C. Tags
Hypertext documents are documents containing hypertext.the thing your looking at right now - a webpage like this one written in HTML
You can create a HTML file in any of the text editors known. Notepad and various other IDE's are examples.
yes you can use any text editing software to make a HTML file. Just use the rules of HTML and save it as htm or HTML and your good to go.
Any simple text editor can be used to create an HTML document. HTML documents are just simple text, so any basic editor will do the job. Notepad, Vim, or Emacs are all good examples of very simple programs used to create HTML documents. (I'm not sure of the Macintosh equivalent to these, but that would work just as well.)
Yes, they do. The contents is a lot different for one thing. If you open .htm and then .doc in notepad, you will notice that .htm will display code. .doc will display a bunch of random symbols. A word document can't be displayed in a browser. Also, word documents contain pictures. HTML documents have to have pictures linked to it. That's why people sometimes get image errors with the little red X.
HTML documents are plain-text files, usually encoded in UTF8 format.
Hypertext documents are documents containing hypertext.the thing your looking at right now - a webpage like this one written in HTML
HTML stands for Hyper Text Markup Language. An HTML document contains HTML code that shows a Web browser how to display the document content.
You can create a HTML file in any of the text editors known. Notepad and various other IDE's are examples.
No. Valid HTML requires at least these tags:HTML example... content goes here ...The body content can be plain text. But after adding these tags, the document is not plain text anymore.
yes you can use any text editing software to make a HTML file. Just use the rules of HTML and save it as htm or HTML and your good to go.
Any simple text editor can be used to create an HTML document. HTML documents are just simple text, so any basic editor will do the job. Notepad, Vim, or Emacs are all good examples of very simple programs used to create HTML documents. (I'm not sure of the Macintosh equivalent to these, but that would work just as well.)
Yes, but not always.
HTML stands for Hyper Text Mark-up Language and was created in 1991.
Yes, they do. The contents is a lot different for one thing. If you open .htm and then .doc in notepad, you will notice that .htm will display code. .doc will display a bunch of random symbols. A word document can't be displayed in a browser. Also, word documents contain pictures. HTML documents have to have pictures linked to it. That's why people sometimes get image errors with the little red X.
A HTML page is a web page that is created using Hyper Text Markup Language and is saved with a .html extension
Any simple text editor can be used to create an HTML document. HTML documents are just simple text, so any basic editor will do the job. Notepad, Vim, or Emacs are all good examples of very simple programs used to create HTML documents. (I'm not sure of the Macintosh equivalent to these, but that would work just as well.)