Computer Science, asked by kohina25, 4 months ago

Anything between these two tags will be centered including text, images or tables.​

Answers

Answered by yasmeenbharara62
0

Answer:

<title> The Title goes here - it shows at the top of the browser - but not on your Web page.</title>

</head> This tag signifies the end of the header information.

[Information above the <body> tag does not show on the Web page.]

<body> This tag signifies the beginning of the html material.

<h1> Your first header or title should go between these symbols. </h1>

<p> This tag designates a paragraph.</p>

<p> And this is the second paragraph...and so on.</p>

</body> This tag signifies the end of the body of the document.

</html> This tag signifies the end of the html document.

[Note: New html conventions (xhtml) will eventually require lower case for html tags, closing tags on paragraph endings: </p> and other "open" tags, like horizontal line tags: <hr /> - Note the space after the "hr"- and other changes. These conventions are compatible with xhtml. These changes are consistent with html. Current browsers do not use XHTML; however, it is possible to write XHTML that is compatible with HTML, and will work on existing HTML-based browsers. [W3C recommendation. Accessed 26 January 2000.]

Meta search tags [All info in brackets is explanatory and not part of the HTML code.]:

<meta http-equiv="keywords" content="english, English, distance learning, computer-mediated learning, computer-mediated education, Internet literacy, university, college, evaluate Web sites, web-based class, scholarship, composition "> [This tag goes between the <head>and </head> tags. Insert terms between the quotation marks to be searched by search engines to find your page contents. Some search engines recognize lower or upper case distinctions. It is not essential for you to create a content section. The terms above direct search engines to find my Web resources.]

Answered by Anonymous
0

Answer:

hope it's help full for u

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