Tags Explained
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.
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.
NOTE: HTML is not case sensitive
in most cases. <title> is
equivalent to <TITLE> or <TiTlE>.
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.
HTML Links (Writing - Understanding - etc.):