HTML Attributes
Attributes provide additional information about HTML elements.
HTML Attributes
- HTML elements may have attributes
- Attributes gives additional information about an element
- Attributes are always specified in the start tag
- Attributes come in name/value pairs like: name="value"
The lang Attribute
The document language may be declared in the <html> tag.The language is declared in the lang attribute.
Declaring a language is important for accessibility applications (screen readers) and search engines:
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html lang="en-US">
<body>
<h1>My First Heading</h1>
<p>My first paragraph.</p>
</body>
</html>
<html lang="en-US">
<body>
<h1>My First Heading</h1>
<p>My first paragraph.</p>
</body>
</html>
The title Attribute
HTML paragraphs are defined with the <p> tag.
In this example, the <p> element has a title attribute. The value of the attribute is "bbcnews"
Example
<p title="About bbcnews">
It provides tutorials and references covering
many aspects of web programming,
including HTML, CSS, JavaScript, XML, SQL, PHP, ASP, etc.
</p>
It provides tutorials and references covering
many aspects of web programming,
including HTML, CSS, JavaScript, XML, SQL, PHP, ASP, etc.
</p>
The href Attribute
HTML links are defined with the <a> tag. The link address is specified in the href attribute:Size Attributes
HTML images are defined with the <img> tag.The filename of the source (src), and the size of the image (width and height) are all provided as attributes:
The image size is specified in pixels: width="104" means 104 screen pixels wide.
You will learn more about images and the <img> tag later in this tutorial.
The alt Attribute
The alt attribute specifies an alternative text to be used, when an HTML element cannot be shown.The value of the attribute can be read by "screen readers". This way, someone "listening" to the webpage, i.e. a blind person, can "hear" the element.
We Suggest: Always Use Lowercase Attributes
The HTML5 standard does not require lower case attribute names.The title attribute can be written with upper or lower case like Title and/or TITLE.
Some site recommends lowercase in HTML4, and demands lowercase for stricter document types like XHTML.
Lower case is the most common. Lower case is easier to type. |
We Suggest: Always Quote Attribute Values
The HTML5 standard does not require quotes around attribute values.The href attribute, demonstrated above, can be written as:
Example
<a
href=http://www.bbcnews.com>
Single or Double Quotes?
Double style quotes are the most common in HTML, but single style can also be used.In some situations, when the attribute value itself contains double quotes, it is necessary to use single quotes:
<p title='John "ShotGun" Nelson'>
<p title="John 'ShotGun' Nelson">
Chapter Summary
- All HTML elements can have attributes
- The HTML title attribute provides additional "tool-tip" information
- The HTML href attribute provides address information for links
- The HTML width and height attributes provide size information for images
- The HTML alt attribute provides text for screen readers
- At W3Schools we always use lowercase HTML attribute names
- At W3Schools we always quote attributes with double quotes
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