Actually, it depends on the version of HTML and your browser. The current standard requires you to write HTML tags in lower-case letters. However, many browsers will recognize both <BODY> and <body> as valid HTML tags.
No. HTML tags are not case sensitive. However, he standard approach by designers now, is to type them in lower case.
No this language is not case sensitive. You can interchange uppercase and lowercase characters.
All default tags should be written in all lowercase but you could also do this to custom tags:
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HTML5 isn't something you download. HTML is the language for creating Web pages and HTML5 is the latest version that is being devised by Web standards organizations. To use HTML5, you can write HTML5 instructions (known as tags) in a text editor, save the text file, and then open the file in a Web browser that supports HTML5. As of January 2011, the major Web browsers such as Internet Explorer, Firefox, Safari, and Chrome are beginning to support HTML5 features. For more information about HTML5, see the Related Link.
You can find out if your browser supports html5 by going to html5test.com
C is case sensitive, which means that, for example, $var and $VAR are not the same variable.
yes.
By using the Html5 lot of development can be made like HTML5 mobile apps,html5 mobile websites,html5 mobile template,html5 mobile boilerplate work, html5 mobile games,html5 mobile forms
Yes xml is case sensitive, this includes enumerations which are also case sensitive.
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Both. "Case sensitive" means that upper case and lower case characters are treated as different characters.
Yes, Chrome can support HTML5. HTML5 is the latest version of HTML and has many features.
Yes. C and C++ are case sensitive, although, depending on implementation, external symbols might not be case sensitive.
Most browsers support HTML5. However not all of them. You can check the HTML5 compatibility by running the html5test.
Something is case sensitive when it requires proper capitalization and lower case letters as well as numbers. Case sensitive passwords will not work if you forget to make sure the proper letters in words used for password are capitalized. An example of a case sensitive word would be WikiAnswers.
Yes they are case sensitive.. :-)
HTML5 isn't something you download. HTML is the language for creating Web pages and HTML5 is the latest version that is being devised by Web standards organizations. To use HTML5, you can write HTML5 instructions (known as tags) in a text editor, save the text file, and then open the file in a Web browser that supports HTML5. As of January 2011, the major Web browsers such as Internet Explorer, Firefox, Safari, and Chrome are beginning to support HTML5 features. For more information about HTML5, see the Related Link.
Html5 is not installed anywhere. It is coded and browser compiles it.
A URL is case sensitive. An email address is not. If you had an address of AbCd, the email provider will automatically switch it to abcd, even if you type it as AbCd. (In years past, email addresses were all case sensitive. But not now.) Passwords though are all CaSe SenSitIve.