Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Stratvert is a former Microsoft program manager who left the company to focus full-time on his work as a YouTube creator, producing how-to videos about software and services from Microsoft and others.
HTML editors that support What You See Is What You Get paradigm provide a user interface similar to a word processor for creating HTML documents, as an alternative to manual coding. [1] Achieving true WYSIWYG however is not always possible .
CoffeeCup HTML Editor is an HTML editor. Originally created by Nicholas Longo and Kevin Jurica, it was first released to the public in August 1996. Until version 12.5 released in 2012, it was capable of WYSIWYG editing. In later versions, editing is done using HTML code, supported and assisted by a number of built-in features to generate and ...
January 14, 1997 HTML 3.2 [16] was published as a W3C Recommendation.It was the first version developed and standardized exclusively by the W3C, as the IETF had closed its HTML Working Group on September 12, 1996.
HTML 5.1: 17 December 2012: 21 June 2016: 1 November 2016: 28 January 2021 [43] HTML 5.1 2nd Edition — 20 June 2017: 3 October 2017 HTML 5.2: 18 August 2016: 8 August 2017: 14 December 2017: 28 January 2021 [3] HTML 5.3: 14 December 2017 [44] — — 28 January 2021 [40]
An HTML element is a type of HTML (HyperText Markup Language) document component, one of several types of HTML nodes (there are also text nodes, comment nodes and others). [vague] The first used version of HTML was written by Tim Berners-Lee in 1993 and there have since been many versions of HTML.
Semantic HTML is the use of HTML markup to reinforce the semantics, or meaning, of the information in web pages and web applications rather than merely to define its presentation or look. Semantic HTML is processed by traditional web browsers as well as by many other user agents .
Following common practice (e.g. the use of <cite> around links to author IDs in blog and forum software, and many other well-deployed uses for the element for more than work titles), Wikipedia is following the W3C HTML5.2 Recommendation, which has superseded HTML 4.01, XHTML 1.1, and all other previous W3C [X]HTML specs.