This document provides an introduction to basic HTML syntax and common tags. It explains opening and closing tags, and shows examples of common tags like paragraphs, headings, links, images, lists, bold, italics, and div boxes. It also introduces Markdown as a simplified way to write HTML. The document encourages learning more at Ted Curran.net or W3Schools.com.
Markup provides information about document structure and presentation. It includes start and closing tags like <p> and </p>. HTML is a markup language used to build web pages and includes elements like <head> and <body>. It has a defined structure with tags nested properly. HTML documents are text files with a .html extension.
Introduction to basic HTML [Librarian edition]Kosie Eloff
HTML is the main markup language used to create web pages and display information in web browsers. It uses tags (<tag>text</tag>) to structure documents and describe their nature. Key points about HTML include:
- It stands for Hypertext Markup Language and is used to structure documents with hyperlinks to other texts.
- HTML pages are written as plain text files that use tags to describe text formatting and structure. The files end with .html.
- Web browsers are used to open and display HTML files, interpreting the tags and displaying the structured content.
The document provides information about HTML (Hypertext Markup Language):
1. HTML is the standard markup language used to create web pages and defines the structure and layout of a web page.
2. HTML uses tags to annotate text with semantic information like headings, paragraphs, links, quotes, etc. and the tags are enclosed in angle brackets.
3. Basic HTML tags include <html>, <head>, <title>, <body>, <h1>-<h6> for headings, <p> for paragraphs, <a> for links, <img> for images, and <br> for line breaks.
The document discusses HTML headings, paragraphs, formatting, links, and the <head> element. It provides examples and descriptions of HTML tags for headings (<h1>-<h6>), paragraphs (<p>), line breaks (<br>), text formatting (<b>, <i>, etc.), links (<a>), and elements in the <head> including <title>. It emphasizes the importance of headings, proper formatting, and links in HTML documents.
Markup provides information about document structure and presentation. It includes start and closing tags like <p> and </p>. HTML is a markup language used to build web pages and includes elements like <head> and <body>. It has a defined structure with tags nested properly. HTML documents are text files with a .html extension.
Introduction to basic HTML [Librarian edition]Kosie Eloff
HTML is the main markup language used to create web pages and display information in web browsers. It uses tags (<tag>text</tag>) to structure documents and describe their nature. Key points about HTML include:
- It stands for Hypertext Markup Language and is used to structure documents with hyperlinks to other texts.
- HTML pages are written as plain text files that use tags to describe text formatting and structure. The files end with .html.
- Web browsers are used to open and display HTML files, interpreting the tags and displaying the structured content.
The document provides information about HTML (Hypertext Markup Language):
1. HTML is the standard markup language used to create web pages and defines the structure and layout of a web page.
2. HTML uses tags to annotate text with semantic information like headings, paragraphs, links, quotes, etc. and the tags are enclosed in angle brackets.
3. Basic HTML tags include <html>, <head>, <title>, <body>, <h1>-<h6> for headings, <p> for paragraphs, <a> for links, <img> for images, and <br> for line breaks.
The document discusses HTML headings, paragraphs, formatting, links, and the <head> element. It provides examples and descriptions of HTML tags for headings (<h1>-<h6>), paragraphs (<p>), line breaks (<br>), text formatting (<b>, <i>, etc.), links (<a>), and elements in the <head> including <title>. It emphasizes the importance of headings, proper formatting, and links in HTML documents.
Hypertext Markup Language (HTML) is a markup language used to create web pages and viewable content in web browsers. It uses tags to denote elements in a web page like headings, paragraphs, and other text formatting. To create an HTML file, the file is saved with a .html or .htm extension. Elements can then be added between tags like <h1> for main headings and <p> for paragraphs. Attributes can also be added to tags to further style elements, such as adding a background image or color.
This document provides an overview of creating and submitting forms in ProdigyView. It discusses the required understanding of HTML form elements and PVHtml. It then demonstrates creating a basic form using various form elements like text inputs, textareas, buttons, selects, radios, checkboxes and more. It also discusses options that can be passed to form elements to define attributes. The document encourages reviewing the PVForms API reference and checking additional tutorials for more details.
This document provides instructions for a basic HTML tutorial assignment. It instructs students to set up a file structure with an htmlLesson10 folder, add an images subfolder, and download a chef image file. It then tells students to create an HTML file with code that displays text, the chef image below it, their name below the image, and another image of their choice, and provides instructions to test the code in a browser and upload a screenshot.
This document provides instructions on creating extra space between words and using special characters in HTML. It explains that the tag creates extra space, lists special characters like <, >, &, and " and their corresponding codes, and instructs the reader to copy sample code and test it in a browser by taking a screenshot for an assignment.
This document provides an introduction to HTML and building basic websites. It explains that HTML stands for "hypertext markup language" and is used to build websites. The document then gives an example of a simple HTML file structure and tags like <html>, <head>, <title>, <body>, <h1>, <p>, etc. It demonstrates how to write the code for a basic "Hello World" website and includes an explanation of each part of the code. The document concludes by listing some common HTML tags that can be used to format text and insert images and links.
Links are a core part of HTML that allow webpages to connect to other resources on the internet or within the same page. The document instructs the reader to create a new folder called HTML_Lesson12, make an HTML file within it called HTML_Lesson12.html, then add some basic anchor tags with href attributes to that file to create hyperlinks and take a screenshot of the code for an assignment.
The document discusses several key HTML elements for structuring and presenting content on web pages, including basic page structure tags, text formatting tags, image tags, list tags, table tags, and frame tags. It provides examples of common tags for each element and their purpose in organizing and displaying information.
HTML uses tags marked by < and > to provide structure and formatting to web pages. The basic structure of an HTML page includes <html>, <head>, and <body> tags, with the <head> containing the <title> and the <body> displaying content. Common tags include those for headings, titles, comments, and different levels of headings from <h1> to <h6>.
The document provides information about designing and developing websites and web applications. It discusses topics like HTML tags for text formatting, lists, tables, images, forms, and multimedia. It also covers CSS for styling websites and the differences between HTML4 and HTML5. The speaker is Md. Zakir Hossain, a software engineer who will teach participants how to design professional websites, develop web-based software, and publish online content in a series of classes.
This document provides an introduction to HTML (Hypertext Markup Language) and describes the basic structure and tags used in an HTML document. It explains that HTML documents use markup tags to define headings, paragraphs, lists and other elements. The key tags are <html> to define an HTML document, <head> for page header info like the <title>, and <body> for the visible page content. It provides examples of basic HTML documents and describes common tags like <p> for paragraphs and <h1> for headings.
- HTML (Hypertext Markup Language) is the code that defines the structure and layout of a web page.
- HTML uses tags to annotate text, images, and other content for display in a web browser. Common tags include <body>, <h1> for headings, and <p> for paragraphs.
- To create an HTML page, you open a plain text editor and save the file with a .html extension. Then you can use tags to structure the page content and view it in a web browser.
The document discusses HTML (Hypertext Markup Language), which defines the structure and layout of web pages using tags and attributes. It describes common HTML elements like <head>, <title>, <body>, and <html> that form the basic structure of an HTML document, as well as tags for text formatting, hyperlinks, images, lists, and tables. Paired and singular tags are introduced along with examples.
HTML Training in Ambala ! BATRA COMPUTER CENTREjatin batra
The document provides information about HTML including:
- HTML is the standard markup language used to define the structure of web pages. It uses tags to label content like headings, paragraphs, and tables.
- An example HTML page structure is shown including the <html>, <head>, <title>, and <body> tags.
- Common HTML tags are described like <h1>-<h6> for headings, <p> for paragraphs, <a> for links, and <img> for images.
This document provides an overview of HTML and CSS elements for creating web pages. It defines common terms like HTML, HTTP, URLs and describes basic HTML page structure using tags like <html>, <head>, <title>, and <body>. It also covers many other fundamental elements for formatting text, inserting images, tables, lists, links and more. Cascading Style Sheets (CSS) are introduced as a way to control styles and formatting across web pages.
Overview of HTTP, HTML, WWW and web technologies.
The combo HTTP and HTML is the foundation of the World Wide Web (WWW).
HTML (HyperText Markup Language) defines a text-based format for describing the contents of a web page. HTML is based on tags similar to XML (eXtensible Markup Language), but its definition is less strict.
HTML pages are transported with the HTTP protocol (HyperText Transmission Protocol) over TCP/IP based networks.
The power of the WWW comes with the links based on URLs (Uniform Resource Locators) that connect pages to form a web of content.
Browsers display links as clickable items that, when clicked, trigger the browser to load the web page pointed to by the link.
This statelessness contributed a lot to the stability and scalability of the world wide web where web servers are only tasked with the delivery of web pages while the browser is responsible for the rendering of web pages.
The static nature of the early World Wide Web was soon augmented with the dynamic creation of web pages by web servers or by enriching static web pages with dynamic content.
Technologies like CGI (Common Gateway Interface), JSP (Java Server Pages) or ASP (Active Server Pages) were developed to provide the infrastructure to build dynamic web applications.
These server-side technologies were complemented with client-side technologies like Javascript and AJAX (Asynchronous Javascript And XML).
Web page caching is an important mechanism to reduce latency in loading web pages and reducing network traffic.
HTTP defines different caching control mechanisms. Simpler caching methods are based on web page expiry dates while more complex mechanisms use web page validation.
Hypertext Markup Language (HTML) is a markup language used to create web pages and viewable content in web browsers. It uses tags to denote elements in a web page like headings, paragraphs, and other text formatting. To create an HTML file, the file is saved with a .html or .htm extension. Elements can then be added between tags like <h1> for main headings and <p> for paragraphs. Attributes can also be added to tags to further style elements, such as adding a background image or color.
This document provides an overview of creating and submitting forms in ProdigyView. It discusses the required understanding of HTML form elements and PVHtml. It then demonstrates creating a basic form using various form elements like text inputs, textareas, buttons, selects, radios, checkboxes and more. It also discusses options that can be passed to form elements to define attributes. The document encourages reviewing the PVForms API reference and checking additional tutorials for more details.
This document provides instructions for a basic HTML tutorial assignment. It instructs students to set up a file structure with an htmlLesson10 folder, add an images subfolder, and download a chef image file. It then tells students to create an HTML file with code that displays text, the chef image below it, their name below the image, and another image of their choice, and provides instructions to test the code in a browser and upload a screenshot.
This document provides instructions on creating extra space between words and using special characters in HTML. It explains that the tag creates extra space, lists special characters like <, >, &, and " and their corresponding codes, and instructs the reader to copy sample code and test it in a browser by taking a screenshot for an assignment.
This document provides an introduction to HTML and building basic websites. It explains that HTML stands for "hypertext markup language" and is used to build websites. The document then gives an example of a simple HTML file structure and tags like <html>, <head>, <title>, <body>, <h1>, <p>, etc. It demonstrates how to write the code for a basic "Hello World" website and includes an explanation of each part of the code. The document concludes by listing some common HTML tags that can be used to format text and insert images and links.
Links are a core part of HTML that allow webpages to connect to other resources on the internet or within the same page. The document instructs the reader to create a new folder called HTML_Lesson12, make an HTML file within it called HTML_Lesson12.html, then add some basic anchor tags with href attributes to that file to create hyperlinks and take a screenshot of the code for an assignment.
The document discusses several key HTML elements for structuring and presenting content on web pages, including basic page structure tags, text formatting tags, image tags, list tags, table tags, and frame tags. It provides examples of common tags for each element and their purpose in organizing and displaying information.
HTML uses tags marked by < and > to provide structure and formatting to web pages. The basic structure of an HTML page includes <html>, <head>, and <body> tags, with the <head> containing the <title> and the <body> displaying content. Common tags include those for headings, titles, comments, and different levels of headings from <h1> to <h6>.
The document provides information about designing and developing websites and web applications. It discusses topics like HTML tags for text formatting, lists, tables, images, forms, and multimedia. It also covers CSS for styling websites and the differences between HTML4 and HTML5. The speaker is Md. Zakir Hossain, a software engineer who will teach participants how to design professional websites, develop web-based software, and publish online content in a series of classes.
This document provides an introduction to HTML (Hypertext Markup Language) and describes the basic structure and tags used in an HTML document. It explains that HTML documents use markup tags to define headings, paragraphs, lists and other elements. The key tags are <html> to define an HTML document, <head> for page header info like the <title>, and <body> for the visible page content. It provides examples of basic HTML documents and describes common tags like <p> for paragraphs and <h1> for headings.
- HTML (Hypertext Markup Language) is the code that defines the structure and layout of a web page.
- HTML uses tags to annotate text, images, and other content for display in a web browser. Common tags include <body>, <h1> for headings, and <p> for paragraphs.
- To create an HTML page, you open a plain text editor and save the file with a .html extension. Then you can use tags to structure the page content and view it in a web browser.
The document discusses HTML (Hypertext Markup Language), which defines the structure and layout of web pages using tags and attributes. It describes common HTML elements like <head>, <title>, <body>, and <html> that form the basic structure of an HTML document, as well as tags for text formatting, hyperlinks, images, lists, and tables. Paired and singular tags are introduced along with examples.
HTML Training in Ambala ! BATRA COMPUTER CENTREjatin batra
The document provides information about HTML including:
- HTML is the standard markup language used to define the structure of web pages. It uses tags to label content like headings, paragraphs, and tables.
- An example HTML page structure is shown including the <html>, <head>, <title>, and <body> tags.
- Common HTML tags are described like <h1>-<h6> for headings, <p> for paragraphs, <a> for links, and <img> for images.
This document provides an overview of HTML and CSS elements for creating web pages. It defines common terms like HTML, HTTP, URLs and describes basic HTML page structure using tags like <html>, <head>, <title>, and <body>. It also covers many other fundamental elements for formatting text, inserting images, tables, lists, links and more. Cascading Style Sheets (CSS) are introduced as a way to control styles and formatting across web pages.
Overview of HTTP, HTML, WWW and web technologies.
The combo HTTP and HTML is the foundation of the World Wide Web (WWW).
HTML (HyperText Markup Language) defines a text-based format for describing the contents of a web page. HTML is based on tags similar to XML (eXtensible Markup Language), but its definition is less strict.
HTML pages are transported with the HTTP protocol (HyperText Transmission Protocol) over TCP/IP based networks.
The power of the WWW comes with the links based on URLs (Uniform Resource Locators) that connect pages to form a web of content.
Browsers display links as clickable items that, when clicked, trigger the browser to load the web page pointed to by the link.
This statelessness contributed a lot to the stability and scalability of the world wide web where web servers are only tasked with the delivery of web pages while the browser is responsible for the rendering of web pages.
The static nature of the early World Wide Web was soon augmented with the dynamic creation of web pages by web servers or by enriching static web pages with dynamic content.
Technologies like CGI (Common Gateway Interface), JSP (Java Server Pages) or ASP (Active Server Pages) were developed to provide the infrastructure to build dynamic web applications.
These server-side technologies were complemented with client-side technologies like Javascript and AJAX (Asynchronous Javascript And XML).
Web page caching is an important mechanism to reduce latency in loading web pages and reducing network traffic.
HTTP defines different caching control mechanisms. Simpler caching methods are based on web page expiry dates while more complex mechanisms use web page validation.
4. Common tags:
Paragraph
<p>
</p>
Sunday, November 11, 12
5. Common tags:
Paragraph
<p> 'How do you like the Queen?' said the Cat in a low voice.
'Not at all,' said Alice: 'she's so extremely—' Just then she
noticed that the Queen was close behind her, listening: so
she went on, '—likely to win, that it's hardly worth while
finishing the game.' The Queen smiled and passed on.
'Who ARE you talking to?' said the King, going up to Alice,
and looking at the Cat's head with great curiosity. 'It's a
friend of mine—a Cheshire Cat,' said Alice: 'allow me to
introduce it.' 'I don't like the look of it at all,' said the King:
'however, it may kiss my hand if it likes.' 'I'd rather not,' the
Cat remarked. 'Don't be impertinent,' said the King, 'and
don't look at me like that!' He got behind Alice as he
spoke. 'A cat may look at a king,' said Alice.
</p>
Sunday, November 11, 12
6. Common tags:
Headings 1-6
<h1> </h1>
Sunday, November 11, 12
7. Common tags:
Headings 1-6
<h1> The MAIN IDEA </h1>
<h2> Subheading </h2>
<h2> Subheading </h2>
<h3> Sub- Subheading </h3>
<h3> Sub- Subheading </h3>
Sunday, November 11, 12
8. Common tags:
Headings 1-6
<h1> My favorite Animals </h1>
<h2> Dogs </h2>
<h2> Cats </h2>
<h3> Tabby Cats </h3>
<h3> Siamese Cats </h3>
Sunday, November 11, 12
9. Common tags:
Links
<a href=“http://tedcurran.net”>
This is my link text
</a>
Sunday, November 11, 12
10. Common tags:
Links
<a href=“http://tedcurran.net”> This is my link text </a>
This is my link text
Sunday, November 11, 12
11. Common tags:
Attributes
<a href=“http://tedcurran.net”
title=”More information about this link”>
This is my link text </a>
This is my link text
More information about this link
Sunday, November 11, 12
12. Common tags:
Images
<img src=
“http://placedog.com/400/300”
/>
Sunday, November 11, 12
13. Common tags:
Images
<img src= “http://placedog.com/400/300” />
Careful!
This one’s an
exception to the rule!
Can you see why?
Sunday, November 11, 12
14. Common tags:
Images
<img src= “http://placedog.com/400/300”
alt=”cute brown puppy” />
Careful!
This one’s an
exception to the rule!
Can you see why?
Sunday, November 11, 12
15. Common tags:
Lists (Unordered)
<ul>
<li> Moe </li> •Moe
<li> Larry </li>
•Larry
<li> Curly </li>
•Curly
</ul>
Sunday, November 11, 12
16. Common tags:
Lists (Ordered)
<ol>
<li> Moe </li> 1. Moe
<li> Larry </li> 2. Larry
<li> Curly </li> 3. Curly
</ol>
Sunday, November 11, 12
17. Common tags:
Bold/Strong
<strong>
</strong>
Sunday, November 11, 12
18. Common tags:
Italics/Emphasis
<em>
</em>
Sunday, November 11, 12
19. Nesting Tags:
Match pairs from inside out
<strong> <em>
My text
</em> </strong>
Sunday, November 11, 12
20. Common tags:
iFrames
<iframe width="853" height="480"
src="http://www.youtube.com/embed/SgmARwtptoo"
frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe>
Sunday, November 11, 12
21. Common tags:
Boxes (Div)
<div style=”width: 100%; height: 600px; ”>
<div style=” width:
My text
33%; float: right;”
>
</div> </div>
Sunday, November 11, 12
22. Markdown: Simplified HTML
# Heading 1
This is a bunch of paragraph text. Here’s some more….
## Heading 2
Here’s a paragraph with an image <img src=” http://
placedog.com/300/400” />
### Heading 3
Here’s a paragraph with a [link](http://tedcurran/net).
### Heading 3
- list item 1
- list item 2
- list item 3
### Heading 3
1. list item 1
2. list item 2
3. list item 3
Sunday, November 11, 12