HTML stands for Hypertext Markup Language
The original extension of a HTML page was .htm because of file name restrictions that limited filetype extensions to 3 characters, today you can use 3 or 4 so either .html or .htm is perfectly fine.
No, but they work best that way. You can use any extension you'd like to on an HTML file. You just need to be sure that the server is serving the file with the MIME type of "text/html."
We write HTML coding in notepad and save it with .html extension. It will automatically open with internet explorer
There are several things that can graphically represent an HTML file. One is a web browser. Another is an HTML writing program, like Adobe's Web Design Premium.
HTML files must end with the .html or .htm file extension. This convention helps web browsers recognize and render the file as a web page. Using either extension allows for proper identification and processing of the content as HTML by web servers and clients.
The original extension of a HTML page was .htm because of file name restrictions that limited filetype extensions to 3 characters, today you can use 3 or 4 so either .html or .htm is perfectly fine.
.html or .htm
You mean the file extension, right? HTML: .html or .htm XML: .xml
html file
HTTP is not a file, it is a protocol. It therefore does not have an extension. If you mean HTML files, which are web pages, then either htm or html can be used as extensions.
What a wiki file is? .html, I guess.
Go to Notepad, enter HTML, and save the file with an extension of either .htm or .html.
No, but they work best that way. You can use any extension you'd like to on an HTML file. You just need to be sure that the server is serving the file with the MIME type of "text/html."
The extension for web pages are usually either .htm or it also can be .html as well
File extensions for web pages usually are .html.
.html, .php, or .htm
We write HTML coding in notepad and save it with .html extension. It will automatically open with internet explorer