|
WWW
World Wide Web
Web
World Wide Web
SGML
Standard Generalized Markup
Language--a standard for describing markup languages
DTD
Document Type
Definition--this is the formal specification of a markup language, written using
SGML
HTML
HyperText Markup
Language--HTML is an SGML DTD
In practical terms, HTML is
a collection of platform-independent styles (indicated by markup tags) that
define the various components of a World Wide Web document. HTML was invented by
Tim Berners-Lee while at CERN, the European Laboratory for Particle Physics in
Geneva.
This primer assumes that you:
- know how to use Internet Explorer or some other Web
browser
- have a general understanding of how Web servers and
client browsers work
- have access to a Web server (or that you want to produce
HTML documents for personal use in local-viewing mode) .
This guide reflects the most current
specification--HTML Version 4.0-- plus some additional features that have been
widely and consistently implemented in browsers.
Editing code in Microsoft FrontPage
or Adobe PageMill in the “View Code” menu for the respective program is much the
same as editing straight HTML. Just be careful not to eliminate resident bots or
form code that is specific to the program.
HTML documents are plain-text (also
known as ASCII) files that can be created using any text editor (e.g., Emacs or
vi on UNIX machines; SimpleText on a Macintosh; Notepad on a Windows machine).
You can also use word-processing software if you remember to save your document
as "text only with line breaks".
Some WYSIWYG editors are also available (e.g., Claris
Home Page or Adobe PageMill, both for Windows and Macintosh). You may wish to
try one of them after you learn some of the basics of HTML tagging. WYSIWYG is
an acronym for "what you see is what you get"; it means that you design your
HTML document visually, as if you were using a word processor, instead of
writing the markup tags in a plain-text file and imagining what the resulting
page will look like.
It is useful to know enough HTML to code a document
before you determine the usefulness of a WYSIWYG editor, in case you want to add
HTML features that your editor doesn't support.
If you have access to a Web server,
contact your webmaster (the individual who maintains the server) to see
how you can get your files on the Web. If you do not have access to a server,
check to see if your community operates a FreeNet, a community-based
network that provides free access to the Internet. Lacking a FreeNet, you may
need to contact a local Internet provider that will post your files on a server
for a fee.
An element is a fundamental component of the
structure of a text document. Some examples of elements are heads, tables,
paragraphs, and lists. Think of it this way: you use HTML tags to mark the
elements of a file for your browser. Elements can contain plain text, other
elements, or both.
To denote the various elements in an HTML document,
you use tags. HTML tags consist of a left angle bracket (<), a tag name, and a
right angle bracket (>). Tags are usually paired (e.g., <H1> and </H1>) to start
and end the tag instruction. The end tag looks just like the start tag except a
slash (/) precedes the text within the brackets. HTML tags are listed below.
Some elements may include an attribute, which is
additional information that is included inside the start tag. For example, you
can specify the alignment of images (top, middle, or bottom) by including the
appropriate attribute with the image source HTML code. Tags that have optional
attributes are noted below.
NOTE: HTML is not case sensitive. <title> is
equivalent to <TITLE> or <TiTlE>. There are a few exceptions noted in Escape
Sequences below. Not all tags are supported by all World Wide Web
browsers. If a browser does not support a tag, it will simply ignore it. Any
text placed between a pair of unknown tags will still be displayed, however.
Every HTML document should contain
certain standard HTML tags. Each document consists of head and body text. The
head contains the title, and the body contains the actual text that is made up
of paragraphs, lists, and other elements. Browsers expect specific information
because they are programmed according to HTML and SGML specifications.
Required elements are shown in this
sample bare-bones document:
<html> <head> <TITLE>A Simple HTML Example</TITLE> </head> <body> <H1>HTML is Easy To Learn</H1> <P>Welcome to the world of HTML. <P>This is the first paragraph.</P> <P>And this is the second paragraph.</P> </body> </html>
The required elements are the <html>, <head>, <title>,
and <body> tags (and their corresponding end tags). Because you should include
these tags in each file, you might want to create a template file with them.
(Some browsers will format your HTML file correctly even if these tags are not
included. But some browsers won't! So make sure to include them.)
Click to see the formatted version of the example. A
longer example is also available but you should read through the rest of the
guide before you take a look. This longer-example file contains tags explained
in the next section.
To see a copy of the file that your browser reads to
generate the information in your current window, select View Source (or the
equivalent) from the browser menu. (Most browsers have a "View" menu under which
this command is listed.) The file contents, with all the HTML tags, are
displayed in a new window.
This is an excellent way to see how HTML is used and
to learn tips and constructs. Of course, the HTML might not be technically
correct. Once you become familiar with HTML and check the many online and
hard-copy references on the subject, you will learn to distinguish between
"good" and "bad" HTML.
Remember that you can save a source file with the HTML
codes and use it as a template for one of your Web pages or modify the format to
suit your purposes.
This element tells your browser that the file contains
HTML-coded information. The file extension .html also indicates this an HTML
document and must be used. (If you are restricted to 8.3 filenames (e.g.,
LeeHome.htm, use only .htm for your extension.)
The head element identifies the first part of your
HTML-coded document that contains the title. The title is shown as part of your
browser's window (see below).
The title element contains your document title and
identifies its content in a global context. The title is typically displayed in
the title bar at the top of the browser window, but not inside the window
itself. The title is also what is displayed on someone's hotlist or bookmark
list, so choose something descriptive, unique, and relatively short. A title is
also used to identify your page for search engines (such as
HotBot or
Infoseek).
For example, you might include a shortened title of a book along with the
chapter contents: The HTML Primer: Up to the Web. This tells the software
name, the platform, and the chapter contents, which is more useful than simply
calling the document Installation. Generally you should keep your titles to 64
characters or fewer.
The second--and largest--part of your HTML document is
the body, which contains the content of your document (displayed within the text
area of your browser window). The tags explained below are used within the body
of your HTML document.
HTML has six levels of headings, numbered 1 through 6,
with 1 being the largest. Headings are typically displayed in larger and/or
bolder fonts than normal body text. The first heading in each document should be
tagged <H1>.
The syntax of the heading element
is:
<Hy>Text
of heading </Hy>
where y is a number between 1 and 6 specifying the
level of the heading.
Do not skip levels of headings in your document. For
example, don't start with a level-one heading (<H1>) and then next use a
level-three (<H3>) heading.
Unlike documents in most word processors, carriage
returns in HTML files aren't significant. In fact, any amount of whitespace --
including spaces, linefeeds, and carriage returns -- are automatically
compressed into a single space when your HTML document is displayed in a
browser. So you don't have to worry about how long your lines of text are.
Word wrapping can occur at any point in your source
file without affecting how the page will be displayed.
In the bare-bones example shown in the Minimal HTML
Document section, the first paragraph is coded as
<P>Welcome to the world of HTML. This is the first paragraph. While short it is still a paragraph!</P>
In the source file there is a line break between the
sentences. A Web browser ignores this line break and starts a new paragraph only
when it encounters another <P> tag.
Important: You must indicate paragraphs with
<P> elements. A browser ignores any indentations or blank lines in the source
text. Without <P> elements, the document becomes one large paragraph. (One
exception is text tagged as "preformatted," which is explained below.) For
example, the following would produce identical output as the first bare-bones
HTML example:
<H1>Level-one heading</H1> <P>Welcome to the world of HTML. This is the first paragraph. While short it is still a paragraph! </P> <P>And this is the second paragraph.</P>
To preserve readability in HTML files, put headings on
separate lines, use a blank line or two where it helps identify the start of a
new section, and separate paragraphs with blank lines (in addition to the <P>
tags). These extra spaces will help you when you edit your files (but your
browser will ignore the extra spaces because it has its own set of rules on
spacing that do not depend on the spaces you put in your source file).
NOTE: The </P> closing tag may be omitted. This is because browsers understand
that when they encounter a <P> tag, it means that the previous paragraph has
ended. However, since HTML now allows certain attributes to be assigned to the
<P> tag, it's generally a good idea to include it.
Using the <P> and </P> as a paragraph container means that you can center a
paragraph by including the ALIGN=alignment attribute in your source file.
<TT><P ALIGN=CENTER></TT> This is a centered paragraph. [See the formatted version below.] </P>
This is a centered paragraph.
It is also possible to align a paragraph to the right
instead, by including the ALIGN=RIGHT attribute. ALIGN=LEFT is the default
alignment; if no ALIGN attribute is included, the paragraph will be
left-aligned.
HTML supports unnumbered, numbered,
and definition lists. You can nest lists too, but use this feature sparingly
because too many nested items can get difficult to follow.
Unnumbered Lists
To make an unnumbered, bulleted
list,
1.
start with an opening list
<UL>
(for unnumbered list) tag
2.
enter the
<LI>
(list item) tag followed by the individual item; no closing
</LI> tag is needed
3.
end the entire list with a closing list
</UL> tag
Below is a sample three-item list:
<UL> <LI> apples <LI> bananas <LI> grapefruit </UL>
The output is:
- apples
- bananas
- grapefruit
The <LI> items can contain multiple paragraphs. Indicate the
paragraphs with the <P> paragraph tags.
Numbered Lists
A numbered list (also called an
ordered list, from which the tag name derives) is identical to an unnumbered
list, except it uses <OL> instead of <UL>. The items are tagged using the same
<LI> tag. The following HTML code:
<OL> <LI> oranges <LI> peaches <LI> grapes </OL
produces this formatted output:
1.
oranges
2.
peaches
3.
grapes
Definition Lists
A definition list (coded as <DL>) usually consists of alternating a
definition term (coded as <DT>) and a definition definition (coded as <DD>). Web
browsers generally format the definition on a new line and indent it.
The following is an example of a definition list:
<DL> <DT> WWRC <DD> WWRC: Writing Web-Ready Code <DT> r.k.lester & company <DD> Feel free to download or print </DL>
The output looks like:
WWRC
WWRC: Writing Web-Ready Code
Feel free to download or print
The <DT> and <DD> entries can contain multiple paragraphs
(indicated by <P> paragraph tags), lists, or other definition
information.
The COMPACT attribute can be used routinely in case your definition
terms are very short. If, for example, you are showing some computer options,
the options may fit on the same line as the start of the definition.
<DL COMPACT> <DT> -i <DD>invokes Internet Explorer for Microsoft Windows using the initialization file defined in the path <DT> -k <DD>invokes Internet Explorer for Microsoft Windows in kiosk mode </DL>
The
output looks like:
-i
invokes Internet Explorer for Microsoft Windows using the
initialization file defined in the path.
-k
invokes Internet Explorer for Microsoft Windows in kiosk
mode.
Nested Lists
Lists can be nested. You can also have a number of paragraphs, each
containing a nested list, in a single list item.
Here is a sample nested list:
<UL> <LI> A few New England states: <UL> <LI> Vermont <LI> New Hampshire <LI> Maine </UL> <LI> Two Midwestern states: <UL> <LI> Michigan <LI> Indiana </UL> </UL>
The nested list is displayed as
- A few New England states:
-
Vermont
- New Hampshire
- Maine
- Two Midwestern states:
Use the<PRE> tag (which stands for "preformatted") to generate text
in a fixed-width font. This tag also makes spaces, new lines, and tabs
significant -- multiple spaces are displayed as multiple spaces, and lines break
in the same locations as in the source HTML file. This is useful for program
listings, among other things. For example, the following lines:
<PRE> #!/bin/csh cd $SCR cfs get mysrc.f:mycfsdir/mysrc.f cfs get myinfile:mycfsdir/myinfile fc -02 -o mya.out mysrc.f mya.out cfs save myoutfile:mycfsdir/myoutfile rm * </PRE>
display as:
#!/bin/csh cd $SCR cfs get mysrc.f:mycfsdir/mysrc.f cfs get myinfile:mycfsdir/myinfile fc -02 -o mya.out mysrc.f mya.out cfs save myoutfile:mycfsdir/myoutfile rm *
The <PRE> tag can be used with an optional WIDTH attribute that specifies the
maximum number of characters for a line. WIDTH also signals your browser to
choose an appropriate font and indentation for the text.
Hyperlinks can be used within <PRE> sections. You should avoid using other
HTML tags within <PRE> sections, however.
Note that because <, >, and & have special meanings in HTML, you must use
their escape sequences (<, >, and &, respectively) to enter these
characters. See the section
Escape Sequences
for more information.
Use the <BLOCKQUOTE> tag to include lengthy quotations in a separate block on
the screen. Most browsers generally change the margins for the quotation to
separate it from surrounding text.
In the example:
<P>Omit needless words.</P> <BLOCKQUOTE> <P>Vigorous writing is concise. A sentence should contain no unnecessary words, a paragraph no unnecessary sentences, for the same reason that a drawing should have no unnecessary lines and a machine no unnecessary parts. </P> <P>--William Strunk, Jr., 1918 </P> </BLOCKQUOTE>
The result is:
Omit needless words. Vigorous writing is concise. A sentence should contain
no unnecessary words, a paragraph no unnecessary sentences, for the same reason
that a drawing should have no unnecessary lines and a machine no unnecessary
parts. --William Strunk, Jr., 1918
The
<BR> tag forces a line
break with no extra (white) space between lines. Using
<P> elements for short
lines of text such as postal addresses results in unwanted additional white
space. For example, with
:
r.k.lester & company<BR> 665 Tanbark Drive<BR> Afton, VA 22920<BR>
The output is:
r.k.lester & company
665 Tanbark Drive
Afton, VA 22920
The <HR> tag produces a horizontal line the width of the browser
window. A horizontal rule is useful to separate major sections of your document.
You can vary a rule's size (thickness) and width (the percentage of the
window covered by the rule). Experiment with the settings until you are
satisfied with the presentation. For example:
<HR SIZE=4 WIDTH="50%">
displays as:

HTML has two types of styles for
individual words or sentences: logical and physical. Logical styles tag
text according to its meaning, while physical styles indicate the
specific appearance of a section. For example, in the preceding sentence, the
words "logical styles" was tagged as "emphasis." The same effect (formatting
those words in italics) could have been achieved via a different tag that tells
your browser to "put these words in italics."
If physical and logical styles produce the same result on the screen, why are
there both?
In the ideal SGML universe, content is divorced from presentation. Thus SGML
tags a level-one heading as a level-one heading, but does not specify that the
level-one heading should be, for instance, 24-point bold Times centered. The
advantage of this approach (it's similar in concept to style sheets in many word
processors) is that if you decide to change level-one headings to be 20-point
left-justified Helvetica, all you have to do is change the definition of the
level-one heading in your Web browser. Indeed, many browsers today let you
define how you want the various HTML tags rendered on-screen using what are
called cascading style sheets, or CSS.
CSS is more advanced than HTML, though, and will not be covered in this
Primer. (You can learn more about CSS at the
World Wide Web Consortium
CSS site.)
Another advantage of logical tags is that they help enforce consistency in
your documents. It's easier to tag something as <H1> than to remember
that level-one headings are 24-point bold Times centered or whatever. For
example, consider the <STRONG> tag.
Most browsers render it in bold text. However, it is possible that a reader
would prefer that these sections be displayed in red instead. (This is possible
using a local cascading style sheet on the reader's own computer.) Logical
styles offer this flexibility.
Try to be consistent about which type of style you use. If you tag with
physical styles, do so throughout a document. If you use logical styles, stick
with them within a document. Keep in mind that future releases of HTML might not
support certain logical styles, which could mean that browsers will not display
your logical-style coding. (For example, the <DFN> tag -- short for
"definition", and typically displayed in italics -- is not widely supported and
will be ignored if the reader's browser does not understand it.)
Logical Styles
<DFN>
for a word being defined. Typically displayed in italics. (Internet
Explorer is a World Wide Web browser.)
<EM>
for emphasis. Typically displayed in italics. (Consultants
cannot reset your password unless you call the help line.)
<CITE>
for titles of books, films, etc. Typically displayed in
italics. (A Beginner's Guide to HTML)
<CODE>
for computer code. Displayed in a fixed-width font. (The
<stdio.h>
header file)
<KBD>
for user keyboard entry. Typically displayed in plain
fixed-width font. (Enter
passwd to change your password.)
<SAMP>
for a sequence of literal characters. Displayed in a
fixed-width font. (Segmentation
fault: Core dumped.)
<STRONG>
for strong emphasis. Typically displayed in bold. (NOTE:
Always check your links.)
<VAR>
for a variable, where you will replace the variable with
specific information. Typically displayed in italics. (rm
filename
deletes the file.)
<B>bold
text
<I>italic
text
<TT>typewriter
text
Character entities have two
functions:
- escaping special characters
- displaying other characters not available in the plain
ASCII character set (primarily characters with diacritical marks)
Three ASCII characters--the left angle bracket (<), the right angle bracket
(>), and the ampersand (&)--have special meanings in HTML and therefore cannot
be used "as is" in text. (The angle brackets are used to indicate the beginning
and end of HTML tags, and the ampersand is used to indicate the beginning of an
escape sequence.) Double quote marks may be used as-is but a character entity
may also be used (").
To use one of the three characters in an HTML document, you must enter its
escape sequence instead:
<
the escape sequence for <
>
the escape sequence for >
&
the escape sequence for &
Additional escape sequences support accented characters,
such as:
ö
a lowercase o with an umlaut: ö
ñ
a lowercase n with a tilde: ñ
È
an uppercase E with a grave accent: È
You can substitute other letters for the o, n, and E
shown above.
NOTE: Unlike the rest of HTML, the escape
sequences are case sensitive. You cannot, for instance, use
< instead
of <.
The chief power of HTML comes from its ability to link text and/or an image
to another document or section of a document. A browser highlights the
identified text or image with color and/or underlines to indicate that it is a
hypertext link (often shortened to hyperlink or just link).
HTML's single hypertext-related tag is <A>, which stands for anchor.
To include an anchor in your document:
1.
Start the anchor with
<A (include a
space after the A)
2.
Specify the document you're linking to by entering the parameter
HREF="filename"
followed by a closing right angle bracket (>)
3.
Enter the text that will serve as the hypertext link in the current
document
4.
Enter the ending anchor tag:
</A> (no space is needed before the
end anchor tag)
Here is a sample hypertext reference in a file called US.html:
<A HREF="MaineStats.html">Maine</A>
This entry makes the word Maine the hyperlink to the document MaineStats.html,
which is in the same directory as the first document.
You can link to documents in other directories by specifying the relative
path from the current document to the linked document. For example, a link to a
file NYStats.html located in the subdirectory AtlanticStates
would be:
<A HREF="AtlanticStates/NYStats.html">New York</A>
These are called relative links because you are specifying the path to the
linked file relative to the location of the current file. You can also use the
absolute pathname (the complete URL) of the file, but relative links are more
efficient in accessing a server. They also have the advantage of making your
documents more "portable" -- for instance, you can create several web pages in a
single folder on your local computer, using relative links to hyperlink one page
to another, and then upload the entire folder of web pages to your web server.
The pages on the server will then link to other pages on the server, and the
copies on your hard drive will still point to the other pages stored there.
It is important to point out that UNIX is a case-sensitive operating system
where filenames are concerned, while DOS and the MacOS are not. For instance, on
a Macintosh, "DOCUMENT.HTML", "Document.HTML", and "document.html" are all the
same name.
If you make a relative hyperlink to "DOCUMENT.HTML", and the file is actually
named "document.html", the link will still be valid. But if you upload all your
pages to a UNIX web server, the link will no longer work. Be sure to check your
filenames before uploading.
Pathnames use the standard UNIX syntax. The UNIX syntax for the parent
directory (the directory that contains the current directory) is "..". (For more
information consult a beginning UNIX reference text such as Learning the UNIX
Operating System from O'Reilly and Associates, Inc.)
If you were in the NYStats.html file and were referring to the
original document US.html, your link would look like this:
<A HREF="../US.html">United States</A>
In
general, you should use relative links whenever possible because:
1.
It's easier to move a group of documents to another location (because the
relative path names will still be valid)
2.
It's more efficient connecting to the server
3.
There is less to type
However, use absolute pathnames when linking to documents that are not
directly related. For example, consider a group of documents that comprise a
user manual. Links within this group should be relative links. Links to other
documents (perhaps a reference to related software) should use absolute
pathnames instead. This way if you move the user manual to a different
directory, none of the links would have to be updated.
The World Wide Web uses Uniform Resource Locators (URLs) to specify the
location of files on other servers. A URL includes the type of resource being
accessed (e.g., Web, gopher, FTP), the address of the server, and the location
of the file. The syntax is:
scheme://host.domain
[:port]/path/ filename
where scheme is one of
file
a file on your local system
ftp
a file on an anonymous FTP server
http
a file on a World Wide Web server
gopher
a file on a Gopher server
WAIS
a file on a WAIS server
news
a Usenet newsgroup
telnet
a connection to a Telnet-based service
The port number can generally be omitted. (That means unless someone tells
you otherwise, leave it out.)
For example, to include a link to this primer in your document, enter:
<A HREF="http://www.rosedata.net/manual.html">A Guide to HTML</A>
This entry makes the text “A Guide to HTML” a hyperlink to this document.
There is also a mailto scheme, used to hyperlink email addresses, but this
scheme is unique in that it uses only a colon (:) instead of :// between the
scheme and the address. You can read more about mailto
below.
For more information on URLs, refer to:
Anchors can also be used to move a reader to a
particular section in a document (either the same or a different document)
rather than to the top, which is the default. This type of an anchor is commonly
called a named anchor because to create the links, you insert HTML names
within the document.
This guide is a good example of using named anchors in
one document. The guide is constructed as one document to make printing easier.
But as one (long) document, it can be time-consuming to move through when all
you really want to know about is one bit of information about HTML. Internal
hyperlinks are used to create a "table of contents" at the top of this document.
These hyperlinks move you from one location in the document to another location
in the same document.
You can also link to a specific section in another
document. That information is presented first because understanding that helps
you understand linking within one document.
Suppose you want to set a link from document A (documentA.html)
to a specific section in another document (MaineStats.html).
Enter the HTML coding for a link to a named anchor:
documentA.html: In addition to the many state parks, Maine is also home to <a href="MaineStats.html#ANP">Acadia National Park</a>.
Think of the characters after the hash (#) mark as a
tab within the MaineStats.html file. This tab tells your browser what should be
displayed at the top of the window when the link is activated. In other words,
the first line in your browser window should be the Acadia National Park
heading.
Next, create the named anchor (in this example "ANP")
in MaineStats.html:
<H2><A NAME="ANP">Acadia National Park</a></H2>
With both of these elements in place, you can bring a
reader directly to the Acadia reference in MaineStats.html.
NOTE: You cannot make links to specific sections within a different
document unless either you have write permission to the coded source of that
document or that document already contains in-document named anchors. For
example, you could include named anchors to this primer in a document you are
writing because there are named anchors in this guide (use View Source in your
browser to see the coding). But if this document did not have named anchors, you
could not make a link to a specific section because you cannot edit the original
file on the server.
The technique is the same except the filename is
omitted.
For example, to link to the ANP anchor from within
MaineStats, enter:
...More information about <A HREF="#ANP">Acadia National Park</a> is available elsewhere in this document.
Be sure to include the <A NAME=> tag at the place in
your document where you want the link to jump to (<A NAME="ANP">Acadia National
Park</a>).
Named anchors are particularly useful when you think
readers will print a document in its entirety or when you have a lot of short
information you want to place online in one file.
You can make it easy for a reader to
send electronic mail to a specific person or mail alias by including the
mailto
attribute in a hyperlink. The format is:
<A HREF="mailto:emailinfo@host">Name</a>
For
example, enter:
<A HREF="mailto:rose@rosedata.net"> RoseData</a>
Most Web browsers can display inline
images (that is, images next to text) that are in X Bitmap (XBM), GIF, or JPEG
format. Other image formats are also being incorporated into Web browsers [e.g.,
the Portable Network Graphic (PNG) format]. Each image takes additional time to
download and slows down the initial display of a document. Carefully select your
images and the number of images in a document.
To include an inline image, enter:
<IMG SRC=ImageName>
where ImageName is the URL of
the image file.
The syntax for
<IMG SRC>
URLs is identical to that used in an anchor
HREF. If the
image file is a GIF file, then the filename part of ImageName must end
with .gif.
Filenames of X Bitmap images must end with
.xbm; JPEG
image files must end with
.jpg or
.jpeg; and
Portable Network Graphic files must end with
.png.
You should include two other attributes on <IMG> tags to tell your
browser the size of the images it is downloading with the text. The HEIGHT
and WIDTH attributes let your browser set aside the appropriate space
(in pixels) for the images as it downloads the rest of the file. (You can get
the pixel size from your image-processing software, such as Adobe Photoshop.
Some browsers will also display the dimensions of an image file in the title bar
if the image is viewed by itself without an enclosing HTML document.)
For example, to include a self portrait image in a file along with the
portrait's dimensions, enter:
<IMG SRC=SelfPortrait.gif HEIGHT=100 WIDTH=65>
NOTE: Some browsers use the HEIGHT and WIDTH attributes to
stretch or shrink an image to fit into the allotted space when the image does
not exactly match the attribute numbers. Not all browser developers think
stretching/shrinking is a good idea, so don't plan on your readers having access
to this feature. Check your dimensions and use the correct ones.
You have some flexibility when displaying images. You can have images
separated from text and aligned to the left or right or centered. Or you can
have an image aligned with text. Try several possibilities to see how your
information looks best.
Aligning Text with an Image
By default the bottom of an image is aligned with the following text, as shown
in this paragraph. You can align images to the top or center of a paragraph
using the ALIGN= attributes TOP and CENTER.
This text is aligned with the top of
the image (<IMG SRC = "BarHotlist.gif" ALT="[HOTLIST]" ALIGN=TOP>). Notice how
the browser aligns only one line and then jumps to the bottom of the image for
the rest of the text.
And this text is centered on the
image (<IMG SRC = "BarHotlist.gif" ALT="[HOTLIST]" ALIGN=CENTER>). Again, only
one line of text is centered; the rest is below the image.
Images without Text
To display an image without any associated text (e.g., your organization's
logo), make it a separate paragraph. Use the paragraph ALIGN= attribute to
center the image or adjust it to the right side of the window as shown below:
<p ALIGN=CENTER> <IMG SRC = "BarHotlist.gif" ALT="[HOTLIST]"> </p>
which
results in:
The
image is centered; this paragraph starts below it and left justified.
Some World Wide Web browsers -- primarily the text-only browsers such as
Lynx -- cannot
display images. Some users turn off image loading even if their software can
display images (especially if they are using a modem or have a slow connection).
HTML provides a mechanism to tell readers what they are missing on your pages if
they can't load images.
The ALT attribute lets you specify text to be displayed instead of an image.
For example:
<IMG SRC="UpArrow.gif" ALT="Up">
where UpArrow.gif is the picture of an upward pointing arrow. With
graphics-capable viewers that have image-loading turned on, you see the up arrow
graphic. With a text-only browser or if image-loading is turned off, the word Up
is shown in your window in place of the image.
You should try to include alternate text for each image you use in your
document, which is a courtesy for your readers -- or, for users who might be
visually impaired, a necessity.
Inline images can be used as hyperlinks just like plain text. The following
HTML code:
<A HREF="hotlist.html"><IMG SRC="BarHotlist.gif" ALT="[HOTLIST]"></A>
Produces the following result:
(Note that this link doesn't
actually go anywhere.) The blue border that surrounds the image indicates that
it's a clickable hyperlink. You may not always want this border to be displayed,
though. In this case you can use the BORDER attribute of the IMG tag to make the
image appear as normal. Adding the BORDER attribute and setting it to zero:
<A HREF="hotlist.html"><IMG SRC="BarHotlist.gif" BORDER=0 ALT="[HOTLIST]"></A>
Produces the following result:
The BORDER attribute can also be set to non-zero values, whether or not the
image is used as a hyperlink. In this case, the border will appear using the
default text color for the web page. For instance, if you wanted to give your
image a plain black border to help it stand out on the page, you might try this:
<IMG SRC="BarHotlist.gif" BORDER=6 ALT="[HOTLIST]">
And get the following result:
Newer versions of Web browsers can load an image and use it as a background
when displaying a page. Some people like background images and some don't. In
general, if you want to include a background, make sure your text can be read
easily when displayed on top of the image.
Background images can be a texture (linen finished paper, for example) or an
image of an object (a logo possibly). You create the background image as you do
any image.
However you only have to create a small piece of the image. Using a feature
called tiling, a browser takes the image and repeats it across and down to fill
your browser window. In sum you generate one image, and the browser replicates
it enough times to fill your window. This action is automatic when you use the
background tag shown below.
The tag to include a background image is included in the <BODY> statement as
an attribute:
<BODY BACKGROUND="filename.gif">
By default browsers display text in black on a gray background. However, you
can change both elements if you want. Some HTML authors select a background
color and coordinate it with a change in the color of the text.
Always preview changes like this to make sure your pages are readable. (For
example, many people find red text on a black background difficult to read!) In
general, try to avoid using high-contrast images or images that use the color of
your text anywhere within the graphic.
You change the color of text, links, visited links, and active links (links
that are currently being clicked on) using further attributes of the <BODY> tag.
For example:
<BODY BGCOLOR="#000000" TEXT="#FFFFFF" LINK="#9690CC">
This creates a window with a black background (BGCOLOR), white text (TEXT),
and silvery hyperlinks (LINK).
The six-digit number and letter combinations represent colors by giving their
RGB (red, green, blue) value. The six digits are actually three two-digit
numbers in sequence, representing the amount of red, green, or blue as a
hexadecimal value in the range 00-FF. For example, 000000 is black (no color at
all), FF0000 is bright red, 0000FF is bright blue, and FFFFFF is white (fully
saturated with all three colors).
These number and letter combinations are generally rather cryptic.
Fortunately an online resource is available to help you track down the
combinations that map to specific colors and there is software available for you
to do this on your workstation:
For some basic colors -- typically those in the standard sixteen-color
Windows 3.1 palette -- you can also use the name of the color instead of the
corresponding RGB value. For example, "black", "red", "blue", and "cyan" are all
valid for use in place of RGB values. However, while not all browsers will
understand all color names, any browser that can display colors will understand
RGB values, so use them whenever possible.
You may want to have an image open as a separate document when a user
activates a link on either a word or a smaller, inline version of the image
included in your document. This is called an external image, and it is useful if
you do not wish to slow down the loading of the main document with large inline
images.
To include a reference to an external image, enter:
<A HREF="MyImage.gif">link anchor</A>
You can
also use a smaller image as a link to a larger image. Enter:
<A HREF="LargerImage.gif"><IMG SRC="SmallImage.gif"></A>
The reader sees the SmallImage.gif image and clicks on it to open the
LargerImage.gif file.
Use the same syntax for links to external animations and sounds. The only
difference is the file extension of the linked file. For example,
<A HREF="AdamsRib.mov">link
anchor</A>
specifies a link to a QuickTime movie. Some common file types and their
extensions are:
plain text.txt
HTML
document.html
GIF image.gif
TIFF image.tiff
X Bitmap
image.xbm
JPEG image.jpg
(or
.jpeg
)
PostScript
file.ps
AIFF sound
file.aiff
AU sound
file.au
WAV sound
file.wav
QuickTime
movie.mov
MPEG movie.mpeg
(or
.mpg
)
Keep in mind your intended audience and their access to software. Most UNIX
workstations, for instance, cannot view QuickTime movies.
Before HTML tags for tables were finalized, authors had to carefully format
their tabular information within <PRE> tags, counting spaces and previewing
their output. Tables are very useful for presentation of tabular information as
well as a boon to creative HTML authors who use the table tags to present their
regular Web pages.
Think of your tabular information in light of the coding explained below. A
table has heads where you explain what the columns/rows include, rows for
information, cells for each item. In the following table, the first column
contains the header information, each row explains an HTML table tag, and each
cell contains a paired tag or an explanation of the tag's function.
|
|
|
Element |
Description |
|
<TABLE> ...
</TABLE> |
defines a table in HTML. If the
BORDER attribute is present, your browser displays the table
with a border. |
|
<CAPTION> ...
</CAPTION> |
defines the caption for the title of the table. The
default position of the title is centered at the top of the table. The
attribute
ALIGN=BOTTOM can be used to position the caption below the
table.
NOTE: Any kind of markup tag can be used in the caption. |
|
<TR>
...
</TR> |
specifies a table row within a table. You may define
default attributes for the entire row:
ALIGN (LEFT,
CENTER,
RIGHT) and/or
VALIGN (TOP,
MIDDLE,
BOTTOM). See Table Attributes at the end of this table for more
information. |
|
<TH>
...
</TH> |
defines a table header cell. By default the text in
this cell is bold and centered. Table header cells may contain other
attributes to determine the characteristics of the cell and/or its contents.
See Table Attributes at the end of this table for more information. |
|
<TD>
...
</TD> |
defines a table data cell. By default the text in this
cell is aligned left and centered vertically. Table data cells may contain
other attributes to determine the characteristics of the cell and/or its
contents. See Table Attributes at the end of this table for more
information. |
|