Comments
Comments
The explanatory note that is located at the end of a book or document is called the endnote. It comments or sites references that are used within the document.
The area used to provide information about the author, title, subject, keywords, category, and comments that describe the document is typically referred to as metadata. Metadata helps users locate and understand the content of a document without having to read the entire text. It serves as a summary or description of the document's key attributes.
Comments are not displayed by the browser, but they can help document your HTML source code.
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Comments can give more information about a document. They can be used for things that may not be clear and need some explanation. They can be attached to the text, assisting people who are reading it, but without being directly in the text.
A false statement about comments could be "Comments are visible to users but not to developers". In reality, comments are visible and intended for developers to provide explanations and context within the code for themselves and fellow developers to understand the code better.
If, by 'elaborating' you mean adding comments, you can choose to Insert Comments using those options if they are available on the Google Docs toolbar for your document.
Comments are used to give extra information to the person writing or updating the HTML, usually explaining what a piece of code does, or identifying a significant point in the document. Comments are not displayed on the webpage itself. They are only within the code. They are ignored by the browser. The concept of using comments comes from programming. Comments can also do other things, like get a piece of code to be ignored temporarily so that testing to see if there is a problem can be done. A comment is started by putting this <!-- and is finished by putting this --> with the comments in between them like this: <!-- This will be ignored by the browser-->
This ensures that the script text does not appear in the page.
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