What
is HTML?
HTML is a computer language
devised to allow website
creation. These websites can then be viewed by anyone
else connected to the Internet. It is relatively easy to
learn, with the basics being accessible to most
people in one sitting; and quite
powerful in what it allows you to create. It
is constantly undergoing
revision and evolution to
meet the demands and requirements of the growing Internet
audience under the direction of the World Wide Web
Consortium (W3C), the organisation charged with designing and
maintaining the language.
The definition of HTML
is HyperText Markup
Language.
- HyperText is
the method by which you move around on the web — by
clicking on special text called hyperlinks
which bring you to the next page. The fact that it
is hyper just
means it is not linear —
i.e. you can go to any place on the Internet whenever you
want by clicking on links — there is no set order to do things in.
- Markup is
what
HTML
tags do to the text inside them. They mark
it as a certain type of text (italicised text, for
example).
- HTML is a Language, as it has
code-words and syntax like any other language.
How does it work?
HTML consists of a series of short
codes typed into a text-file by the site
author — these are the tags. The text is then saved as a
html file, and
viewed through a
browser, like Internet Explorer or
Netscape Navigator. This browser reads the file and translates
the text into a visible form,
hopefully rendering the page as the author had intended.
Writing your own HTML entails
using tags correctly to create your vision. You can use anything from a
rudimentary text-editor to a powerful graphical editor to
create HTML
pages.
What are
the tags up to?
The tags are what separate
normal text from HTML code. You
might know them as the words between the
<triangle-brackets>. They allow all the cool
stuff like images and tables and stuff, just by telling your
browser what to render on the
page. Different tags will perform different functions. The tags
themselves don’t appear when you view your page through a
browser, but their effects do. The simplest tags do nothing
more than apply formatting to some text, like
this:
<b>These words
will be bold</b>, and these will
not.
In the example above, the <b> tags were
wrapped around some text, and their effect will be that the
contained text will be bolded when viewed through an ordinary
web browser.
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