Difference between revisions of "HTML"

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[[HTML]] ([[Hypertext Markup Language|'''H'''yper'''t'''ext '''M'''arkup '''L'''anguage]]) is any [[markup language]] for  that [[W3 Consortium]] defines as a standard for marking-up [[web document]]s.
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[[HTML]] ([[Hypertext Markup Language|'''H'''yper'''t'''ext '''M'''arkup '''L'''anguage]]) is any [[markup language]] that the [[World Wide Web Consortium]] ([[W3C]]) defined until 2004 and the [[Web Hypertext Application Technology Working Group]] ([[WHATWG]]) has been defining since 2004 as a standard for marking-up [[web document]]s.
  
 
''HTML'' is one of three [[web language]]s that complement each other. Among these three, (a) ''HTML'' is used to mark up a [[webpage]], (b) [[CSS|Cascading Style Sheets]] ([[CSS]]) is used to provide multiple [[webpage]]s of one or more [[website]]s with a [[single source of truth]] for their graphic elements, and (c) a [[programming language]], [[JavaScript]] ([[JavaScript|JS]]), is used to create everything, especially multimedia features, that the first two languages cannot create.
 
''HTML'' is one of three [[web language]]s that complement each other. Among these three, (a) ''HTML'' is used to mark up a [[webpage]], (b) [[CSS|Cascading Style Sheets]] ([[CSS]]) is used to provide multiple [[webpage]]s of one or more [[website]]s with a [[single source of truth]] for their graphic elements, and (c) a [[programming language]], [[JavaScript]] ([[JavaScript|JS]]), is used to create everything, especially multimedia features, that the first two languages cannot create.

Revision as of 20:48, 12 October 2020

HTML (Hypertext Markup Language) is any markup language that the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) defined until 2004 and the Web Hypertext Application Technology Working Group (WHATWG) has been defining since 2004 as a standard for marking-up web documents.

HTML is one of three web languages that complement each other. Among these three, (a) HTML is used to mark up a webpage, (b) Cascading Style Sheets (CSS) is used to provide multiple webpages of one or more websites with a single source of truth for their graphic elements, and (c) a programming language, JavaScript (JS), is used to create everything, especially multimedia features, that the first two languages cannot create.


See also

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