HyperText Markup Language - HTML
The authoring language used in the creation of documents for the World Wide Web.
Investopedia Commentary
If you want to see what HTML language looks like, then, in your browser, click on "view" then "view source." Those hundreds of tags and coding is what makes up HTML.
See also: E-Commerce
Also spelled: HTML
Hypertext Markup Language hypertext, World-Wide Web, standard
(HTML) A hypertext document format used on the World-Wide Web. HTML is built on top of SGML. "Tags" are embedded in the text. A tag consists of a "<", a "directive" (in lower case), zero or more parameters and a ">". Matched pairs of directives, like "
for a new paragraph, .. for bold text,
for preformated text,,
..
for headings.
HTML supports some standard SGML national characters and other non-ASCII characters through special escape sequences, e.g. "é" for a lower case 'e' with an acute accent. You can sometimes get away without the terminating semicolon but it's bad style.
Most systems will ignore the case of tags and attributes but lower case should be used for compatibility with XHTML.
The World-Wide Web Consortium (W3C) is the international standards body for HTML.
Latest version: XHTML 1.0, as of 2000-09-10.
(http://w3.org/MarkUp/).
Character escape sequences.
See also weblint.
(2006-01-19)