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HTML Elements


An HTML element is everything from the start tag to the end tag:


HTML elements :: futurex 




  Start tag                       Element content                               End tag

 <p>                                This is a example paragraph              </p>
 <a href="default.html">  This is a link                              </a>
 <br>  

 The start tag is often called the opening tag. The end tag is often called the closing tag.


HTML Element Syntax

An HTML element starts with a start tag / opening tag.
An HTML element ends with an end tag / closing tag.
The element content is everything between the start and the end tag.
Some HTML elements have empty content.
Empty elements are closed in the start tag.
Most HTML elements can have attributes.

Nested HTML Elements


Most HTML elements can be nested (can contain other HTML elements).

HTML documents consist of nested HTML elements.

Example


<!DOCTYPE html>
<html>

<body>
<p>This is my first paragraph.</p>
</body>

</html>

Don't Forget the End Tag

Some HTML elements might display correctly even if you forget the end tag:

<p>This is a paragraph
<p>This is a paragraph
The example above works in most browsers, because the closing tag is considered optional.

Never rely on this. Many HTML elements will produce unexpected results and/or errors if you forget the end tag .

Empty HTML Elements

HTML elements with no content are called empty elements.

<br> is an empty element without a closing tag (the <br> tag defines a line break).

Tip: In XHTML, all elements must be closed. Adding a slash inside the start tag, like <br />, is the proper way of closing empty elements in XHTML (and XML).

HTML Tip: Use Lowercase Tags

HTML tags are not case sensitive: <P> means the same as <p>. Many web sites use uppercase HTML tags.

We use lowercase because the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) recommends lowercase in HTML 4, and demands lowercase tags in XHTML.



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