rule of html on internet
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There are five important rules for coding with HTML tags.
Tags are always surrounded by angle brackets (less-than/greater-than characters), as in <HEAD>.
Most tags come in pairs and surround the material they affect. They work like a light switch: the first tag turns the action on, and the second turns it off. (There are some exceptions. For instance, the <BR>tag creates a blank line and doesn't have an "off switch." Once you've made a line break, you can't unmake it.)
The second tag—the "off switch"—always starts with a forward slash. For example, you turn on bold with <B>, shout your piece, and then go back to regular text with </B>.
First tag on, last tag off. Tags are embedded, so when you start a tag within another tag, you have to close that inner tag before closing the outer tag. For instance, the page will not display properly with the tags in this order:
<HEAD><TITLE>Your text</HEAD></TITLE>.
The correct order is:
<HEAD><TITLE>Your text</TITLE></HEAD>.
Many tags have optional attributes that use values to modify the tag's behavior. The <P> (paragraph) tag's ALIGN attribute, for instance, lets you change the default (left) paragraph alignment. For example, <P ALIGN=CENTER> centers the next paragraph on the page.
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Tags are always surrounded by angle brackets (less-than/greater-than characters), as in <HEAD>.
Most tags come in pairs and surround the material they affect. They work like a light switch: the first tag turns the action on, and the second turns it off. (There are some exceptions. For instance, the <BR>tag creates a blank line and doesn't have an "off switch." Once you've made a line break, you can't unmake it.)
The second tag—the "off switch"—always starts with a forward slash. For example, you turn on bold with <B>, shout your piece, and then go back to regular text with </B>.
First tag on, last tag off. Tags are embedded, so when you start a tag within another tag, you have to close that inner tag before closing the outer tag. For instance, the page will not display properly with the tags in this order:
<HEAD><TITLE>Your text</HEAD></TITLE>.
The correct order is:
<HEAD><TITLE>Your text</TITLE></HEAD>.
Many tags have optional attributes that use values to modify the tag's behavior. The <P> (paragraph) tag's ALIGN attribute, for instance, lets you change the default (left) paragraph alignment. For example, <P ALIGN=CENTER> centers the next paragraph on the page.
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