Course Content
HTML Basic Examples
In this chapter we will show some basic HTML examples. Don't worry if we use tags you have not learned about yet.
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HTML Editors
A simple text editor is all you need to learn HTML.
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HTML Basic Examples
In this chapter we will show some basic HTML examples.
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HTML Elements
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HTML Attributes
HTML attributes provide additional information about HTML elements.
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HTML Headings
HTML headings are titles or subtitles that you want to display on a webpage.
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HTML Paragraphs
A paragraph always starts on a new line, and is usually a block of text.
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HTML Styles
The HTML style attribute is used to add styles to an element, such as color, font, size, and more.
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HTML Text Formatting
HTML contains several elements for defining text with a special meaning
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HTML Quotation and Citation Elements
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HTML Comments
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HTML Styles – CSS
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HTML Favicon
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HTML Page Title
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HTML Block and Inline Elements
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HTML Div Element
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HTML class Attribute
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HTML id Attribute
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HTML Iframes
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HTML JavaScript
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HTML File Paths
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HTML – The Head Element
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HTML Layout Elements and Techniques
HTML Tutorial
About Lesson

HTML Elements

The HTML element is everything from the start tag to the end tag:

<tagname>Content goes here…</tagname>

Examples of some HTML elements:

<h1>My First Heading</h1>
<p>My first paragraph.</p>
Start tagElement contentEnd tag
<h1>My First Heading</h1>
<p>My first paragraph.</p>
<br>nonenone

Note: Some HTML elements have no content (like the <br> element). These elements are called empty elements. Empty elements do not have an end tag!


Nested HTML Elements

HTML elements can be nested (this means that elements can contain other elements).

All HTML documents consist of nested HTML elements.

The following example contains four HTML elements (<html><body><h1> and <p>):

Example

<!DOCTYPE html>
<html>
<body>

<h1>My First Heading</h1>
<p>My first paragraph.</p>

</body>
</html>

Example Explained

The <html> element is the root element and it defines the whole HTML document.

It has a start tag <html> and an end tag </html>.

Then, inside the <html> element there is a <body> element:

<body>

<h1>My First Heading</h1>
<p>My first paragraph.</p>

</body>
 

The <body> element defines the document’s body.

It has a start tag <body> and an end tag </body>.

Then, inside the <body> element there are two other elements: <h1> and <p>:

<h1>My First Heading</h1>
<p>My first paragraph.</p>

The <h1> element defines a heading.

It has a start tag <h1> and an end tag </h1>:

<h1>My First Heading</h1>

The <p> element defines a paragraph.

It has a start tag <p> and an end tag </p>:

<p>My first paragraph.</p>

Never Skip the End Tag

Some HTML elements will display correctly, even if you forget the end tag:

Example

<html>
<body>

<p>This is a paragraph
<p>This is a paragraph

</body>
</html>

Empty HTML Elements

HTML elements with no content are called empty elements.

The <br> tag defines a line break, and is an empty element without a closing tag:

Example

<p>This is a <br> paragraph with a line break.</p>

HTML is Not Case Sensitive

HTML tags are not case sensitive: <P> means the same as <p>.

The HTML standard does not require lowercase tags, but W3C recommends lowercase in HTML, and demands lowercase for stricter document types like XHTML.