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The Compendium of HTML Elements | ||
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November 1, 1997. ![]() |
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| The Compendium of HTML Elements is a reference manual of all Hypertext Markup Language (HTML) tags in general use. Each element page contains the tag, text on how it is used, an example of its use, where possible, and the acknowledged attributes and arguments that modify that tag. The pages are being expanded to include charts to show the history of the tag and which browsers support it.
This page is the introduction to the Compendium. It includes a description of the features of this particular version, currently version 6. It also contains the links to the mirror site closest to you. Select the site nearest to you by your choice of a frames or non-frames page or click on the |
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Thank you for choosing "The Compendium of HTML Elements". This revision is rather minor except for the work that went into it. We went searching for the documentation on all versions of HTML since HTML+ and updated the Compatibility Charts accordingly. This will give a better view of the history of any given tag. This will be expanded in future revisions. There were lots of tags that came and went during various versions of HTML so examine the Compatability Charts before deciding to try a tag.
The Compendium has undertaken to moderate a conference on the i/us site. The objective is to provide readers a forum on the use and abuse of HTML. It will be heavily moderated to ensure that readers get the information they need in a timely fashion. Take a moment to review the site and see if it meets your needs. Your suggestions on improving this service are always welcome.
The i/us site provides cross-platform assistance for those using a wide variety of visual content creation applications. It hosts dozens of discussion conferences, and has a moderator team of 50 veteran users to respond to questions. The site also provides a variety of content areas of value to graphics users, news and commentary, free directories, support for a pager network, live chat, a gallery of user images, monthly sweepstakes and other related content and services for the user community.
Ron Woodall
November 1, 1997.