in a column to align. The default units is pixels,
but may be specified by a suffix on the number. The standard defined units
suffixes include: pt=points, pi=picas, in=inches,
cm=centimeters, mm=millimeters, em=em units,
px=screen pixels. In addition the suffix of a percentsign may
be used to specify the percentage offset within the cell. The VALIGN attribute
defines the vertical alignment of the cell contents. The ALIGN, CHAR and
CHAROFF attribute values may be inherited from other table elements in
the following order: cells < columns < column groups < rows <
row groups < default. The VALIGN, LANG and DIR attribute values may
be inherited from other table elements in the following order: cells <
rows < row groups < columns < column groups < table < default.
The WIDTH attribute is a Netscape extension. The BGCOLOR attribute is
a MS Internet Explorer 2.0 extension. Internet Explorer accepts either
an "#rrggbb" number or the following color names: Black, Maroon, Green,
Olive, Navy, Purple, Teal, Gray, Silver, Red, Lime, Yellow, Blue, Fuchsia,
Aqua, White.
THEAD
-
Description
-
The THEAD element encloses a series of table row definitions and specifies
the defaults for all the rows in this group. Table rows are grouped inside
the TABLE
content into at most one THEAD, at most one TFOOT,
and at least one TBODY
sections, in that order. Depending on the capabilities of the browser,
this sectioning can be used to repeat table head and foot rows when breaking
tables across page boundaries, or to provide fixed headers above and footers
below a scrollable body panel, or other similar rendering schemes.
-
Minimum Attributes
-
<THEAD>
-
All Possible Attributes
-
<THEAD LANG="..." DIR=ltr|rtl ID="..." CLASS="..." ALIGN=left|right|center|justify|char
CHAR="..." CHAROFF="..." VALIGN=top|middle|bottom|baseline>characters...</THEAD>
-
Elements Allowed Within...
-
TR
-
Allowed In Content Of...
-
TABLE
-
Variations
-
The THEAD element is a part of the latest table proposal. This THEAD element
is new and not widely implemented. The ending element is optional for this
element and may be implied when a TFOOT or the TBODY element is encountered.
The table proposal states that a browser may display ALIGN=justify
the same as the default ALIGN=left if it lacks support for text
justification. The CHAR and CHAROFF attributes are used when ALIGN=char.
CHAR specifies a single character to be used for alignment, and defaults
to the decimal point in the current language. CHAROFF specifies the offset,
in the DIR direction, to the first occurrence of the CHAR character on
each line. If a line doesn't include the CHAR character, it is to end at
the CHAROFF position. The default value for CHAROFF is either 50% or whatever
will cause the CHAR characters in all cells with a declared CHAR in a column
to align. The default units is pixels, but may be specified by a suffix
on the number. The standard defined units suffixes include: pt=points,
pi=picas, in=inches, cm=centimeters, mm=millimeters,
em=em units, px=screen pixels. In addition the suffix
of a percentsign may be used to specify the percentage offset within the
cell. The VALIGN attribute defines the vertical alignment of the cell contents.
The ALIGN, CHAR and CHAROFF attribute values may be inherited from other
table elements in the following order: cells < columns < column groups
< rows < row groups < default. The VALIGN, LANG and DIR attribute
values may be inherited from other table elements in the following order:
cells < rows < row groups < columns < column groups < table
< default.
TITLE
-
Description
-
The TITLE is not part of the document text. Often the title is used
by a browser to label the display window. Some Web search engines only
search the title of Web pages. Therefore the text of the TITLE should be
kept short but sufficient to identify the document.
-
Minimum Attributes
-
<TITLE>characters... </TITLE>
-
All Possible Attributes
-
<TITLE LANG="..." DIR=ltr|rtl>characters... </TITLE>
-
Elements Allowed Within...
-
Only parsed character data is expected in the content of the TITLE element.
Note that the elements <META>
<LINK>
are expressly prohibited by RFC 1866 from being nested within the
TITLE element content
-
Allowed In Content Of...
-
<HEAD>
-
Variations
-
RFC 1866 specifies that all HTML documents must contain a TITLE element.
Some browsers will truncate titles to a length they can handle. RFC 1866
recommends that titles be fewer than 64 characters. The LANG and DIR attributes
are introduced with the internationalization proposal. TITLE is a Level
0 element.
-
Sandia Requirements
-
The TITLE element is required to include a short, uniquely descriptive
document title.
TR
-
Description
-
The TR element defines a table row in one of the three sections of the
TABLE construct: THEAD, TFOOT, or TBODY. The contents of the TR element
is required to contain at least one of either the TH element or the TD
element.
-
Minimum Attributes
-
<TR>
-
All Possible Attributes
-
<TR LANG="..." DIR=ltr|rtl ID="..." CLASS="..." ALIGN=left|right|center|justify|char|decimal
CHAR="..." CHAROFF="..." VALIGN=top|middle|bottom|baseline DP="...">
-
Elements Allowed Within...
-
<TD>
<TH>
-
Allowed In Content Of...
-
<TBODY>
<TFOOT>
<THEAD>
-
Variations
-
The TR element is part of the proposed TABLE construct. A browser is to
assume the table row ends with the beginning of the next table row, the
next table row group, or the end of the table and thus a closing tag is
not required. An early Version 3 proposal recommended that browsers should
tolerate the absence of the first TR in a table, but this option was not
included in the formal table proposal. This element is an extension in
Netscape 1.1 and MS Internet Explorer 2.0.
The values justify|char for the ALIGN attribute are new
and are not widely implemented. The table proposal states that a browser
may display ALIGN=justify the same as the default ALIGN=left
if it lacks support for text justification. The attribute DP is from an
earlier version of the proposal and was used with a value of decimal
on the ALIGN attribute. It has been replaced with the CHAR and CHAROFF
attributes used when ALIGN=char. CHAR specifies a single character
to be used for alignment, and defaults to the decimal point in the current
language. CHAROFF specifies the offset, in the DIR direction, to the first
occurrence of the CHAR character on each line. If a line doesn't include
the CHAR character, it is to end at the CHAROFF position. The default value
for CHAROFF is either 50% or whatever will cause the CHAR characters in
all cells with a declared CHAR in a column to align. The default units
is pixels, but may be specified by a suffix on the number. The standard
defined units suffixes include: pt=points, pi=picas,
in=inches, cm=centimeters, mm=millimeters, em=em
units, px=screen pixels. In addition the suffix of a percentsign
may be used to specify the percentage offset within the cell. The VALIGN
attribute defines the vertical alignment of the cell contents. The ALIGN,
CHAR and CHAROFF attribute values may be inherited from other table elements
in the following order: cells < columns < column groups < rows
< row groups < default. The VALIGN, LANG and DIR attribute values
may be inherited from other table elements in the following order: cells
< rows < row groups < columns < column groups < table <
default.
TT
-
Description
-
The TT element changes the physical rendering of the contents of the element
to a fixed width teletype font.
-
Minimum Attributes
-
<TT>characters... </TT>
-
All Possible Attributes
-
<TT LANG="..." DIR=ltr|rtl ID="..." CLASS="...">characters... </TT>
-
Elements Allowed Within...
-
members of group text
-
Allowed In Content Of...
-
Any element that permits members of group font
-
Variations
-
Browsers who do not have teletype font may render in some other manner.
The LANG and DIR attributes are introduced with the internationalization
proposal. All character definition elements are Level 2.
U
-
Description
-
The U element changes the physical rendering of the contents of the element
to an underlined font.
-
Minimum Attributes
-
<U>characters... </U>
-
All Possible Attributes
-
<U LANG="..." DIR=ltr|rtl ID="..." CLASS="...">characters... </U>
-
Elements Allowed Within...
-
-In progress, to be determined-
-
Allowed In Content Of...
-
-In progress, to be determined-
-
Variations
-
The U element was in an early Version 2 proposal but is not part of RFC
1866. It is often rendered in italic or slanted rather than underlined.
All character definition elements are Level 2.
UL
-
Description
-
The UL element defines an unordered list consisting of a number of separated
multi-line <LI> elements, and usually marked by a bullet or
similar symbol.
-
Minimum Attributes
-
<UL></UL>
-
All Possible Attributes
-
<UL COMPACT LANG="..." DIR=ltr|rtl ALIGN=center|left|right|justify
ID="..." CLASS="..." CLEAR=left|right|all|"..." PLAIN SRC="..." MD="..."
DINGBAT="..." WRAP=vert|horiz TYPE=disk|circle|square> </UL>
-
Elements Allowed Within...
-
<LH>
<LI>
-
Allowed In Content Of...
-
Any element that permits members of the group list
-
Variations
-
Nested UL lists are usually rendered more indented with differing bullets
or symbols. The LANG and DIR attributes are introduced with the internationalization
proposal. The internationalization proposal also includes ALIGN=center|left|right|justify
Version 3 proposes the CLEAR, PLAIN, SRC, MD, DINGBAT, and WRAP attributes.
The TYPE attribute is a current Netscape extension. Version 3 proposes
to replace it with the SRC and DINGBAT attributes to point to general server
and browser images respectively. Specifying <UL PLAIN> to eliminate
the bullets is proposed by Version 3 as a replacement for the MENU
element. Specifying <UL PLAIN WRAP=HORIZ> is proposed by Version
3 as a replacement for the DIR
list element. The browser may dynamically determine the appropriate number
of columns. All list elements are Level 0.
VAR
-
Description
-
The VAR element changes the character rendering of the contents of the
element to logically represent a variable name.
-
Minimum Attributes
-
<VAR>characters... </VAR>
-
All Possible Attributes
-
<VAR LANG="..." DIR=ltr|rtl ID="..." CLASS="...">characters... </VAR>
-
Elements Allowed Within...
-
members of the group text
-
Allowed In Content Of...
-
Any element that permits members of the group phrase
-
Variations
-
This is usually rendered in italics. The LANG and DIR attributes are introduced
with the internationalization proposal. All character definition elements
are Level 2.
WBR
-
Description
-
The WBR element exists to force the possibility of a word break in a no-break
section.
-
Minimum Attributes
-
<WBR>
-
All Possible Attributes
-
<WBR>
-
Elements Allowed Within...
-
The WBR element is defined as having no content.
-
Allowed In Content Of...
-
<NOBR>
-
Variations
-
The WBR element is a Netscape extension.
XMP
-
Description
-
The XMP element defined a separated multi-line set of text to be rendered
as it exists in the source document with the same line breaks.
-
Minimum Attributes
-
<XMP>characters... </XMP>
-
All Possible Attributes
-
<XMP WIDTH="..." LANG="..." DIR=ltr|rtl>characters... </XMP>
-
Elements Allowed Within...
-
The only markup recognized is the XMP ending element.
-
Allowed In Content Of...
-
Any element that permits members of group block
-
Variations
-
Most browsers use fixed-width characters for XMP text. This element existed
in Version 0 and has been replaced by the <PRE> element. RFC
1866 states that the content of the XMP element should be rendered so that
at least 80 characters fit on a line. RFC 1866 has declared XMP as deprecated
and some current browsers no longer recognize it. The LANG and DIR attributes
are introduced with the internationalization proposal.
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