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To make all span elements bold, use the an element selector, and the font-weight property, like so: span { font-weight: bold; }
If refeering to Microsoft Office such as Word the correct answer would be on 'Home' and under the 'Font' group.
There are many places to learn the correct syntactical parts of the standard which is now CSS 2.1, and CSS 3.0 in the wings. Whole books are dedicated to this subject. I have one that site that uses nothing but version 1.0, but they will degrade gracefully down to Internet Explorer 3, Netscape Navigator 2.02 and pre-Opera 3.6 Links are attached.
Base font is an HTML tag that specifies the font you want to use throughout your document: <basefont face="arial, verdana, courier" size="4" color="green"> In this example the browser of the user will select the first available font of the list to display the text. The font tag is an older HTML tag but is no longer recommended although it still works. This is an example of its use: <p> <font size="3" face="verdana" color="blue"> This paragraph is in Verdana, size 3, and in blue text color. </font> </p> This is the Wikipedia explanation for tag: In the HTML syntax, most elements are written with a start tag and an end tag, with the content in between. Tags are composed of the name of the element, surrounded by angle brackets. An end tag also has a slash after the opening angle bracket, to distinguish it from the start tag. For example, a paragraph, which is represented by the p element, would be written as
Use the Font face=".." command with the attribute of the font you want. for example" This is arial font This is century font To change the size of the font use the size= ".." attribute with the value being the size of the font using the numbers 1-7 with "3" being default. You could also use the tagsto make the font one size bigger Makes it Blod
p { font-weight: bold; /* font-weight: 700; does the same */ }
p { font-weight: bold; }
To make all span elements bold, use the an element selector, and the font-weight property, like so: span { font-weight: bold; }
HTML doesn't set a default font for display. Browsers, however, set a default font. The particular font depends on the browser and the operating system. The default in Chrome on Windows, for instance, is Times New Roman, 16px. But in Mac of Linux, it's Times, 14px.
Well, font-size and color are normally initially defined in the "body" element of the stylesheet. They can be elementally redefined for separate elements in the same place. Understand the necessity of hyphens and correct naming. Syntax is critical.
Nowadays I would simply put it in a CSS and maybe defife it as a paragragh as such p.sublime { font-size: 12pt; font-weight: bold; font-family: "Times New Roman", serif; text-align: left; font--color:green; } If your sublime is green?!?
When typing casual or formal documents, there is no control over font size and family changing within portions of the document; all font sizes and families must be the same. This can make professional documents less appealing, or look cheesy. When programming, syntax is not highlighted, making debugging or editing a more difficult task.
Love, Loyalty, Friendship
click home choose arial from the font menu then write the text
If refeering to Microsoft Office such as Word the correct answer would be on 'Home' and under the 'Font' group.
Home tab/ font group
No. they are examples of formatting. Correct answer is: Styles