draft-ietf-html-spec-00

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INTERNET DRAFT November 28, 1994
Expires in six months
 HyperText Markup Language Specification - 2.0
 <draft-ietf-html-spec-00.txt>
STATUS OF THIS MEMO
 This document is an Internet draft. Internet drafts are
 working documents of the Internet Engineering Task Force
 (IETF), its areas, and its working groups. Note that
 other groups may also distribute working documents as
 Internet drafts.
 Internet drafts are draft documents valid for a maximum
 of six months and may be updated, replaced, or obsoleted
 by other documents at any time. It is inappropriate to
 use Internet drafts as reference material or to cite
 them other than as "work in progress."
 To learn the current status of any Internet-Draft,
 please check the "1id-abstracts.txt" listing contained
 in the Internet- Drafts Shadow Directories on
 ftp.is.co.za (Africa), nic.nordu.net (Europe),
 munnari.oz.au (Pacific Rim), ds.internic.net (US East
 Coast), or ftp.isi.edu (US West Coast).
 Distribution of this document is unlimited. Please send
 comments to the HTML working group (HTML-WG) of the
 Internet Engineering Task Force (IETF) at <html-
 wg@oclc.org>. Discussions of the group are archived at
 URL: http://www.acl.lanl.gov/HTML_WG/archives.html.
Abstract
 The HyperText Markup Language (HTML) is a simple markup
 language used to create hypertext documents that are
 portable from one platform to another. HTML documents
 are SGML documents with generic semantics that are
 appropriate for representing information from a wide
 range of applications. HTML markup can represent
 hypertext news, mail, documentation, and hypermedia;
 menus of options; database query results; simple
 structured documents with in-lined graphics; and
 hypertext views of existing bodies of information.
 HTML has been in use by the World Wide Web (WWW) global
 information initiative since 1990. This specification
 corresponds to the legitimate capabilities of HTML in
 common use prior to June 1994. It is defined as an
 application of ISO Standard 8879:1986 Information
 Processing Text and Office Systems; Standard Generalized
 Markup Language (SGML). This specificiation is proposed
 as the Internet Media Type (RFC 1590) and MIME Content
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 Type (RFC 1521) called "text/html", or "text/html;
 version=2.0".
Contents
 Overview of HTML Specification........................ 1
 HTML Specification.................................... 10
 Security Considerations............................... 52
 Obsolete and Proposed Features........................ 52
 HTML Document Type Definitions........................ 55
 DTD Element References................................ 71
 Glossary.............................................. 89
 References............................................ 92
 Acknowledgments....................................... 93
 Author's Addresses.................................... 95
1. Overview of HTML Specification
 This chapter is a summary of the HTML specification. See
 Section 2. for the complete specification.
 HTML describes the structure and organization of a
 document. It only suggests appropriate presentations of
 the document when processed.
 In HTML documents, tags define the start and end of
 headings, paragraphs, lists, character highlighting and
 links. Most HTML elements are identified in a document
 as a start tag, which gives the element name and
 attributes, followed by the content, followed by the end
 tag. Start tags are delimited by < and >, and end tags
 are delimited by </ and >.
 Example:
 <H1>This is a heading</H1>
 Every HTML document starts with a HTML document
 identifier which contains two sections, a head and a
 body. The head contains HTML elements which describe the
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 documents title, usage and relationship with other
 documents. The body contains other HTML elements with
 the entire text and graphics of the document.
 This overview briefly describes the syntax of HTML
 elements and provides an example HTML document.
 NOTE: The term "HTML user agent" is used in this
 document to describe applications that are used with
 HTML documents.
 1.1 HTML Elements
 1.1.1 Document Structure Elements
 HTML Identifier
 <HTML> ... </HTML>
 The HTML identifier defines the document as containing
 HTML elements. It contains only the Head and Body
 elements.
 Head
 <HEAD> ... </HEAD>
 The Head element contains HTML elements that describe
 the documents title, usage and relationship with other
 documents.
 Body
 <BODY> ... </BODY>
 The Body element contains the text and its associated
 HTML elements of the document.
 Example of Document Structure Elements
 <HTML>
 <HEAD>
 <TITLE>The Document's Title</TITLE>
 </HEAD>
 <BODY>
 The document's text.
 </BODY>
 1.1.2 Anchor Element
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 Anchor
 <A> ... </A>
 An anchor specifies a link to another location (<A
 HREF>) or the value to use when linking to this location
 from another location (<A NAME>):
 See <A HREF="http://www.hal.com/">HaL</A>'s
 information for more details.
 <A NAME="B">Section B</A> describes...
 ...
 See <A HREF="#B">Section B</A> for more information.
 1.1.3 Block Formatting Elements
 Address
 <ADDRESS> ... </ADDRESS>
 <ADDRESS>
 Newsletter editor<BR>
 J.R. Brown<BR>
 JimquickPost News, Jumquick, CT 01234<BR>
 Tel (123) 456 7890
 </ADDRESS>
 Body
 <BODY> ... </BODY>
 Place the <BODY> and </BODY> tags above and below the
 body of the text (not including the head) of your HTML
 document.
 Blockquote
 <BLOCKQUOTE>... </BLOCKQUOTE>
 I think it ends
 <BLOCKQUOTE>
 <P>Soft you now, the fair Ophelia. Nymph, in thy
 orisons,
 be all my sins remembered.
 </BLOCKQUOTE>
 but I am not sure.
 Head
 <HEAD> ... </HEAD>
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 Every HTML document must have a head, which provides a
 title. Example:
 <HTML>
 <HEAD>
 <TITLE>Introduction to HTML</TITLE>
 </HEAD>
 Headings
 <H1>This is a first level heading</H1>
 <P>There are six levels of headings.
 <H2>Second level heading</H2>
 <P>This text appears under the second level heading
 Horizontal Rule
 <HR>
 Inserts a horizontal rule that spans the width of the
 document. Example:
 <HR>
 <ADDRESS>November 28, 1994, CERN</ADDRESS>
 </BODY>
 HTML Identifier
 <HTML> ... </HTML>
 An HTML document begins with an <HTML> tag and ends with
 the </HTML> tag.
 Line Break
 <BR>
 Forces a line break:
 Name<BR>
 Street address<BR>
 City, State Zip
 Paragraph
 <P> ... </P>
 <H1>This Heading Precedes the Paragraph</H1>
 <P>This is the text of the first paragraph.
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 <P>This is the text of the second paragraph. Although
 you do not need to start paragraphs on new lines,
 maintaining this convention facilitates document
 maintenance.
 <P>This is the text of a third paragraph.
 Preformatted Text
 <PRE> ... </PRE>
 <PRE WIDTH="80">
 This is an example of preformatted text.
 </PRE>
 Title
 <TITLE> ... </TITLE>
 <TITLE>Title of document</TITLE>
 1.1.4 List Elements
 Definition List
 <DL> ... <DT>term<DD>definition... </DL>
 <DL>
 <DT>Term<DD>This is the first definition.
 <DT>Term<DD>This is the second definition.
 </DL>
 Directory List
 <DIR> ... <LI>List item... </DIR>
 <DIR>
 <LI>A-H<LI>I-M
 <LI>M-R<LI>S-Z
 </DIR>
 Menu List
 <MENU> ... <LI>List item... </MENU>
 <MENU>
 <LI>First item in the list.
 <LI>Second item in the list.
 <LI>Third item in the list.
 </MENU>
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 Ordered List
 <OL> ... <LI>List item... </OL>
 <OL>
 <LI>Click the Web button to open the Open the URL
 window.
 <LI>Enter the URL number in the text field of the Open
 URL window. The Web document you specified is displayed.
 <LI>Click highlighted text to move from one link to
 another.
 </OL>
 Unordered List
 <UL> ... <LI>List item... </UL>
 <UL>
 <LI>This is the first item in the list.
 <LI>This is the second item in the list.
 <LI>This is the third item in the list.
 </UL>
 1.1.5 Information Type and Character Formatting Elements
 Bold
 <B> ... </B>
 Suggests the rendering of the text in boldface. If
 boldface is not available, alternative mapping is
 allowed.
 Citation
 <CITE> ... </CITE>
 Specifies a citation; typically rendered as italic.
 Code
 <CODE> ... </CODE>
 Indicates an inline example of code; typically rendered
 as monospaced.. Do not confuse with the <PRE> tag.
 Emphasis
 <EM> ... </EM>
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 Provides typographic emphasis; typically rendered as
 italics.
 Italics
 <I> ... </I>
 Suggests the rendering of text in italic font, or
 slanted if italic is not available.
 Keyboard
 <KBD> ... </KBD>
 Indicates text typed by a user; typically rendered as
 monospaced.
 Sample
 <SAMP> ... </SAMP>
 Indicates a sequence of literal characters; typically
 rendered as monospaced..
 Strong
 <STRONG> ... </STRONG>
 Provides strong typographic emphasis; typically rendered
 as bold.
 Typetype
 <TT> ... </TT>
 Specifies that the text be rendered in fixed-width font.
 Variable
 <VAR> ... </VAR>
 Indicates a variable name; typically rendered as italic.
 1.1.6 Image Element
 Image
 <IMG>
 Inserts the referenced graphic image into the document
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 at the location where the element occurs.
 Example:
 <IMG SRC ="triangle.gif" ALT="Warning:"> Be sure to read
 these instructions.
 1.1.7 Form Elements
 Form
 <FORM> ... </FORM>
 The Form element contains nested elements (described
 below) which define user input controls and allow
 descriptive text to be displayed when the document is
 processed.
 Input
 <INPUT>
 Takes these attributes: ALIGN, MAXLENGTH, NAME, SIZE,
 SRC, TYPE, VALUE. The type attribute can define these
 field types: CHECKBOX, HIDDEN, IMAGE, PASSWORD, RADIO,
 RESET, SUBMIT, TEXT.
 Example:
 <FORM METHOD="POST" action="http://www.hal.com/sample">
 <P>Your name: <INPUT NAME="name" SIZE="48">
 <P>Male <INPUT NAME="gender" TYPE=RADIO VALUE="male">
 <P>Female <INPUT NAME="gender" TYPE=RADIO
 VALUE="female">
 </FORM>
 Option
 <OPTION>
 The Option element can only occur within a Select
 element. It represents one choice.
 Select
 <SELECT NAME="..." > ... </SELECT>
 Select provides a list of choices.
 <SELECT NAME="flavor">
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 <OPTION>Vanilla
 <OPTION>Strawberry
 <OPTION>Rum and Raisin
 <OPTION>Peach and Orange
 </SELECT>
 Textarea
 <TEXTAREA> ... </TEXTAREA>
 Textarea defines a multi-line text entry input control.
 It contains the initial text contents of the control.
 <TEXTAREA NAME="address" ROWS=64 COLS=6>
 HaL Computer Systems
 1314 Dell Avenue
 Campbell California 95008
 </TEXTAREA>
 1.1.8 Character Data in HTML
 Representing Graphic Characters in HTML
 Because of the way special characters are used in
 marking up HTML text, character strings are used to
 represent the less than (<) and greater than (>) symbols
 and the ampersand (&) as shown in Section 2.17.1.
 Representing ISO Latin-1 Characters in HTML
 HTML also allows references to any of the ISO Latin-1
 alphabet, using the names in the table ISO Latin-1
 Character Representations, which is derived from ISO
 Standard 8879:1986//ENTITIES Added Latin 1//EN. For
 details, see 2.17.2.
 1.2 Example HTML Document
 <HTML>
 <HEAD>
 <TITLE>Structural Example</TITLE>
 </HEAD>
 <BODY>
 <H1>First Header</H1>
 <P>This is a paragraph in the example HTML file.
 Keep in mind that the title does not appear in the
 document text, but that the header (defined by H1) does.
 <UL>
 <LI>First item in an unordered list.
 <LI>Second item in an unordered list.
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 </UL>
 <P>This is an additional paragraph. Technically, end
 tags
 are not required for paragraphs, although they are
 allowed.
 You can include character highlighting in a paragraph.
 <I>This sentence of the paragraph is in italics.</I>
 <IMG SRC ="triangle.gif" alt="Warning:"> Be sure to read
 these instructions.
 </BODY>
 </HTML>
2. HTML Specification
 HTML has been in use by the World Wide Web (WWW) global
 information initiative since 1990. This specification
 corresponds to the legitimate capabilities of HTML in
 common use prior to June 1994. It is defined as an
 application of ISO Standard 8879:1986: Standard
 Generalized Markup Language (SGML). This specification
 is proposed as the Internet Media Type (RFC 1590) and
 MIME Content Type (RFC 1521) called "text/html", or
 "text/html; version=2.0".
 This specification also includes:
 - 5.1 SGML Declaration for HTML
 - 5.1.1 Sample SGML Open Style Entity Catalog for HTML
 - 5.2 HTML DTD
 This specification is currently available on the World
 Wide Web at URL: http://www.hal.com/%7Econnolly/html-spec
 Please send comments to the discussion list at: html-
 wg@oclc.org
 2.1 Levels of Conformance
 Version 2.0 of the HTML specification introduces forms
 for user input of information, and adds a distinction
 between levels of conformance:
 Level 0
 Indicates the minimum conformance level. When writing
 Level 0 documents, authors can be confident that the
 rendering at different sites will reflect their intent.
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 Level 1
 Includes Level 0 features plus features such as
 highlighting and images.
 Level 2
 Includes all Level 0 and Level 1 features, plus forms.
 Features of higher levels, such as tables, figures, and
 mathematical formulae, are under discussion and are
 described as proposed where mentioned.
 2.2 Undefined Tag and Attribute Names
 An accepted networking principle is to be conservative
 in that which one produces, and liberal in that which
 one accepts. HTML user agents should be liberal except
 when verifying code. HTML generators should generate
 strictly conforming HTML.
 The behavior of HTML user agents reading HTML documents
 and discovering tag or attribute names which they do not
 understand should be to behave as though, in the case of
 a tag, the whole tag had not been there but its content
 had, or in the case of an attribute, that the attribute
 had not been present.
 2.3 Deprecated and Recommended Sections in DTDs
 In Section 5., optional "deprecated" and "recommended"
 sections are used. Conformance with this specification
 is defined with these sections disabled. In the liberal
 spirit of Section 2.2, HTML user agents reading HTML
 documents should accept syntax corresponding to the
 specification with "deprecated" turned on. HTML user
 agents generating HTML may in the spirit of
 conservation, generate documents that conform to the
 specification with the "recommended" sections turned on.
 2.4 HTML and MIME
 The World Wide Web initiative (WWW) links information
 throughout the world. To do this, WWW uses the Internet
 Hypertext Transfer Protocol (HTTP), which allows
 transfer representations to be negotiated between client
 and server. Results are returned in a MIME body part.
 HTML is one of the representations used by WWW, and is
 proposed as a MIME content type. The definition of the
 HTML Content-Type is text/html, and has three optional
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 parameters:
 Level
 The level parameter specifies the feature set used in
 the document. The level is an integer number, implying
 that any features of same or lower level may be present
 in the document. Levels are defined by this
 specification.
 Version
 To help avoid future compatibility problems, the version
 parameter may be used to give the version number of the
 specification to which the document conforms. The
 version number appears at the front of this document and
 within the public identifier for the SGML DTD.
 Character sets
 The charset parameter is reserved for future use. See
 Section 2.16 for a discussion of character sets and
 encodings in HTML.
 The actual character set used in the representation of
 an HTML document may be ISO 8859/1, or its 7-bit subset
 which is ISO 646. There is no obligation for an HTML
 document to contain any characters above decimal 127. It
 is possible that a transport medium such as electronic
 mail imposes constraints on the number of bits in a
 representation of a document, though the HTTP access
 protocol used by WWW always allows 8 bit transfer.
 When an HTML document is encoded using 7-bit characters,
 then the mechanisms of numeric character references (see
 Section 2.16.2) and character entity references (see
 Section 2.16.3) may be used to encode characters in the
 upper half of the ISO 8859/1 Latin-1 set. In this way,
 documents may be prepared which are suitable for mailing
 through 7-bit limited systems.
 NOTE: ISO 646 is, for all intents and purposes,
 equivalent to the ANSI standard for ASCII (American
 Standard Code for Information Interchange). The only
 notable differences between the two standards are the
 names assigned to the control characters that occupy
 positions 00 through 31 and position 127 (decimal) in
 that encoding. For encoding HTML documents, only three
 control characters in ISO 646 or ASCII are relevant (see
 Section 2.16.2). These are Carriage Return (CR) at
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 position 13, Line Feed (LF) at position 10, and
 Horizontal Tab (HT) at position 11.
 2.5 Understanding HTML and SGML
 HTML is an application of ISO Standard 8879:1986 -
 Standard Generalized Markup Language (SGML). SGML is a
 system for defining structured document types, and
 markup languages to represent instances of those
 document types. The SGML declaration for HTML is given
 in Section 5.1. It is implicit among HTML user agents.
 If the HTML specification and SGML standard conflict,
 the SGML standard is definitive.
 Every SGML document has three parts:
 SGML declaration
 Binds SGML processing quantities and syntax token names
 to specific values. For example, the SGML declaration in
 the HTML DTD specifies that the string that opens an end
 tag is </ and the maximum length of a name is 72
 characters.
 Prologue
 Includes one or more document type declarations, which
 specify the element types, element relationships and
 attributes.
 Instance
 Contains the data and markup of the document.
 HTML refers to the document type as well as the markup
 language for representing instances of that document
 type.
 2.6 Working with Structured Text
 An HTML document is like a text file, except that some
 of the characters are markup. Markup (tags) define the
 structure of the document.
 To identify information as HTML, each HTML document
 should start with the prologue:
 <!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//IETF//DTD HTML//EN//2.0">
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 NOTE: If the body of a text/html body part does not
 begin with a document type declaration, an HTML user
 agent should infer the above document type declaration.
 HTML documents should also contain an <HTML> tag at the
 beginning of the file, after the prologue, and an
 </HTML> tag at the end. Within those tags, an HTML
 document is organized as a head and a body, much like
 memo or a mail message. Within the head, you can specify
 the title and other information about the document.
 Within the body, you can structure text into paragraphs
 and lists as well as highlighting phrases and creating
 links. You do this using HTML elements.
 NOTE: Technically, the start and end tags for HTML,
 Head, and Body elements are omissible; however, this is
 not recommended since the head/ body structure allows an
 implementation to determine certain properties of a
 document, such as the title, without parsing the entire
 document.
 2.6.1 HTML Elements
 In HTML documents, tags define the start and end of
 headings, paragraphs, lists, character highlighting and
 links. Most HTML elements are identified in a document
 as a start tag, which gives the element name and
 attributes, followed by the content, followed by the end
 tag. Start tags are delimited by < and >, and end tags
 are delimited by </ and >.
 Example:
 <H1>This is a Heading</H1>
 Some elements only have a start tag without an end tag.
 For example, to create a line break, you use the <BR>
 tag. Additionally, the end tags of some other elements,
 such as Paragraph (<P>), List Item (<LI>), Definition
 Term (<DT>), and Definition Description (<DD>) elements,
 may be omitted.
 The content of an element is a sequence of characters
 and nested elements. Some elements, such as anchors,
 cannot be nested. Anchors and character highlighting may
 be put inside other constructs.
 NOTE: The SGML declaration for HTML specifies SHORTTAG
 YES, which means that there are other valid syntaxes for
 tags, such as NET tags, <EM/.../; empty start tags, <>;
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 and empty end tags, </>. Until support for these idioms
 is widely deployed, their use is strongly discouraged.
 2.6.2 Names
 A name consists of a letter followed by up to 71
 letters, digits, periods, or hyphens. Element names are
 not case sensitive, but entity names are. For example,
 <BLOCKQUOTE>, <BlockQuote>, and <blockquote> are
 equivalent, whereas &amp; is different from &AMP;.
 In a start tag, the element name must immediately follow
 the tag open delimiter <.
 2.6.3 Attributes
 In a start tag, white space and attributes are allowed
 between the element name and the closing delimiter. An
 attribute typically consists of an attribute name, an
 equal sign, and a value (although some attributes may be
 just a value). White space is allowed around the equal
 sign.
 The value of the attribute may be either:
 - A string literal, delimited by single quotes or
 double quotes and not containing any occurrences of the
 delimiting character.
 - A name token (a sequence of letters, digits,
 periods, or hyphens)
 In this example, A is the element name, HREF is the
 attribute name, and http://host/dir/file.html is the
 attribute value:
 <A HREF="http://host/dir/file.html">
 NOTE: Some non-SGML implementations consider any
 occurrence of the > character to signal the end of a
 tag. For compatibility with such implementations, when >
 appears in an attribute value, you may want to represent
 it with an entity or numeric character reference (see
 Section 2.17.1), such as: <IMG SRC="eq1.ps" alt="a &#62;
 b">
 To put quotes inside of quotes, you may use the
 character representation &quot; as in:
 <IMG SRC="image.ps" alt="First &quot;real&quot;
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 example">
 The length of an attribute value is limited to 1024
 characters after replacing entity and numeric character
 references.
 NOTE: Some non-SGML implementations allow any character
 except space or > in a name token. Attributes values
 must be quoted only if they don't satisfy the syntax for
 a name token.
 Attributes with a declared value of NAME, such as ISMAP
 and COMPACT, may be written using a minimized syntax.
 The markup:
 <UL COMPACT="compact">
 can be written using a minimized syntax:
 <UL COMPACT>
 NOTE: Some non-SGML implementations only understand the
 minimized syntax.
 2.6.4 Special Characters
 The characters between the tags represent text in the
 ISO-Latin-1 character set, which is a superset of ASCII.
 Because certain characters will be interpreted as
 markup, they should be represented by markup - entity or
 numeric character references. For more information, see
 Section 2.16.
 2.6.5 Comments
 To include comments in an HTML document that will be
 ignored by the HTML user agent, surround them with <!--
 and -->. After the comment delimiter, all text up to the
 next occurrence of --> is ignored. Hence comments cannot
 be nested. White space is allowed between the closing --
 and >, but not between the opening <! and --.
 For example:
 <HEAD>
 <TITLE>HTML Guide: Recommended Usage</TITLE>
 <!-- Id: Text.html,v 1.6 1994年04月25日 17:33:48 connolly Exp -->
 </HEAD>
 NOTE: Some historical HTML user agents incorrectly
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 consider a > sign to terminate a comment.
 2.7 The Head Element and Related Elements
 Only certain elements are allowed in the head of an HTML
 document. Elements that may be included in the head of a
 document are:
 2.7.1 Head
 <HEAD> ... </HEAD>
 Level 0
 The head of an HTML document is an unordered collection
 of information about the document. It requires the Title
 element between <HEAD> and </HEAD> tags in this format:
 <HEAD>
 <TITLE>Introduction to HTML</TITLE>
 </HEAD>
 2.7.2 Base
 Level 0
 The Base element allows the URL of the document itself
 to be recorded in situations in which the document may
 be read out of context. URLs within the document may be
 in a "partial" form relative to this base address.
 Where the base address is not specified, the HTML user
 agent uses the URL it used to access the document to
 resolve any relative URLs.
 The Base element has one attribute, HREF, which
 identifies the URL.
 2.7.3 Isindex
 Level 0
 The Isindex element tells the HTML user agent that the
 document is an index document. As well as reading it,
 the reader may use a keyword search.
 The document can be queried with a keyword search by
 adding a question mark to the end of the document
 address, followed by a list of keywords separated by
 plus signs.
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 NOTE: The Isindex element is usually generated
 automatically by a server. If added manually to an HTML
 document, the HTML user agent assumes that the server
 can handle a search on the document. To use the Isindex
 element, the server must have a search engine that
 supports this element.
 2.7.4 Link
 Level 1
 The Link element indicates a relationship between the
 document and some other object. A document may have any
 number of Link elements.
 The Link element is empty (does not have a closing tag),
 but takes the same attributes as the Anchor element.
 Typical uses are to indicate authorship, related indexes
 and glossaries, older or more recent versions, etc.
 Links can indicate a static tree structure in which the
 document was authored by pointing to a "parent" and
 "next" and "previous" document, for example.
 Servers may also allow links to be added by those who do
 not have the right to alter the body of a document.
 2.7.5 Nextid
 Level 0
 The Nextid element is a parameter read by and generated
 by text editing software to create unique identifiers.
 This tag takes a single attribute which is the next
 document-wide alpha-numeric identifier to be allocated
 of the form z123:
 <NEXTID N=Z27>
 When modifying a document, existing anchor identifiers
 should not be reused, as these identifiers may be
 referenced by other documents. Human writers of HTML
 usually use mnemonic alphabetical identifiers.
 HTML user agents may ignore the Nextid element. Support
 for the Nextid element does not impact HTML user agents
 in any way.
 2.7.6 Title
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 <TITLE> ... </TITLE>
 Level 0
 Every HTML document must contain a Title element. The
 title should identify the contents of the document in a
 global context, and may be used in a history lists and
 as a label for the window displaying the document.
 Unlike headings, titles are not typically rendered in
 the text of a document itself.
 The Title element must occur within the head of the
 document, and may not contain anchors, paragraph tags,
 or highlighting. Only one title is allowed in a
 document.
 NOTE: The length of a title is not limited; however,
 long titles may be truncated in some applications. To
 minimize this possibility, titles should be fewer than
 64 characters. Also keep in mind that a short title,
 such as Introduction, may be meaningless out of context.
 An example of a meaningful title might be "Introduction
 to HTML Elements."
 2.7.7 Meta
 Level 1
 The Meta element is used within the Head element to
 embed document meta-information not defined by other
 HTML elements. Such information can be extracted by
 servers/clients for use in identifying, indexing, and
 cataloging specialized document meta-information.
 Although it is generally preferable to use named
 elements that have well-defined semantics for each type
 of meta-information, such as a title, this element is
 provided for situations where strict SGML parsing is
 necessary and the local DTD is not extensible.
 In addition, HTTP servers can read the content of the
 document head to generate response headers corresponding
 to any elements defining a value for the attribute HTTP-
 EQUIV. This provides document authors a mechanism (not
 necessarily the preferred one) for identifying
 information that should be included in the response
 headers for an HTTP request.
 Attributes of the Meta element:
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 HTTP-EQUIV
 This attribute binds the element to an HTTP response
 header. If the semantics of the HTTP response header
 named by this attribute is known, then the contents can
 be processed based on a well-defined syntactic mapping
 whether or not the DTD includes anything about it. HTTP
 header names are not case sensitive. If not present, the
 NAME attribute should be used to identify this meta-
 information and it should not be used within an HTTP
 response header.
 NAME
 Meta-information name. If the NAME attribute is not
 present, the name can be assumed equal to the value of
 HTTP-EQUIV.
 CONTENT
 The meta-information content to be associated with the
 given name and/or HTTP response header.
 Examples
 If the document contains:
 <META HTTP-EQUIV="Expires" CONTENT="1993年12月04日 21:29:02
 GMT">
 <META HTTP-EQUIV="Keywords" CONTENT="Fred, Barney">
 <META HTTP-EQUIV="Reply-
 to" content="fielding@ics.uci.edu (Roy Fielding)">
 Expires: 1993年12月04日 21:29:02 GMT
 Keywords: Fred, Barney
 Reply-to: fielding@ics.uci.edu (Roy Fielding)
 When the HTTP-EQUIV attribute is not present, the server
 should not generate an HTTP response header for this
 meta-information; e.g.,
 <META NAME="IndexType" CONTENT="Service">
 Do not use the Meta element to define information that
 should be associated with an existing HTML element.
 Example of an inappropriate use of the Meta element:
 <META NAME="Title" CONTENT="The Etymology of Dunsel">
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 Do not name an HTTP-EQUIV equal to a response header
 that should typically only be generated by the HTTP
 server. Some inappropriate names are "Server", "Date",
 and "Last-modified". Whether a name is inappropriate
 depends on the particular server implementation. It is
 recommended that servers ignore any Meta elements that
 specify HTTP-equivalents equal (case-insensitively) to
 their own reserved response headers.
 2.8 The Body Element and Related Elements
 The following elements may be included in the body of an
 HTML document:
 2.8.1 Body
 <BODY> ... </BODY>
 Level 0
 The Body element identifies the body component of an
 HTML document. Specifically, the body of a document may
 contain links, text, and formatting information within
 <BODY> and </BODY> tags.
 2.8.2 Address
 <ADDRESS> ... </ADDRESS>
 Level 0
 The Address element specifies such information as
 address, signature and authorship, often at the top or
 bottom of a document.
 Typically, an Address is rendered in an italic typeface
 and may be indented. The Address element implies a
 paragraph break before and after.
 Example of use:
 <ADDRESS>
 Newsletter editor<BR>
 J.R. Brown<BR>
 JimquickPost News, Jumquick, CT 01234<BR>
 Tel (123) 456 7890
 </ADDRESS>
 2.8.3 Anchor
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 <A> ... </A>
 Level 0
 An anchor is a marked text that is the start and/or
 destination of a hypertext link. Anchor elements are
 defined by the <A> tag. The <A> tag accepts several
 attributes, but either the NAME or HREF attribute is
 required.
 Attributes of the <A> tag:
 HREF
 Level 0
 If the HREF attribute is present, the text between the
 opening and closing anchor tags becomes hypertext. If
 this hypertext is selected by readers, they are moved to
 another document, or to a different location in the
 current document, whose network address is defined by
 the value of the HREF attribute.
 Example:
 See <A HREF="http://www.hal.com/">HaL</A>'s information
 for more details.
 In this example, selecting "HaL" takes the reader to a
 document at http://www.hal.com. The format of the
 network address is specified in the URI specification
 for print readers.
 With the HREF attribute, the form HREF="#identifier" can
 refer to another anchor in the same document.
 Example:
 The <A HREF="document.html#glossary">glossary</A>
 defines terms used in this document.
 In this example, selecting "glossary" takes the reader
 to another anchor (i.e., <A
 NAME="glossary">Glossary</A>) in the same document
 (document.html). The NAME attribute is described below.
 If the anchor is in another document, the HREF attribute
 may be relative to the document's address or the
 specified base address (see 2.7.2 Base).
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 NAME
 Level 0
 If present, the NAME attribute allows the anchor to be
 the target of a link. The value of the NAME attribute is
 an identifier for the anchor. Identifiers are arbitrary
 strings but must be unique within the HTML document.
 Example of use:
 <A NAME="coffee">Coffee</A> is an example of ...
 ...
 An example of this is <A HREF="#coffee">coffee</A>.
 Another document can then make a reference explicitly to
 this anchor by putting the identifier after the address,
 separated by a hash sign:
 <A NAME="drinks.html#coffee">
 TITLE
 Level 1
 The TITLE attribute is informational only. If present,
 the TITLE attribute should provide the title of the
 document whose address is given by the HREF attribute.
 The TITLE attribute is useful for at least two reasons.
 The HTML user agent may display the title of the
 document prior to retrieving it, for example, as a
 margin note or on a small box while the mouse is over
 the anchor, or while the document is being loaded.
 Another reason is that documents that are not marked up
 text, such as graphics, plain text and Gopher menus, do
 not have titles. The TITLE attribute can be used to
 provide a title to such documents. When using the TITLE
 attribute, the title should be valid and unique for the
 destination document.
 REL
 Level 1
 The REL attribute gives the relationship(s) described by
 the hypertext link from the anchor to the target. The
 value is a comma-separated list of relationship values.
 Values and their semantics will be registered by the
 HTML registration authority. The default relationship if
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 none other is given is void. The REL attribute is only
 used when the HREF attribute is present.
 REV
 Level 1
 The REV attribute is the same as the REL attribute, but
 the semantics of the link type are in the reverse
 direction. A link from A to B with REL="X" expresses the
 same relationship as a link from B to A with REV="X". An
 anchor may have both REL and REV attributes.
 URN
 Level 1
 If present, the URN attribute specifies a uniform
 resource name (URN) for a target document. The format of
 URNs is under discussion (1994) by various working
 groups of the Internet Engineering Task Force.
 METHODS
 The METHODS attributes of anchors and links provide
 information about the functions that the user may
 perform on an object. These are more accurately given by
 the HTTP protocol when it is used, but it may, for
 similar reasons as for the TITLE attribute, be useful to
 include the information in advance in the link. For
 example, the HTML user agent may chose a different
 rendering as a function of the methods allowed; for
 example, something that is searchable may get a
 different icon.
 The value of the METHODS attribute is a comma separated
 list of HTTP methods supported by the object for public
 use.
 See also: 2.7.4 Link
 2.8.4 Blockquote
 <BLOCKQUOTE> ... </BLOCKQUOTE>
 Level 0
 The Blockquote element is used to contain text quoted
 from another source.
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 A typical rendering might be a slight extra left and
 right indent, and/or italic font. The Blockquote element
 causes a paragraph break, and typically provides space
 above and below the quote.
 Single-font rendition may reflect the quotation style of
 Internet mail by putting a vertical line of graphic
 characters , such as the greater than symbol (>), in the
 left margin.
 Example of use:
 I think the poem ends
 <BLOCKQUOTE>
 <P>Soft you now, the fair Ophelia. Nymph,
 in thy orisons, be all my sins remembered.
 </BLOCKQUOTE>
 but I am not sure.
 2.8.5 Headings
 <H1> ... </H1> through <H6> ... </H6>
 Level 0
 HTML defines six levels of heading. A Heading element
 implies all the font changes, paragraph breaks before
 and after, and white space necessary to render the
 heading.
 The highest level of headings is H1, followed by H2 ...
 H6.
 Example of use:
 <H1>This is a heading</H1>
 Here is some text
 <H2>Second level heading</H2>
 Here is some more text.
 The rendering of headings is determined by the HTML user
 agent, but typical renderings are:
 <H1> ... </H1>
 Bold, very-large font, centered. One or two blank lines
 above and below.
 <H2> ... </H2>
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 Bold, large font, flush-left. One or two blank lines
 above and below.
 <H3> ... </H3>
 Italic, large font, slightly indented from the left
 margin. One or two blank lines above and below.
 <H4> ... </H4>
 Bold, normal font, indented more than H3. One blank line
 above and below.
 <H5> ... </H5>
 Italic, normal font, indented as H4. One blank line
 above.
 <H6> ... </H6>
 Bold, indented same as normal text, more than H5. One
 blank line above.
 Although heading levels can be skipped (for example,
 from H1 to H3), this practice is discouraged as skipping
 heading levels may produce unpredictable results when
 generating other representations from HTML.
 2.9 Overview of Character-Level Elements
 Level 2 (all elements)
 Character-level elements are used to specify either the
 logical meaning or the physical appearance of marked
 text without causing a paragraph break. Like most other
 elements, character-level elements include both opening
 and closing tags. Only the characters between the tags
 are affected:
 This is <EM>emphasized</EM> text.
 Character-level tags may be ignored by minimal HTML
 applications.
 Character-level tags are interpreted from left to right
 as they appear in the flow of text. Level 1 HTML user
 agents must render highlighted text distinctly from
 plain text. Additionally, EM content must be rendered as
 distinct from STRONG content, and B content must
 rendered as distinct from I content.
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 Character-level elements may be nested within the
 content of other character-level elements; however, HTML
 user agents are not required to render nested character-
 level elements distinctly from non-nested elements:
 plain <B>bold <I>italic</I></B>
 may the rendered the same as
 plain <B>bold </B><I>italic</I>
 Note that typical renderings for information type
 elements vary between applications. If a specific
 rendering is necessary, for example, when referring to a
 specific text attribute as in "The italic parts are
 mandatory", a formating element can be used to ensure
 that the intended rendered is used where possible.
 2.10 Information Type Elements
 Note that different information type elements may be
 rendered in the same way.
 2.10.1 Citation
 <CITE>...</CITE>
 The Citation element specifies a citation; typically
 rendered as italics.
 2.10.2 Code
 <CODE> ... </CODE>
 The Code element indicates an example of code; typically
 rendered as monospaced . Do not confuse with the
 Preformatted Text element.
 2.10.3 Emphasis
 <EM> ... </EM>
 The Emphasis element indicates typographic emphasis,
 typically rendered as italics.
 2.10.4 Keyboard
 <KBD> ... </KBD>
 The Keyboard element indicates text typed by a user;
 typically rendered as monospaced . It might commonly be
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 used in an instruction manual.
 2.10.5 Sample
 <SAMP> ... </SAMP>
 The Sample element indicates a sequence of literal
 characters; typically rendered as monospaced.
 2.10.6 Strong
 <STRONG> ... </STRONG>
 The Strong element indicates strong typographic
 emphasis, typically rendered in bold.
 2.10.7 Variable
 <VAR> ... </VAR>
 The Variable element indicates a variable name;
 typically rendered as italic.
 2.11 Character Format Elements
 Character format elements are used to specify the format
 of marked text. Example of use:
 2.11.1 Bold
 <B> ... </B>
 The Bold element specifies that the text should be
 rendered in boldface, where available. Otherwise,
 alternative mapping is allowed.
 2.11.2 Italic
 <I> ... </I>
 The Italic element specifies that the text should be
 rendered in italic font, where available. Otherwise,
 alternative mapping is allowed.
 2.11.3 Teletype
 <TT> ... </TT>
 The Teletype element specifies that the text should be
 rendered in fixed-width typewriter font.
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 2.12 Image Element
 <IMG>
 Level 0
 The Image element is used to incorporate in-line
 graphics (typically icons or small graphics) into an
 HTML document. This element cannot be used for embedding
 other HTML text.
 HTML user agents that cannot render in-line images
 ignore the Image element unless it contains the ALT
 attribute. Note that some HTML user agents can render
 linked graphics but not in-line graphics. If a graphic
 is essential, you may want to create a link to it rather
 than to put it in-line. If the graphic is not essential,
 then the Image element is appropriate.
 The Image element, which is empty (no closing tag), has
 these attributes:
 ALIGN
 The ALIGN attribute accepts the values TOP or MIDDLE or
 BOTTOM, which specifies if the following line of text is
 aligned with the top, middle, or bottom of the graphic.
 ALT
 Optional text as an alternative to the graphic for
 rendering in non-graphical environments. Alternate text
 should be provided whenever the graphic is not rendered.
 Alternate text is mandatory for Level 0 documents.
 Example of use:
 <IMG SRC="triangle.gif" ALT="Warning:"> Be sure to read
 these instructions.
 ISMAP
 The ISMAP (is map) attribute identifies an image as an
 image map. Image maps are graphics in which certain
 regions are mapped to URLs. By clicking on different
 regions, different resources can be accessed from the
 same graphic. Example of use:
 <A HREF="http://machine/htbin/imagemap/sample">
 <IMG SRC="sample.gif" ISMAP>
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 </A>
 SRC
 The value of the SRC attribute is the URL of the
 document to be embedded; only images can be embedded,
 not HTML text. Its syntax is the same as that of the
 HREF attribute of the <A> tag. SRC is mandatory. Image
 elements are allowed within anchors.
 Example of use:
 <IMG SRC ="triangle.gif">Be sure to read these
 instructions.
 2.13 List Elements
 HTML supports several types of lists, all of which may
 be nested.
 2.13.1 Definition List
 <DL> ... </DL>
 Level 0
 A definition list is a list of terms and corresponding
 definitions. Definition lists are typically formatted
 with the term flush-left and the definition, formatted
 paragraph style, indented after the term.
 Example of use:
 <DL>
 <DT>Term<DD>This is the definition of the first term.
 <DT>Term<DD>This is the definition of the second term.
 </DL>
 If the DT term does not fit in the DT column (one third
 of the display area), it may be extended across the page
 with the DD section moved to the next line, or it may be
 wrapped onto successive lines of the left hand column.
 Single occurrences of a <DT> tag without a subsequent
 <DD> tag are allowed, and have the same significance as
 if the <DD> tag had been present with no text.
 The opening list tag must be <DL> and must be
 immediately followed by the first term (<DT>).
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 The definition list type can take the COMPACT attribute,
 which suggests that a compact rendering be used, because
 the list items are small and/or the entire list is
 large.
 Unless you provide the COMPACT attribute, the HTML user
 agent may leave white space between successive DT, DD
 pairs.The COMPACT attribute may also reduce the width of
 the left-hand (DT) column.
 If using the COMPACT attribute, the opening list tag
 must be <DL COMPACT>, which must be immediately followed
 by the first <DT> tag:
 <DL COMPACT>
 <DT>Term<DD>This is the first definition in compact format.
 <DT>Term<DD>This is the second definition in compact format.
 </DL>
 2.13.2 Directory List
 <DIR> ... </DIR>
 Level 0
 A Directory List element is used to present a list of
 items containing up to 20 characters each. Items in a
 directory list may be arranged in columns, typically 24
 characters wide. If the HTML user agent can optimize the
 column width as function of the widths of individual
 elements, so much the better.
 A directory list must begin with the <DIR> tag which is
 immediately followed by a <LI> (list item) tag:
 <DIR>
 <LI>A-H<LI>I-M
 <LI>M-R<LI>S-Z
 </DIR>
 2.13.3 Menu List
 <MENU> ... </MENU>
 Level 0
 A menu list is a list of items with typically one line
 per item. The menu list style is more compact than the
 style of an unordered list.
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 A menu list must begin with a <MENU> tag which is
 immediately followed by a <LI> (list item) tag:
 <MENU>
 <LI>First item in the list.
 <LI>Second item in the list.
 <LI>Third item in the list.
 </MENU>
 2.13.4 Ordered List
 <OL> ... </OL>
 Level 0
 The Ordered List element is used to present a numbered
 list of items, sorted by sequence or order of
 importance.
 An ordered list must begin with the <OL> tag which is
 immediately followed by a <LI> (list item) tag:
 <OL>
 <LI>Click the Web button to open the Open the URL window.
 <LI>Enter the URL number in the text field of the Open URL
 window. The Web document you specified is displayed.
 <LI>Click highlighted text to move from one link to another.
 </OL>
 The Ordered List element can take the COMPACT attribute,
 which suggests that a compact rendering be used.
 2.13.5 Unordered List
 <UL> ... </UL>
 Level 0
 The Unordered List element is used to present a list of
 items which is typically separated by white space and/or
 marked by bullets.
 An unordered list must begin with the <UL> tag which is
 immediately followed by a <LI> (list item) tag:
 <UL>
 <LI>First list item
 <LI>Second list item
 <LI>Third list item
 </UL>
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 2.14 Other Elements
 2.14.1 Paragraph
 <P>
 Level 0
 The Paragraph element indicates a paragraph. The exact
 indentation, leading, etc. of a paragraph is not defined
 and may be a function of other tags, style sheets, etc.
 Typically, paragraphs are surrounded by a vertical space
 of one line or half a line. This is typically not the
 case within the Address element and or is never the case
 within the Preformatted Text element. With some HTML
 user agents, the first line in a paragraph is indented.
 Example of use:
 <H1>This Heading Precedes the Paragraph</H1>
 <P>This is the text of the first paragraph.
 <P>This is the text of the second paragraph. Although you
 do not need to start paragraphs on new lines, maintaining
 this convention facilitates document maintenance.
 <P>This is the text of a third paragraph.
 2.14.2 Preformatted Text
 <PRE> ... </PRE>
 Level 0
 The Preformatted Text element presents blocks of text in
 fixed-width font, and so is suitable for text that has
 been formatted on screen.
 The <PRE> tag may be used with the optional WIDTH
 attribute, which is a Level 1 feature. The WIDTH
 attribute specifies the maximum number of characters for
 a line and allows the HTML user agent to select a
 suitable font and indentation. If the WIDTH attribute is
 not present, a width of 80 characters is assumed. Where
 the WIDTH attribute is supported, widths of 40, 80 and
 132 characters should be presented optimally, with other
 widths being rounded up.
 Within preformatted text:
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 - Line breaks within the text are rendered as a move
 to the beginning of the next line.
 - The <P> tag should not be used. If found, it should
 be rendered as a move to the beginning of the next line.
 - Anchor elements and character highlighting elements
 may be used.
 - Elements that define paragraph formatting
 (headings, address, etc.) must not be used.
 - The ASCII horizontal tab character must be
 interpreted as the smallest positive nonzero number of
 spaces which will leave the number of characters so far
 on the line as a multiple of 8. Its use is not
 recommended however.
 NOTE: References to the "beginning of a new line" do not
 imply that the renderer is forbidden from using a
 constant left indent for rendering preformatted text.
 The left indent may be constrained by the width
 required.
 Example of use:
 <PRE WIDTH="80">
 This is an example line.
 </PRE>
 NOTE: Within a Preformatted Text element, the constraint
 that the rendering must be on a fixed horizontal
 character pitch may limit or prevent the ability of the
 HTML user agent to render highlighting elements
 specially.
 2.14.3 Line Break
 <BR>
 Level 0
 The Line Break element specifies that a new line must be
 started at the given point. A new line indents the same
 as that of line-wrapped text.
 Example of use:
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 <P>
 Pease porridge hot<BR>
 Pease porridge cold<BR>
 Pease porridge in the pot<BR>
 Nine days old.
 2.14.4 Horizontal Rule
 <HR>
 Level 0
 A Horizontal Rule element is a divider between sections
 of text such as a full width horizontal rule or
 equivalent graphic.
 Example of use:
 <HR>
 <ADDRESS>November 28, 1994, CERN</ADDRESS>
 </BODY>
 2.15 Form Elements
 Forms are created by placing input fields within
 paragraphs, preformatted/literal text, and lists. This
 gives considerable flexibility in designing the layout
 of forms.
 The following elements (all are HTML 2 features) are
 used to create forms:
 FORM
 A form within a document.
 INPUT
 One input field.
 OPTION
 One option within a Select element.
 SELECT
 A selection from a finite set of options.
 TEXTAREA
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 A multi-line input field.
 Each variable field is defined by an Input, Textarea, or
 Option element and must have an NAME attribute to
 identify its value in the data returned when the form is
 submitted.
 Example of use (a questionnaire form):
 <H1>Sample Questionnaire</H1>
 <P>Please fill out this questionnaire:
 <FORM METHOD="POST" ACTION="http://www.hal.com/sample">
 <P>Your name: <INPUT NAME="name" size="48">
 <P>Male <INPUT NAME="gender" TYPE=RADIO VALUE="male">
 <P>Female <INPUT NAME="gender" TYPE=RADIO VALUE="female">
 <P>Number in family: <INPUT NAME="family" TYPE=text>
 <P>Cities in which you maintain a residence:
 <UL>
 <LI>Kent <INPUT NAME="city" TYPE=checkbox VALUE="kent">
 <LI>Miami <INPUT NAME="city" TYPE=checkbox VALUE="miami">
 <LI>Other <TEXTAREA NAME="other" cols=48 rows=4></textarea>
 </UL>
 Nickname: <INPUT NAME="nickname" SIZE="42">
 <P>Thank you for responding to this questionnaire.
 <P><INPUT TYPE=SUBMIT> <INPUT TYPE=RESET>
 </FORM>
 In the example above, the <P> and <UL> tags have been
 used to lay out the text and input fields. The HTML user
 agent is responsible for handling which field will
 currently get keyboard input.
 Many platforms have existing conventions for forms, for
 example, using Tab and Shift keys to move the keyboard
 focus forwards and backwards between fields, and using
 the Enter key to submit the form. In the example, the
 SUBMIT and RESET buttons are specified explicitly with
 special purpose fields. The SUBMIT button is used to e-
 mail the form or send its contents to the server as
 specified by the ACTION attribute, while RESET resets
 the fields to their initial values. When the form
 consists of a single text field, it may be appropriate
 to leave such buttons out and rely on the Enter key.
 The Input element is used for a large variety of types
 of input fields.
 To let users enter more than one line of text, use the
 Textarea element.
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 2.15.1 Representing Choices
 The radio button and checkbox types of input field can
 be used to specify multiple choice forms in which every
 alternative is visible as part of the form. An
 alternative is to use the Select element which is
 typically rendered in a more compact fashion as a pull
 down combo list.
 2.15.2 Form
 <FORM> ... </FORM>
 Level 2
 The Form element is used to delimit a data input form.
 There can be several forms in a single document, but the
 Form element can't be nested.
 The ACTION attribute is a URL specifying the location to
 which the contents of the form is submitted to elicit a
 response. If the ACTION attribute is missing, the URL of
 the document itself is assumed. The way data is
 submitted varies with the access protocol of the URL,
 and with the values of the METHOD and ENCTYPE
 attributes.
 In general:
 - the METHOD attribute selects variations in the
 protocol.
 - the ENCTYPE attribute specifies the format of the
 submitted data in case the protocol does not impose a
 format itself.
 The Level 2 specification defines and requires support
 for the HTTP access protocol only.
 When the ACTION attribute is set to an HTTP URL, the
 METHOD attribute must be set to an HTTP method as
 defined by the HTTP method specification in the IETF
 draft HTTP standard. The default METHOD is GET, although
 for many applications, the POST method may be preferred.
 With the post method, the ENCTYPE attribute is a MIME
 type specifying the format of the posted data; by
 default, is application/x-www-form-urlencoded.
 Under any protocol, the submitted contents of the form
 logically consist of name/value pairs. The names are
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 usually equal to the NAME attributes of the various
 interactive elements in the form.
 NOTE: The names are not guaranteed to be unique keys,
 nor are the names of form elements required to be
 distinct. The values encode the user's input to the
 corresponding interactive elements. Elements capable of
 displaying a textual or numerical value will return a
 name/value pair even when they receive no explicit user
 input.
 2.15.3 Input
 <INPUT>
 Level 2
 The Input element represents a field whose contents may
 be edited by the user.
 Attributes of the Input element:
 ALIGN
 Vertical alignment of the image. For use only with
 TYPE=IMAGE in HTML level 2. The possible values are
 exactly the same as for the ALIGN attribute of the image
 element.
 CHECKED
 Indicates that a checkbox or radio button is selected.
 Unselected checkboxes and radio buttons do not return
 name/value pairs when the form is submitted.
 MAXLENGTH
 Indicates the maximum number of characters that can be
 entered into a text field. This can be greater than
 specified by the SIZE attribute, in which case the field
 will scroll appropriately. The default number of
 characters is unlimited.
 NAME
 Symbolic name used when transferring the form's
 contents. The NAME attribute is required for most input
 types and is normally used to provide a unique
 identifier for a field, or for a logically related group
 of fields.
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 SIZE
 Specifies the size or precision of the field according
 to its type. For example, to specify a field with a
 visible width of 24 characters:
 INPUT TYPE=text SIZE="24"
 SRC
 A URL or URN specifying an image. For use only with
 TYPE=IMAGE in HTML Level 2.
 TYPE
 Defines the type of data the field accepts. Defaults to
 free text. Several types of fields can be defined with
 the type attribute:
 CHECKBOX
 Used for simple Boolean attributes, or for attributes
 that can take multiple values at the same time. The
 latter is represented by a number of checkbox fields
 each of which has the same name. Each selected checkbox
 generates a separate name/value pair in the submitted
 data, even if this results in duplicate names. The
 default value for checkboxes is "on".
 HIDDEN
 No field is presented to the user, but the content of
 the field is sent with the submitted form. This value
 may be used to transmit state information about
 client/server interaction.
 IMAGE
 An image field upon which you can click with a pointing
 device, causing the form to be immediately submitted.
 The coordinates of the selected point are measured in
 pixel units from the upper-left corner of the image, and
 are returned (along with the other contents of the form)
 in two name/value pairs. The x-coordinate is submitted
 under the name of the field with .x appended, and the y-
 coordinate is submitted under the name of the field with
 .y appended. Any VALUE attribute is ignored. The image
 itself is specified by the SRC attribute, exactly as for
 the Image element.
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 NOTE: In a future version of the HTML specification, the
 IMAGE functionality may be folded into an enhanced
 SUBMIT field.
 PASSWORD is the same as the TEXT attribute, except that
 text is not displayed as it is entered.
 RADIO is used for attributes that accept a single value
 from a set of alternatives. Each radio button field in
 the group should be given the same name. Only the
 selected radio button in the group generates a
 name/value pair in the submitted data. Radio buttons
 require an explicit VALUE attribute.
 RESET is a button that when pressed resets the form's
 fields to their specified initial values. The label to
 be displayed on the button may be specified just as for
 the SUBMIT button.
 SUBMIT is a button that when pressed submits the form.
 You can use the VALUE attribute to provide a non-
 editable label to be displayed on the button. The
 default label is application-specific. If a SUBMIT
 button is pressed in order to submit the form, and that
 button has a NAME attribute specified, then that button
 contributes a name/value pair to the submitted data.
 Otherwise, a SUBMIT button makes no contribution to the
 submitted data.
 TEXT is used for a single line text entry fields. Use in
 conjunction with the SIZE and MAXLENGTH attributes. Use
 the Textarea element for text fields which can accept
 multiple lines.
 VALUE
 The initial displayed value of the field, if it displays
 a textual or numerical value; or the value to be
 returned when the field is selected, if it displays a
 Boolean value. This attribute is required for radio
 buttons.
 2.15.4 Option
 <OPTION>
 Level 2
 The Option element can only occur within a Select
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 element. It represents one choice, and can take these
 attributes:
 DISABLED
 Proposed.
 SELECTED
 Indicates that this option is initially selected.
 VALUE
 When present indicates the value to be returned if this
 option is chosen. The returned value defaults to the
 contents of the Option element.
 The contents of the Option element is presented to the
 user to represent the option. It is used as a returned
 value if the VALUE attribute is not present.
 2.15.5 Select
 <SELECT NAME=... > ... </SELECT>
 Level 2
 The Select element allows the user to chose one of a set
 of alternatives described by textual labels. Every
 alternative is represented by the Option element.
 Attributes are:
 ERROR
 Proposed.
 MULTIPLE
 The MULTIPLE attribute is needed when users are allowed
 to make several selections, e.g. <SELECT MULTIPLE>.
 NAME
 Specifies the name that will submitted as a name/value
 pair.
 SIZE
 Specifies the number of visible items. If this is
Berners-Lee, Connolly, et. al. Page 42
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 greater than one, then the resulting form control will
 be a list.
 The Select element is typically rendered as a pull down
 or pop-up list. For example:
 <SELECT NAME="flavor">
 <OPTION>Vanilla
 <OPTION>Strawberry
 <OPTION>Rum and Raisin
 <OPTION>Peach and Orange
 </SELECT>
 If no option is initially marked as selected, then the
 first item listed is selected.
 2.15.6 Text Area
 <TEXTAREA> ... </TEXTAREA>
 Level 2
 The Textarea element lets users enter more than one line
 of text. For example:
 <TEXTAREA NAME="address" ROWS=64 COLS=6>
 HaL Computer Systems
 1315 Dell Avenue
 Campbell, California 95008
 </TEXTAREA>
 The text up to the end tag (</TEXTAREA>) is used to
 initialize the field's value. This end tag is always
 required even if the field is initially blank. When
 submitting a form, the line terminators are
 implementation dependent.
 In a typical rendering, the ROWS and COLS attributes
 determine the visible dimension of the field in
 characters. The field is rendered in a fixed-width font.
 HTML user agents should allow text to extend beyond
 these limits by scrolling as needed.
 NOTE: In the initial design for forms, multi-line text
 fields were supported by the Input element with
 TYPE=TEXT. Unfortunately, this causes problems for
 fields with long text values. SGML's default (Reference
 Quantity Set) limits the length of attribute literals to
 only 240 characters. The HTML 2.0 SGML declaration
 increases the limit to 1024 characters.
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 2.16 Character Data
 Level 0
 The characters between HTML tags represent text encoded
 according to ISO 8859/1 8-bit single-byte coded graphic
 character set known as Latin Alphabet No. 1, or simply
 Latin-1. There are 256 character positions in the Latin-
 1 encoding. Latin-1 includes characters from most
 Western European languages. It consists of the space
 character, 186 characters that form a subset of the
 graphic characters in ISO 6937/2 (1983), and four
 additional characters that are intended for inclusion in
 ISO 6937/2. Also see Section 2.4.
 The lower 128 character positions include a space, 33
 control characters, the 26 upper- and lowercase letters
 of the english alphabet, 10 numerals and 32 other
 printing characters This subset, functionally identical
 to ASCII, is defined by ISO 646 7-bit coded character
 set for information interchange, also known as the
 International Reference Version. ISO 646 is identical in
 most respect to the ANSI standard for ASCII (American
 Standard Code for Information Interchange). The only
 significant difference between ISO 646 and ASCII is the
 specific names assigned to the control characters in
 positions 00-31 and 127.
 The upper 128 positions include a non-breaking space, a
 soft hyphen indicator, 93 graphical characters, 8
 unassigned characters, and 25 control characters.
 Because non-breaking space and soft hyphen indicator are
 not recognized and interpreted by all HTML user agents,
 their use is discouraged.
 There are 58 character positions occupied by control
 characters. See Section 2.16.2 for details on the
 interpretation of control characters.
 Because certain special characters are subject to
 interpretation and special processing, information
 providers and HTML user agent implementors should follow
 the guidelines in Section 2.16.1.
 Certain characters may not be accessible from your
 keyboard, or some part of your system (i.e. translation
 software) may not be equipped to deal with 8-bit
 character codes. HTML and many HTML user agents provide
 character entity references (see Section 2.17.2) and
Berners-Lee, Connolly, et. al. Page 44
 HTML 2.0 November 28, 1994
 numerical character references (see Section 2.17.3) to
 facilitate the entry and interpretation of characters by
 name and by numerical position.
 Because certain characters will be interpreted as
 markup, they must be represented by markup as described
 in Section 2.16.3 and Section 2.16.4.
 2.16.1 Special Characters
 Certain characters have special meaning in HTML
 documents. There are two printing characters which may
 be interpreted by an HTML application to have an effect
 of the format of the text:
 Space
 - Interpreted as a word space (place where a line can
 be broken) in all contexts except the Preformatted Text
 element.
 - Interpreted as a nonbreaking space within the
 Preformatted Text element.
 Hyphen
 - Interpreted as a hyphen glyph in all contexts
 - Interpreted as a potential word space by
 hyphenation engine
 2.16.2 Control Characters
 Control characters are non-printable characters that are
 typically used for communication and device control, as
 format effectors, and as information separators.
 In SGML applications, the use of control characters is
 limited in order to maximize the chance of successful
 interchange over heterogenous networks and operating
 systems. In HTML, only three control characters are
 used. The valid control characters and their
 interpretation are:
 Horizontal Tab (HT - 9 dec)
 - Interpreted as a word space in all contexts except
 preformatted text.
 - Within preformatted text, the tab should be
Berners-Lee, Connolly, et. al. Page 45
 HTML 2.0 November 28, 1994
 interpreted to shift the horizontal column position to
 the next position which is a multiple of 8 on the same
 line; that is, col := (col+8) mod 8
 Line Feed (LF - 10 dec)
 - Interpreted as a word space in all contexts except
 preformatted text.
 - Within the Preformatted Text element, the tab
 should be interpreted as a shift to the start of a new
 line; that is, col := 0; row := row+1
 Carriage Return (CR - 13 dec)
 - Interpreted as a word space in all contexts.
 2.16.3 Numeric Character References
 Any printing character within the 8-bit character
 encoding of ISO 8859/1 (256 character positions) or the
 7-bit character encoding of ISO 646 (128 character
 positions) may be represented within the text of an HTML
 document by a numeric character reference. See Section
 2.17.1 for a list of the characters, their names and
 input syntax.
 Two reasons for using a numeric character reference:
 - the keyboard does not provide a key for the
 character, such as on U.S. keyboards which do not
 provide European characters
 - the character may be interpreted as SGML coding,
 such as the ampersand (&), double quotes ("), the lesser
 (<) and greater (>) characters
 Numeric character references are represented in an HTML
 document as SGML entities whose name is number sign (#)
 followed by a numeral from 32-126 and 161-255. The HTML
 DTD includes a numeric character for each of the
 printing characters in Latin-1, so that one may
 reference them by number if it is inconvenient to enter
 them directly:
 the ampersand (&#38;), double quotes (&#34;),
 lesser (&#60;) and greater (&#62;) characters
 2.16.4 Character Entities
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 HTML 2.0 November 28, 1994
 Many of the Latin alphabet No. 1 set of printing
 characters may be represented within the text of an HTML
 document by a character entity. See 2.17.2 for a list of
 the characters, names, input syntax, and descriptions.
 See 5.2.1 for the SGML entity definitions of "Added
 Latin 1 for HTML".
 Two reasons for using a character entity:
 - the keyboard does not provide a key for the
 character, such as on U.S. keyboards which do not
 provide European characters
 - the character may be interpreted as SGML coding,
 such as the ampersand (&), double quotes ("), the lesser
 (<) and greater (>) characters
 A character entity is represented in an HTML document as
 an SGML entity whose name is defined in the HTML DTD.
 The HTML DTD includes a character entity for each of the
 SGML markup characters and for each of the printing
 characters in the upper half of Latin-1, so that one may
 reference them by name if it is inconvenient to enter
 them directly:
 the ampersand (&amp;), double quotes (&quot;),
 lesser (&lt;) and greater (&gt;) characters
 Kurt G&ouml;del was a famous logician and mathematician.
 NOTE: To ensure that a string of characters is not
 interpreted as markup, represent all occurrences of <,
 >, and & by character or entity references.
 NOTE: There are SGML features, CDATA and RCDATA, to
 allow most <, >, and & characters to be entered without
 the use of entity or character references. Because these
 features tend to be used and implemented inconsistently,
 and because they require 8-bit characters to represent
 non-ASCII characters, they are not used in this version
 of the HTML DTD. An earlier HTML specification included
 an Example element (<XMP>) whose syntax is not
 expressible in SGML. No markup was recognized inside of
 the Example element except the </XMP> end tag. While
 HTML user agents are encouraged to support this idiom,
 its use is deprecated.
 2.17 Character Entity Sets
 The following entity names are used in HTML, always
Berners-Lee, Connolly, et. al. Page 47
 HTML 2.0 November 28, 1994
 prefixed by ampersand (&) and followed by a semicolon as
 shown.
 They represent particular graphic characters which have
 special meanings in places in the markup, or may not be
 part of the character set available to the writer.
 2.17.1 Numeric and Special Graphic Entities
 The following table lists each of the supported
 characters specified in the Numeric and Special Graphic
 entity set, along with its name, syntax for use, and
 description. This list is derived from ISO Standard
 8879:1986//ENTITIES Numeric and Special Graphic//EN
 however HTML does not provide support for the entire
 entity set. Only the entities listed below are
 supported.
 GLYPH NAME SYNTAX DESCRIPTION
 < lt &lt; Less than sign
 > gt &gt; Greater than sign
 & amp &amp; Ampersand
 " quot &quot; Double quote sign
 2.17.2 ISO Latin 1 Character Entities
 The following table lists each of the characters
 specified in the Added Latin 1 entity set, along with
 its name, syntax for use, and description. This list is
 derived from ISO Standard 8879:1986//ENTITIES Added
 Latin 1//EN. HTML supports the entire entity set.
 NAME SYNTAX DESCRIPTION
 Aacute &Aacute; Capital A, acute accent
 Agrave &Agrave; Capital A, grave accent
 Acirc &Acirc; Capital A, circumflex accent
 Atilde &Atilde; Capital A, tilde
 Aring &Aring; Capital A, ring
 Auml &Auml; Capital A, dieresis or umlaut mark
 AElig &AElig; Capital AE dipthong (ligature)
 Ccedil &Ccedil; Capital C, cedilla
 Eacute &Eacute; Capital E, acute accent
 Egrave &Egrave; Capital E, grave accent
 Ecirc &Ecirc; Capital E, circumflex accent
 Euml &Euml; Capital E, dieresis or umlaut mark
 Iacute &Iacute; Capital I, acute accent
 Igrave &Igrave; Capital I, grave accent
 Icirc &Icirc; Capital I, circumflex accent
 Iuml &Iuml; Capital I, dieresis or umlaut mark
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 ETH &ETH; Capital Eth, Icelandic
 Ntilde &Ntilde; Capital N, tilde
 Oacute &Oacute; Capital O, acute accent
 Ograve &Ograve; Capital O, grave accent
 Ocirc &Ocirc; Capital O, circumflex accent
 Otilde &Otilde; Capital O, tilde
 Ouml &Ouml; Capital O, dieresis or umlaut mark
 Oslash &Oslash; Capital O, slash
 Uacute &Uacute; Capital U, acute accent
 Ugrave &Ugrave; Capital U, grave accent
 Ucirc &Ucirc; Capital U, circumflex accent
 Uuml &Uuml; Capital U, dieresis or umlaut mark
 Yacute &Yacute; Capital Y, acute accent
 THORN &THORN; Capital THORN, Icelandic
 szlig &szlig; Small sharp s, German (sz ligature)
 aacute &aacute; Small a, acute accent
 agrave &agrave; Small a, grave accent
 acirc &acirc; Small a, circumflex accent
 atilde &atilde; Small a, tilde
 auml &auml; Small a, dieresis or umlaut mark
 aelig &aelig; Small ae dipthong (ligature)
 ccedil &ccedil; Small c, cedilla
 eacute &eacute; Small e, acute accent
 egrave &egrave; Small e, grave accent
 ecirc &ecirc; Small e, circumflex accent
 euml &euml; Small e, dieresis or umlaut mark
 iacute &iacute; Small i, acute accent
 igrave &igrave; Small i, grave accent
 icirc &icirc; Small i, circumflex accent
 iuml &iuml; Small i, dieresis or umlaut mark
 eth &eth; Small eth, Icelandic
 ntilde &ntilde; Small n, tilde
 oacute &oacute; Small o, acute accent
 ograve &ograve; Small o, grave accent
 ocirc &ocirc; Small o, circumflex accent
 otilde &otilde; Small o, tilde
 ouml &ouml; Small o, dieresis or umlaut mark
 oslash &oslash; Small o, slash
 uacute &uacute; Small u, acute accent
 ugrave &ugrave; Small u, grave accent
 ucirc &ucirc; Small u, circumflex accent
 uuml &uuml; Small u, dieresis or umlaut mark
 yacute &yacute; Small y, acute accent
 thorn &thorn; Small thorn, Icelandic
 yuml &yuml; Small y, dieresis or umlaut mark
 2.17.3 Numerical Character References
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 This list, sorted numerically, is derived from ISO
 8859/1 8-bit single-byte coded graphic character set:
 REFERENCE DESCRIPTION
 &#00; - &#08; Unused
 &#09; Horizontal tab
 &#10; Line feed
 &#11; - &#31; Unused
 &#32; Space
 &#33; Exclamation mark
 &#34; Quotation mark
 &#35; Number sign
 &#36; Dollar sign
 &#37; Percent sign
 &#38; Ampersand
 &#39; Apostrophe
 &#40; Left parenthesis
 &#41; Right parenthesis
 &#42; Asterisk
 &#43; Plus sign
 &#44; Comma
 &#45; Hyphen
 &#46; Period (fullstop)
 &#47; Solidus (slash)
 &#48; - &#57; Digits 0-9
 &#58; Colon
 &#59; Semi-colon
 &#60; Less than
 &#61; Equals aign
 &#62; Greater than
 &#63; Question mark
 &#64; Commercial at
 &#65; - &#90; Letters A-Z
 &#91; Left square bracket
 &#92; Reverse solidus (backslash)
 &#93; Right square bracket
 &#95; Horizontal bar
 &#96; Acute accent
 &#97; - &#122; Letters a-z
 &#123; Left curly brace
 &#124; Vertical bar
 &#125; Right curly brace
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 &#126; Tilde
 &#127; - &#160; Unused
 &#161; Inverted exclamation
 &#162; Cent sign
 &#163; Pound sterling
 &#164; General currency sign
 &#165; Yen sign
 &#166; Broken vertical bar
 &#167; Section sign
 &#168; Umlaut (dieresis)
 &#169; Copyright
 &#170; Feminine ordinal
 &#171; Left angle quote, guillemotleft
 &#172; Not sign
 &#173; Soft hyphen
 &#174; Registered trademark
 &#175; Macron accent
 &#176; Degree sign
 &#177; Plus or minus
 &#178; Superscript two
 &#179; Superscript three
 &#180; Acute accent
 &#181; Micro sign
 &#182; Paragraph sign
 &#183; Middle dot
 &#184; Cedilla
 &#185; Superscript one
 &#186; Masculine ordinal
 &#187; Right angle quote, guillemotright
 &#188; Fraction one-fourth
 &#189; Fraction one-half
 &#190; Fraction three-fourths
 &#191; Inverted question mark
 &#192; Capital A, acute accent
 &#193; Capital A, grave accent
 &#194; Capital A, circumflex accent
 &#195; Capital A, tilde
 &#196; Capital A, ring
 &#197; Capital A, dieresis or umlaut mark
 &#198; Capital AE dipthong (ligature)
 &#199; Capital C, cedilla
 &#200; Capital E, acute accent
 &#201; Capital E, grave accent
 &#202; Capital E, circumflex accent
 &#203; Capital E, dieresis or umlaut mark
 &#204; Capital I, acute accent
 &#205; Capital I, grave accent
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 HTML 2.0 November 28, 1994
 &#206; Capital I, circumflex accent
 &#207; Capital I, dieresis or umlaut mark
 &#208; Capital Eth, Icelandic
 &#209; Capital N, tilde
 &#210; Capital O, acute accent
 &#211; Capital O, grave accent
 &#212; Capital O, circumflex accent
 &#213; Capital O, tilde
 &#214; Capital O, dieresis or umlaut mark
 &#215; Multiply sign
 &#216; Capital O, slash
 &#217; Capital U, acute accent
 &#218; Capital U, grave accent
 &#219; Capital U, circumflex accent
 &#220; Capital U, dieresis or umlaut mark
 &#221; Capital Y, acute accent
 &#222; Capital THORN, Icelandic
 &#223; Small sharp s, German (sz ligature)
 &#224; Small a, acute accent
 &#225; Small a, grave accent
 &#226; Small a, circumflex accent
 &#227; Small a, tilde
 &#228; Small a, tilde
 &#229; Small a, dieresis or umlaut mark
 &#230; Small ae dipthong (ligature)
 &#231; Small c, cedilla
 &#232; Small e, acute accent
 &#233; Small e, grave accent
 &#234; Small e, circumflex accent
 &#235; Small e, dieresis or umlaut mark
 &#236; Small i, acute accent
 &#237; Small i, grave accent
 &#238; Small i, circumflex accent
 &#239; Small i, dieresis or umlaut mark
 &#240; Small eth, Icelandic
 &#241; Small n, tilde
 &#242; Small o, acute accent
 &#243; Small o, grave accent
 &#244; Small o, circumflex accent
 &#245; Small o, tilde
 &#246; Small o, dieresis or umlaut mark
 &#247; Division sign
 &#248; Small o, slash
 &#249; Small u, acute accent
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 &#250; Small u, grave accent
 &#251; Small u, circumflex accent
 &#252; Small u, dieresis or umlaut mark
 &#253; Small y, acute accent
 &#254; Small thorn, Icelandic
 &#255; Small y, dieresis or umlaut mark
3. Security Considerations
 Anchors, embedded images, and all other elements which
 contain URIs as parameters may cause the URI to be
 dereferenced in response to user input. In this case,
 the security considerations of the URI specification
 apply.
 Documents may be constructed whose visible contents
 mislead the reader to follow a link to unsuitable or
 offensive material.
4. Obsolete and Proposed Features
 4.1 Obsolete Features
 This section describes elements that are no longer part
 of HTML. Client implementors should implement these
 obsolete elements for compatibility with previous
 versions of the HTML specification.
 4.1.1 Comment
 The Comment element is used to delimit unneeded text and
 comments. The Comment element has been introduced in
 some HTML applications but should be replaced by the
 SGML comment feature in new HTML user agents (see
 Section 2.6.5).
 4.1.2 Highlighted Phrase
 The Highlighted Phrase element (<HP>) should be ignored
 if not implemented. This element has been replaced by
 more meaningful elements (see Section 2.9).
 Example of use:
 <HP1>first highlighted phrase</HP1>non
 highlighted text<HP2>second highlighted
 phrase</HP2> etc.
 4.1.3 Plain Text
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 HTML 2.0 November 28, 1994
 <PLAINTEXT>
 The Plain Text element is used to terminates the HTML
 entity and to indicate that what follows is not SGML
 which does not require parsing. Instead, an old HTTP
 convention specified that what followed was an ASCII
 (MIME "text/plain") body. Its presence is an
 optimization. There is no closing tag.
 Example of use:
 <PLAINTEXT>
 0001 This is line one of a long listing
 0002 file from <ANY@HOST.INC.COM> which is sent
 4.1.4 Example and Listing
 <XMP> ... </XMP> and <LISTING> ... </LISTING>
 The Example element and Listing element have been
 replaced by the Preformatted Text element.
 These styles allow text of fixed-width characters to be
 embedded absolutely as is into the document. The syntax
 is:
 <LISTING>
 ...
 </LISTING>
 or
 <XMP>
 ...
 </XMP>
 The text between these tags is typically rendered in a
 monospaced font so that any formatting done by character
 spacing on successive lines will be maintained.
 Between the opening and closing tags:
 - The text may contain any ISO Latin-1 printable
 characters, expect for the end tag opener. The Example
 and Listing elements have historically used
 specifications which do not conform to SGML.
 Specifically, the text may contain ISO Latin printable
 characters, including the tag opener, as long it they
 does not contain the closing tag in full.
Berners-Lee, Connolly, et. al. Page 54
 HTML 2.0 November 28, 1994
 - SGML does not support this form. HTML user agents
 may vary on how they interpret other tags within Example
 and Listing elements.
 - Line boundaries within the text are rendered as a
 move to the beginning of the next line, except for one
 immediately following a start tag or immediately
 preceding an end tag.
 - The ASCII horizontal tab character must be
 interpreted as the smallest positive nonzero number of
 spaces which will leave the number of characters so far
 on the line as a multiple of 8. Its use is not
 recommended.
 The Listing element is rendered so that at least 132
 characters fit on a line. The Example element is
 rendered to that at least 80 characters fit on a line
 but is otherwise identical to the Listing element.
 4.2 Proposed Features
 This section describes proposed HTML elements and
 entities that are not currently supported under HTML
 Levels 0, 1, or 2, but may be supported in the future.
 4.2.1 Defining Instance
 <DFN> ... </DFN>
 The Defining Instance element indicates the defining
 instance of a term. The typical rendering is bold or
 bold italic. This element is not widely supported.
 4.2.2 Special Characters
 To indicate special characters, HTML uses entity or
 numeric representations. Two additional character
 presentations are proposed:
 CHARACTER REPRESENTATION
 Non-breaking space &nbsp;
 Soft-hyphen &shy;
 Registered &reg;
 Copyright &copy;
 4.2.3 Strike
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 HTML 2.0 November 28, 1994
 <STRIKE> ... </STRIKE>
 The Strike element is proposed to indicate
 strikethrough, a font style in which a horizontal line
 appears through characters. This element is not widely
 supported.
 4.2.4 Underline
 <U> ... </U>
 The Underline element is proposed to indicate that the
 text should be rendered as underlined. This proposed tag
 is not supported by all HTML user agents.
 Example of use:
 The text <U>shown here</U> is rendered in the document
 as underlined.
5. HTML Document Type Definitions
 5.1 SGML Declaration for HTML
This is the SGML Declaration for HyperText Markup Language
(HTML) as used by the World Wide Web (WWW) application:
<!SGML "ISO 8879:1986"
--
 SGML Declaration for HyperText Markup Language (HTML).
--
CHARSET
 BASESET "ISO 646:1983//CHARSET
 International Reference Version (IRV)//ESC 2/5 4/0"
 DESCSET 0 9 UNUSED
 9 2 9
 11 2 UNUSED
 13 1 13
 14 18 UNUSED
 32 95 32
 127 1 UNUSED
 BASESET "ISO Registration Number 100//CHARSET
 ECMA-94 Right Part of Latin Alphabet Nr. 1//ESC 2/13 4/1"
 DESCSET 128 32 UNUSED
 160 96 32
CAPACITY SGMLREF
 TOTALCAP 150000
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 HTML 2.0 November 28, 1994
 GRPCAP 150000
SCOPE DOCUMENT
SYNTAX
 SHUNCHAR CONTROLS 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17
 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 127
 BASESET "ISO 646:1983//CHARSET
 International Reference Version (IRV)//ESC 2/5 4/0"
 DESCSET 0 128 0
 FUNCTION
 -- SPACE 32
 TAB SEPCHAR 9
 LF SEPCHAR 10
 FF SEPCHAR 12
 CR SEPCHAR 13 --
 -- The above is an accurate description of the usage of FUNCTION --
 -- characters in HTML implementations; that is, there is no --
 -- Record Start or Record End character, and no occurences of --
 -- character 10 or 13 are "ignored" by the parser. --
 -- But because few SGML implementations support this concrete --
 -- sytax, we include the one below. --
 -- Note that in order to get correct behaviour w.r.t. newline --
 -- processing, you will have to play some tricks in construcing --
 -- the document entity for parsing in order to keep the parser --
 -- from ignoring newlines in surprising ways --
 RE 13
 RS 10
 SPACE 32
 TAB SEPCHAR 9
 NAMING LCNMSTRT ""
 UCNMSTRT ""
 LCNMCHAR ".-"
 UCNMCHAR ".-"
 NAMECASE GENERAL YES
 ENTITY NO
 DELIM GENERAL SGMLREF
 SHORTREF SGMLREF
 NAMES SGMLREF
 QUANTITY SGMLREF
 NAMELEN 72 -- somewhat arbitrary; taken from
 internet line length conventions --
 TAGLVL 100
 LITLEN 1024
 GRPGTCNT 150
 GRPCNT 64
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FEATURES
 MINIMIZE
 DATATAG NO
 OMITTAG YES
 RANK NO
 SHORTTAG YES
 LINK
 SIMPLE NO
 IMPLICIT NO
 EXPLICIT NO
 OTHER
 CONCUR NO
 SUBDOC NO
 FORMAL YES
 APPINFO NONE
>
<!--
 $Id: html.decl,v 1.9 1994年11月15日 19:54:44 connolly Exp $
 Author: Daniel W. Connolly <connolly@hal.com>
 See also: http://www.hal.com/%7Econnolly/html-spec
 http://info.cern.ch/hypertext/WWW/MarkUp/MarkUp.html
 -->
 5.1.1 Sample SGML Open Style Entity Catalog for HTML
 The SGML standard describes an "entity manager" as the
 portion or component of an SGML system that maps SGML
 entities into the actual storage model (e.g., the file
 system). The standard itself does not define a particular
 mapping methodology or notation.
 To assist the interoperability among various SGML tools and
 systems, the SGML Open consortium has passed a technical
 resolution that defines a format for an
 application-independent entity catalog that maps external
 identifiers and/or entity names to file names.
 Each entry in the catalog associates a storage object
 identifier (such as a file name) with information about the
 external entity that appears in the SGML document. In
 addition to entries that associate public identifiers, a
 catalog entry can associate an entity name with a storage
 object indentifier. For example, the following are
 possible catalog entries:
PUBLIC "ISO 8879:1986//ENTITIES Added Latin 1//EN" "iso-lat1.gml"
PUBLIC "-//ACME DTD Writers//DTD General Report//EN" report.dtd
Berners-Lee, Connolly, et. al. Page 58
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ENTITY "graph1" "graphics\graph1.cgm"
In particular, the following shows entries relevant to HTML.
 -- catalog: SGML Open style entity catalog for HTML --
 -- $Id: catalog,v 1.1 1994年10月07日 21:35:07 connolly Exp $ --
 -- Ways to refer to Level 2: most general to most specific --
PUBLIC "-//IETF//DTD HTML//EN" html.dtd
PUBLIC "-//IETF//DTD HTML//EN//2.0" html.dtd
PUBLIC "-//IETF//DTD HTML Level 2//EN" html.dtd
PUBLIC "-//IETF//DTD HTML Level 2//EN//2.0" html.dtd
 -- Ways to refer to Level 1: most general to most specific --
PUBLIC "-//IETF//DTD HTML Level 1//EN" html-1.dtd
PUBLIC "-//IETF//DTD HTML Level 1//EN//2.0" html-1.dtd
 -- Ways to refer to Level 0: most general to most specific --
PUBLIC "-//IETF//DTD HTML Level 0//EN" html-0.dtd
PUBLIC "-//IETF//DTD HTML Level 0//EN//2.0" html-0.dtd
 -- ISO latin 1 entity set for HTML --
PUBLIC "-//IETF//ENTITIES Added Latin 1//EN" ISOlat1.sgml
 5.2 HTML DTD
 This is the Document Type Definition for the
 HyperText Markup Language (HTML DTD):
<!-- html.dtd
 Document Type Definition for the
 HyperText Markup Language (HTML DTD)
 $Id: html.dtd,v 1.21 1994年11月15日 19:54:38 connolly Exp $
 Author: Daniel W. Connolly <connolly@hal.com>
 See Also: html.decl, html-0.dtd, html-1.dtd
 http://www.hal.com/%7Econnolly/html-spec/index.html
 http://info.cern.ch/hypertext/WWW/MarkUp2/MarkUp.html
-->
<!ENTITY % HTML.Version
 "-//IETF//DTD HTML//EN//2.0"
 -- Typical usage:
 <!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//IETF//DTD HTML//EN">
 <html>
 ...
 </html>
 --
Berners-Lee, Connolly, et. al. Page 59
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 >
<!--================== Feature Test Entities ======================-->
<!ENTITY % HTML.Recommended "IGNORE"
 -- Certain features of the language are necessary for compatibility
 with widespread usage, but they may compromise the structural
 integrity of a document. This feature test entity enables
 a more prescriptive document type definition that eliminates
 those features.
 -->
<![ %HTML.Recommended [
 <!ENTITY % HTML.Deprecated "IGNORE">
]]>
<!ENTITY % HTML.Deprecated "INCLUDE"
 -- Certain features of the language are necessary for compatibility
 with earlier versions of the specification, but they tend
 to be used an implemented inconsistently, and their use is
 deprecated. This feature test entity enables a document type
 definition that eliminates these features.
 -->
<!ENTITY % HTML.Highlighting "INCLUDE"
 -- Use this feature test entity to validate that a document
 uses no highlighting tags, which may be ignored on minimal
 implementations.
 -->
<!ENTITY % HTML.Forms "INCLUDE"
 -- Use this feature test entity to validate that a document
 contains no forms, which may not be supported in minimal
 implementations
 -->
<!--================== Imported Names =============================-->
<!ENTITY % Content-Type "CDATA"
 -- meaning an internet media type
 (aka MIME content type, as per RFC1521)
 -->
<!ENTITY % HTTP-Method "GET | POST"
 -- as per HTTP specification, in progress
 -->
<!ENTITY % URI "CDATA"
 -- The term URI means a CDATA attribute
Berners-Lee, Connolly, et. al. Page 60
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 whose value is a Uniform Resource Identifier,
 as defined by
 "Universal Resource Identifiers" by Tim Berners-Lee
 aka http://info.cern.ch/hypertext/WWW/Addressing/URL/URI_Overview.html
 aka RFC 1630
 Note that CDATA attributes are limited by the LITLEN
 capacity (1024 in the current version of html.decl),
 so that URIs in HTML have a bounded length.
 -->
<!--================== DTD "Macros" ===============================-->
<!ENTITY % heading "H1|H2|H3|H4|H5|H6">
<!ENTITY % list " UL | OL | DIR | MENU " >
<!--================ Character mnemonic entities ==================-->
<!ENTITY % ISOlat1 PUBLIC
 "-//IETF//ENTITIES Added Latin 1 for HTML//EN">
%ISOlat1;
<!ENTITY amp CDATA "&#38;" -- ampersand -->
<!ENTITY gt CDATA "&#62;" -- greater than -->
<!ENTITY lt CDATA "&#60;" -- less than -->
<!ENTITY quot CDATA "&#34;" -- double quote -->
<!--=================== Text Markup ===============================-->
<![ %HTML.Highlighting [
<!ENTITY % font " TT | B | I ">
<!ENTITY % phrase "EM | STRONG | CODE | SAMP | KBD | VAR | CITE ">
<!ENTITY % text "#PCDATA | A | IMG | BR | %phrase | %font">
<!ELEMENT (%font;|%phrase) - - (%text)+>
<!-- <TT> Typewriter text -->
<!-- <B> Bold text -->
<!-- <I> Italic text -->
<!-- <EM> Emphasized phrase -->
<!-- <STRONG> Strong emphais -->
<!-- <CODE> Source code phrase -->
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<!-- <SAMP> Sample text or characters -->
<!-- <KBD> Keyboard phrase, e.g. user input -->
<!-- <VAR> Variable phrase or substituable -->
<!-- <CITE> Name or title of cited work -->
<!ENTITY % pre.content "#PCDATA | A | HR | BR | %font | %phrase">
]]>
<!ENTITY % text "#PCDATA | A | IMG | BR">
<!ELEMENT BR - O EMPTY>
<!-- <BR> Line break -->
<!--================== Link Markup ================================-->
<![ %HTML.Recommended [
 <!ENTITY % linkName "ID">
]]>
<!ENTITY % linkName "CDATA">
<!ENTITY % linkType "NAME"
 -- a list of these will be specified at a later date -->
<!ENTITY % linkExtraAttributes
 "REL %linkType #IMPLIED
 REV %linkType #IMPLIED
 URN CDATA #IMPLIED
 TITLE CDATA #IMPLIED
 METHODS NAMES #IMPLIED
 ">
<![ %HTML.Recommended [
 <!ENTITY % A.content "(%text)+"
 -- <H1><a name="xxx">Heading</a></H1>
 is preferred to
 <a name="xxx"><H1>Heading</H1></a>
 -->
]]>
<!ENTITY % A.content "(%heading|%text)+">
<!ELEMENT A - - %A.content -(A)>
<!ATTLIST A
 HREF %URI #IMPLIED
 NAME %linkName #IMPLIED
 %linkExtraAttributes;
 >
Berners-Lee, Connolly, et. al. Page 62
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<!-- <A> Anchor; source and/or destination of a link -->
<!-- <A NAME="..."> Name of this anchor -->
<!-- <A HREF="..."> Address of link destination -->
<!-- <A URN="..."> Permanent address of destination -->
<!-- <A REL=...> Relationship of this anchor to destination -->
<!-- <A REV=...> Relationship of destination to this anchor -->
<!-- <A TITLE="..."> Title of destination (advisory)
 -->
<!-- <A METHODS="..."> Operations allowed on destination
(advisory) -->
<!--=================== Images ====================================-->
<!ELEMENT IMG - O EMPTY>
<!ATTLIST IMG
 SRC %URI; #REQUIRED
 ALT CDATA #IMPLIED
 ALIGN (top|middle|bottom) #IMPLIED
 ISMAP (ISMAP) #IMPLIED
 >
<!-- <IMG> Image; icon, glyph or illustration -->
<!-- <IMG SRC="..."> Address of image object -->
<!-- <IMG ALT="..."> Textual alternative -->
<!-- <IMG ALIGN=...> Position relative to text -->
<!-- <IMG ISMAP> Each pixel can be a link -->
<!--=================== Paragraphs=================================-->
<!ELEMENT P - O (%text)+>
<!-- <P> Paragraph -->
<!--=================== Headings, Titles, Sections ================-->
<!ELEMENT HR - O EMPTY>
<!-- <HR> Horizontal rule -->
<!ELEMENT ( %heading ) - - (%text;)+>
<!-- <H1> Heading, level 1 -->
<!-- <H2> Heading, level 2 -->
<!-- <H3> Heading, level 3 -->
<!-- <H4> Heading, level 4 -->
<!-- <H5> Heading, level 5 -->
<!-- <H6> Heading, level 6 -->
<!--=================== Text Flows ================================-->
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<![ %HTML.Forms [
 <!ENTITY % block.forms "| FORM | ISINDEX">
]]>
<!ENTITY % block.forms "">
<![ %HTML.Deprecated [
 <!ENTITY % preformatted "PRE | XMP | LISTING">
]]>
<!ENTITY % preformatted "PRE">
<!ENTITY % block "P | %list | DL
 | %preformatted
 | BLOCKQUOTE %block.forms">
<!ENTITY % flow "(%text|%block)*">
<!ENTITY % pre.content "#PCDATA | A | HR | BR">
<!ELEMENT PRE - - (%pre.content)+>
<!ATTLIST PRE
 WIDTH NUMBER #implied
 >
<!-- <PRE> Preformatted text -->
<!-- <PRE WIDTH=...> Maximum characters per line -->
<![ %HTML.Deprecated [
<!ENTITY % literal "CDATA"
 -- historical, non-conforming parsing mode where
 the only markup signal is the end tag
 in full
 -->
<!ELEMENT (XMP|LISTING) - - %literal>
<!-- <XMP> Example section -->
<!-- <LISTING> Computer listing -->
<!ELEMENT PLAINTEXT - O %literal>
<!-- <PLAINTEXT> Plain text passage -->
]]>
<!--=================== Lists =====================================-->
<!ELEMENT DL - - (DT | DD)+>
<!ATTLIST DL
 COMPACT (COMPACT) #IMPLIED>
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<!ELEMENT DT - O (%text)+>
<!ELEMENT DD - O %flow>
<!-- <DL> Definition list, or glossary -->
<!-- <DL COMPACT> Compact style list -->
<!-- <DT> Term in definition list -->
<!-- <DD> Definition of term -->
<!ELEMENT (OL|UL) - - (LI)+>
<!ELEMENT (DIR|MENU) - - (LI)+ -(%block)>
<!ATTLIST (%list)
 COMPACT (COMPACT) #IMPLIED>
<!-- <UL> Unordered list -->
<!-- <UL COMPACT> Compact list style -->
<!-- <OL> Ordered, or numbered list -->
<!-- <OL COMPACT> Compact list style -->
<!-- <DIR> Directory list -->
<!-- <DIR COMPACT> Compact list style -->
<!-- <MENU> Menu list -->
<!-- <MENU COMPACT> Compact list style -->
<!ELEMENT LI - O %flow>
<!-- <LI> List item -->
<!--=================== Document Body =============================-->
<![ %HTML.Recommended [
 <!ENTITY % body.content "(%heading|%block|HR|ADDRESS)*"
 -- <h1>Heading</h1>
 <p>Text ...
 is preferred to
 <h1>Heading</h1>
 Text ...
 -->
]]>
<!ENTITY % body.content "(%heading | %text | %block | HR | ADDRESS)*">
<!ELEMENT BODY O O %body.content>
<!-- <BODY> Document body -->
<!ELEMENT BLOCKQUOTE - - %body.content>
<!-- <BLOCKQUOTE> Quoted passage -->
<!ELEMENT ADDRESS - - (%text|P)*>
<!-- <ADDRESS> Address, signature, or byline for document or
passage -->
Berners-Lee, Connolly, et. al. Page 65
 HTML 2.0 November 28, 1994
<!--================ Forms =======================================-->
<![ %HTML.Forms [
<!ELEMENT FORM - - %body.content -(FORM) +(INPUT|SELECT|TEXTAREA)>
<!ATTLIST FORM
 ACTION %URI #IMPLIED
 METHOD (%HTTP-Method) GET
 ENCTYPE %Content-Type; "application/x-www-form-urlencoded"
 >
<!-- <FORM> Fill-out or data-entry form -->
<!-- <FORM ACTION="..."> Address for completed form -->
<!-- <FORM METHOD=...> Method of submitting form -->
<!-- <FORM ENCTYPE="..."> Representation of form data -->
<!ENTITY % InputType "(TEXT | PASSWORD | CHECKBOX |
 RADIO | SUBMIT | RESET |
 IMAGE | HIDDEN )">
<!ELEMENT INPUT - O EMPTY>
<!ATTLIST INPUT
 TYPE %InputType TEXT
 NAME CDATA #IMPLIED
 VALUE CDATA #IMPLIED
 SRC %URI #IMPLIED
 CHECKED (CHECKED) #IMPLIED
 SIZE CDATA #IMPLIED
 MAXLENGTH NUMBER #IMPLIED
 ALIGN (top|middle|bottom) #IMPLIED
 >
<!-- <INPUT> Form input datum -->
<!-- <INPUT TYPE=...> Type of input interaction -->
<!-- <INPUT TYPE=...> Name of form datum -->
<!-- <INPUT VALUE="..."> Default/initial/selected value -->
<!-- <INPUT SRC="..."> Address of image -->
<!-- <INPUT CHECKED> Initial state is "on" -->
<!-- <INPUT SIZE=...> Field size hint -->
<!-- <INPUT MAXLENGTH=...> Data length maximum -->
<!-- <INPUT ALIGN=...> Image
alignment -->
<!ELEMENT SELECT - - (OPTION+)>
<!ATTLIST SELECT
 NAME CDATA #REQUIRED
 SIZE NUMBER #IMPLIED
 MULTIPLE (MULTIPLE) #IMPLIED
 >
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<!-- <SELECT> Selection of option(s) -->
<!-- <SELECT NAME=...> Name of form datum -->
<!-- <SELECT SIZE=...> Number of options displayed at a time -->
<!-- <SELECT MULTIPLE> Multiple selections allowed -->
<!ELEMENT OPTION - O (#PCDATA)>
<!ATTLIST OPTION
 SELECTED (SELECTED) #IMPLIED
 VALUE CDATA #IMPLIED
 >
<!-- <OPTION> A selection option -->
<!-- <OPTION SELECTED> Initial state -->
<!-- <OPTION VALUE=""> Form datum value for this option -->
<!ELEMENT TEXTAREA - - (#PCDATA)>
<!ATTLIST TEXTAREA
 NAME CDATA #REQUIRED
 ROWS NUMBER #REQUIRED
 COLS NUMBER #REQUIRED
 >
<!-- <TEXTAREA> An area for text input -->
<!-- <TEXTAREA NAME=...> Name of form datum -->
<!-- <TEXTAREA ROWS=...> Height of area -->
<!-- <TEXTAREA COLS=...> Width of area -->
]]>
<!--================ Document Head ================================-->
<!ENTITY % head.link "& LINK*">
<![ %HTML.Recommended [
 <!ENTITY % head.nextid "">
]]>
<!ENTITY % head.nextid "& NEXTID?">
<!ENTITY % head.content "TITLE & ISINDEX? & BASE? & META*
 %head.nextid
 %head.link">
<!ELEMENT HEAD O O (%head.content)>
<!-- <HEAD> Document head -->
<!ELEMENT TITLE - - (#PCDATA)>
<!-- <TITLE> Title of document -->
<!ELEMENT LINK - O EMPTY>
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 HTML 2.0 November 28, 1994
<!ATTLIST LINK
 HREF %URI #REQUIRED
 %linkExtraAttributes; >
<!-- <LINK> Link from this document -->
<!-- <LINK HREF="..."> Address of link destination -->
<!-- <LINK URN="..."> Lasting name of destination -->
<!-- <LINK REL=...> Relationship of this document to dest -->
<!-- <LINK REV=...> Relationship of destination to document -->
<!-- <LINK TITLE="..."> Title of destination (advisory) -->
<!-- <LINK METHODS="..."> Operations allowed on dest (advisory) -->
<!ELEMENT ISINDEX - O EMPTY>
<!-- <ISINDEX> Document is a searchable index -->
<!ELEMENT BASE - O EMPTY>
<!ATTLIST BASE
 HREF %URI; #REQUIRED
 >
<!-- <BASE> Base context document -->
<!-- <BASE HREF="..."> Address for this document -->
<!ELEMENT NEXTID - O EMPTY>
<!ATTLIST NEXTID N %linkName #REQUIRED>
<!-- <NEXTID> Next ID to use for link name -->
<!--
<NEXTID N=...> Next ID to use for link name -->
<!ELEMENT META - O EMPTY>
<!ATTLIST META
 HTTP-EQUIV NAME #IMPLIED
 NAME NAME #IMPLIED
 CONTENT CDATA #REQUIRED
 >
<!-- <META> Generic Metainformation -->
<!-- <META HTTP-EQUIV=...> HTTP response header name -->
<!-- <META HTTP-EQUIV=...> Metainformation name -->
<!-- <META CONTENT="..."> Associated information -->
<!--================ Document Structure ===========================-->
<![ %HTML.Deprecated [
 <!ENTITY % html.content "HEAD, BODY, PLAINTEXT?">
]]>
<!ENTITY % html.content "HEAD, BODY">
<!ELEMENT HTML O O (%html.content)>
<!ENTITY % version.attr "VERSION CDATA #FIXED &#34;%HTML.Version;&#34;">
<!ATTLIST HTML
 %version.attr;
Berners-Lee, Connolly, et. al. Page 68
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 >
<!-- <HTML> HyperText Markup Language Document -->
<!-- <HTML
VERSION="..."> Version of HTML specification -->
5.2.1 ISO Latin 1 Definitions for HTML
<!-- (C) International Organization for Standardization 1986
 Permission to copy in any form is granted for use with
 conforming SGML systems and applications as defined in
 ISO 8879:1986, provided this notice is included in all copies.
-->
<!-- Character entity set. Typical invocation:
 <!ENTITY % ISOlat1 PUBLIC
 "-//IETF//ENTITIES Added Latin 1 for HTML//EN">
 %ISOlat1;
-->
<!-- Modified for use in HTML
 $Id: ISOlat1.sgml,v 1.1 1994年09月24日 14:06:34 connolly Exp $ -->
<!ENTITY AElig CDATA "&#198;" -- capital AE diphthong (ligature) -->
<!ENTITY Aacute CDATA "&#193;" -- capital A, acute accent -->
<!ENTITY Acirc CDATA "&#194;" -- capital A, circumflex accent -->
<!ENTITY Agrave CDATA "&#192;" -- capital A, grave accent -->
<!ENTITY Aring CDATA "&#197;" -- capital A, ring -->
<!ENTITY Atilde CDATA "&#195;" -- capital A, tilde -->
<!ENTITY Auml CDATA "&#196;" -- capital A, dieresis or umlaut mark -->
<!ENTITY Ccedil CDATA "&#199;" -- capital C, cedilla -->
<!ENTITY ETH CDATA "&#208;" -- capital Eth, Icelandic -->
<!ENTITY Eacute CDATA "&#201;" -- capital E, acute accent -->
<!ENTITY Ecirc CDATA "&#202;" -- capital E, circumflex accent -->
<!ENTITY Egrave CDATA "&#200;" -- capital E, grave accent -->
<!ENTITY Euml CDATA "&#203;" -- capital E, dieresis or umlaut mark -->
<!ENTITY Iacute CDATA "&#205;" -- capital I, acute accent -->
<!ENTITY Icirc CDATA "&#206;" -- capital I, circumflex accent -->
<!ENTITY Igrave CDATA "&#204;" -- capital I, grave accent -->
<!ENTITY Iuml CDATA "&#207;" -- capital I, dieresis or umlaut mark -->
<!ENTITY Ntilde CDATA "&#209;" -- capital N, tilde -->
<!ENTITY Oacute CDATA "&#211;" -- capital O, acute accent -->
<!ENTITY Ocirc CDATA "&#212;" -- capital O, circumflex accent -->
<!ENTITY Ograve CDATA "&#210;" -- capital O, grave accent -->
<!ENTITY Oslash CDATA "&#216;" -- capital O, slash -->
<!ENTITY Otilde CDATA "&#213;" -- capital O, tilde -->
<!ENTITY Ouml CDATA "&#214;" -- capital O, dieresis or umlaut mark -->
<!ENTITY THORN CDATA "&#222;" -- capital THORN, Icelandic -->
<!ENTITY Uacute CDATA "&#218;" -- capital U, acute accent -->
<!ENTITY Ucirc CDATA "&#219;" -- capital U, circumflex accent -->
<!ENTITY Ugrave CDATA "&#217;" -- capital U, grave accent -->
<!ENTITY Uuml CDATA "&#220;" -- capital U, dieresis or umlaut mark -->
<!ENTITY Yacute CDATA "&#221;" -- capital Y, acute accent -->
Berners-Lee, Connolly, et. al. Page 69
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<!ENTITY aacute CDATA "&#225;" -- small a, acute accent -->
<!ENTITY acirc CDATA "&#226;" -- small a, circumflex accent -->
<!ENTITY aelig CDATA "&#230;" -- small ae diphthong (ligature) -->
<!ENTITY agrave CDATA "&#224;" -- small a, grave accent -->
<!ENTITY aring CDATA "&#229;" -- small a, ring -->
<!ENTITY atilde CDATA "&#227;" -- small a, tilde -->
<!ENTITY auml CDATA "&#228;" -- small a, dieresis or umlaut mark -->
<!ENTITY ccedil CDATA "&#231;" -- small c, cedilla -->
<!ENTITY eacute CDATA "&#233;" -- small e, acute accent -->
<!ENTITY ecirc CDATA "&#234;" -- small e, circumflex accent -->
<!ENTITY egrave CDATA "&#232;" -- small e, grave accent -->
<!ENTITY eth CDATA "&#240;" -- small eth, Icelandic -->
<!ENTITY euml CDATA "&#235;" -- small e, dieresis or umlaut mark -->
<!ENTITY iacute CDATA "&#237;" -- small i, acute accent -->
<!ENTITY icirc CDATA "&#238;" -- small i, circumflex accent -->
<!ENTITY igrave CDATA "&#236;" -- small i, grave accent -->
<!ENTITY iuml CDATA "&#239;" -- small i, dieresis or umlaut mark -->
<!ENTITY ntilde CDATA "&#241;" -- small n, tilde -->
<!ENTITY oacute CDATA "&#243;" -- small o, acute accent -->
<!ENTITY ocirc CDATA "&#244;" -- small o, circumflex accent -->
<!ENTITY ograve CDATA "&#242;" -- small o, grave accent -->
<!ENTITY oslash CDATA "&#248;" -- small o, slash -->
<!ENTITY otilde CDATA "&#245;" -- small o, tilde -->
<!ENTITY ouml CDATA "&#246;" -- small o, dieresis or umlaut mark -->
<!ENTITY szlig CDATA "&#223;" -- small sharp s, German(sz ligature)-->
<!ENTITY thorn CDATA "&#254;" -- small thorn, Icelandic -->
<!ENTITY uacute CDATA "&#250;" -- small u, acute accent -->
<!ENTITY ucirc CDATA "&#251;" -- small u, circumflex accent -->
<!ENTITY ugrave CDATA "&#249;" -- small u, grave accent -->
<!ENTITY uuml CDATA "&#252;" -- small u, dieresis or umlaut mark -->
<!ENTITY yacute CDATA "&#253;" -- small y, acute accent -->
<!ENTITY yuml CDATA "&#255;" -- small y, dieresis or umlaut mark -->
 5.3 HTML Level 0 DTD
 This is the Document Type Definition for the HyperText
 Markup Language as used by minimally conforming World Wide
 Web applications (HTML Level 0 DTD):
<!-- html-0.dtd
 Document Type Definition for the HyperText Markup Language
 as used by minimally conforming World Wide Web applications
 (HTML Level 0 DTD).
 $Id: html-0.dtd,v 1.9 1994年11月15日 19:54:42 connolly Exp $
 Author: Daniel W. Connolly <connolly@hal.com>
 See Also: http://www.hal.com/%7Econnolly/html-spec/index.html
 http://info.cern.ch/hypertext/WWW/MarkUp2/MarkUp.html
Berners-Lee, Connolly, et. al. Page 70
 HTML 2.0 November 28, 1994
-->
<!ENTITY % HTML.Version
 "-//IETF//DTD HTML Level 0//EN//2.0"
 -- public identifier for "minimal conformance" version --
 -- Typical usage:
 <!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC
 "-//IETF//DTD HTML Level 0//EN">
 <html>
 ...
 </html>
 --
 >
<!-- Feature Test Entities -->
<!ENTITY % HTML.Highlighting "IGNORE">
<!ENTITY % HTML.Forms "IGNORE">
<!ENTITY % head.link " " -- no link in head at level 0 -->
<!ENTITY % linkExtraAttributes " ">
<!ENTITY % html PUBLIC "-//IETF//DTD HTML//EN//2.0">
%html;
 5.4 HTML Level 1 DTD
 This is the Document Type Definition for the HyperText
 Markup Language with Level 1 Extensions (HTML Level 1 DTD):
<!-- html-1.dtd
 Document Type Definition for the HyperText Markup Language
 with Level 1 Extensions (HTML Level 1 DTD).
 $Id: html-1.dtd,v 1.5 1994年09月23日 22:46:54 connolly Exp $
 Author: Daniel W. Connolly <connolly@hal.com>
 See Also: http://www.hal.com/%7Econnolly/html-spec/index.html
 http://info.cern.ch/hypertext/WWW/MarkUp2/MarkUp.html
-->
<!ENTITY % HTML.Version
 "-//IETF//DTD HTML Level 1//EN//2.0"
 -- Typical usage:
 <!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC
Berners-Lee, Connolly, et. al. Page 71
 HTML 2.0 November 28, 1994
 "-//IETF//DTD HTML Level 1//EN">
 <html>
 ...
 </html>
 --
 >
<!-- Feature Test Entities -->
<!ENTITY % HTML.Forms "IGNORE">
<!ENTITY % html PUBLIC "-//IETF//DTD HTML//EN//2.0">
%html;
6. DTD Element References
 Document type definition (DTD) element references are aids
 to reading and understanding the DTDs.
 6.1 Recommended Level 2 Element Reference
 This listing eliminates deprecated idioms. Consult this
 reference when generating new documents. This reference is
 available as hypertext at
 http://www.hal.com/%7Econnolly/html-spec/L2Pindex.html
HTML DTD Reference
Generated from
-//IETF//DTD HTML Recommended//EN//2.0
Alphabetical Index
A, ADDRESS, B, BASE, BLOCKQUOTE, BODY, BR, CITE, CODE, DD, DIR, DL, DT,
EM, FORM, H1, H2, H3, H4, H5, H6, HEAD, HR, HTML, I, IMG, INPUT, ISINDEX
, KBD, LI, LINK, MENU, META, NEXTID, OL, OPTION, P, PRE, SAMP, SELECT,
STRONG, TEXTAREA, TITLE, TT, UL, VAR,
------------------------------------------------------------------------
A
Required Parts
<A>characters... </A>
All Parts
<A HREF="..." NAME="..." REL="..." REV="..." URN="..." TITLE="..."
METHODS="..." >characters... <IMG> <BR> <EM> <STRONG> <CODE> <SAMP>
<KBD> <VAR> <CITE> <TT> <B> <I> </A>
Allowed In Content Of...
<ADDRESS> <B> <CITE> <CODE> <DD> <DT> <EM> <H1> <H2> <H3> <H4> <H5> <H6>
 <I> <KBD> <LI> <P> <PRE> <SAMP> <STRONG> <TT> <VAR>
Berners-Lee, Connolly, et. al. Page 72
 HTML 2.0 November 28, 1994
------------------------------------------------------------------------
ADDRESS
Required Parts
<ADDRESS>characters... </ADDRESS>
All Parts
<ADDRESS>characters... <A> <IMG> <BR> <EM> <STRONG> <CODE> <SAMP> <KBD>
<VAR> <CITE> <TT> <B> <I> </ADDRESS>
Allowed In Content Of...
<BLOCKQUOTE> <BODY> <FORM>
------------------------------------------------------------------------
B
Required Parts
<B>characters... </B>
All Parts
<B>characters... <A> <IMG> <BR> <EM> <STRONG> <CODE> <SAMP> <KBD> <VAR>
<CITE> <TT> <B> <I> </B>
Allowed In Content Of...
<A> <ADDRESS> <B> <CITE> <CODE> <DD> <DT> <EM> <H1> <H2> <H3> <H4> <H5>
<H6> <I> <KBD> <LI> <P> <PRE> <SAMP> <STRONG> <TT> <VAR>
------------------------------------------------------------------------
BASE
Required Parts
<BASE HREF="..." >
All Parts
<BASE HREF="..." >
Allowed In Content Of...
<HEAD>
------------------------------------------------------------------------
BLOCKQUOTE
Required Parts
<BLOCKQUOTE></BLOCKQUOTE>
All Parts
<BLOCKQUOTE><H1> <H2> <H3> <H4> <H5> <H6> <P> <UL> <OL> <DIR> <MENU>
<DL> <PRE> <BLOCKQUOTE> <FORM> <ISINDEX> <HR> <ADDRESS> </BLOCKQUOTE>
Allowed In Content Of...
<BLOCKQUOTE> <BODY> <DD> <FORM> <LI>
------------------------------------------------------------------------
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BODY
Required Parts
All Parts
<BODY><H1> <H2> <H3> <H4> <H5> <H6> <P> <UL> <OL> <DIR> <MENU> <DL>
<PRE> <BLOCKQUOTE> <FORM> <ISINDEX> <HR> <ADDRESS> </BODY>
Allowed In Content Of...
<HTML>
------------------------------------------------------------------------
BR
Required Parts
<BR>
All Parts
<BR>
Allowed In Content Of...
<A> <ADDRESS> <B> <CITE> <CODE> <DD> <DT> <EM> <H1> <H2> <H3> <H4> <H5>
<H6> <I> <KBD> <LI> <P> <PRE> <SAMP> <STRONG> <TT> <VAR>
------------------------------------------------------------------------
CITE
Required Parts
<CITE>characters... </CITE>
All Parts
<CITE>characters... <A> <IMG> <BR> <EM> <STRONG> <CODE> <SAMP> <KBD>
<VAR> <CITE> <TT> <B> <I> </CITE>
Allowed In Content Of...
<A> <ADDRESS> <B> <CITE> <CODE> <DD> <DT> <EM> <H1> <H2> <H3> <H4> <H5>
<H6> <I> <KBD> <LI> <P> <PRE> <SAMP> <STRONG> <TT> <VAR>
------------------------------------------------------------------------
CODE
Required Parts
<CODE>characters... </CODE>
All Parts
<CODE>characters... <A> <IMG> <BR> <EM> <STRONG> <CODE> <SAMP> <KBD>
<VAR> <CITE> <TT> <B> <I> </CODE>
Allowed In Content Of...
<A> <ADDRESS> <B> <CITE> <CODE> <DD> <DT> <EM> <H1> <H2> <H3> <H4> <H5>
<H6> <I> <KBD> <LI> <P> <PRE> <SAMP> <STRONG> <TT> <VAR>
------------------------------------------------------------------------
DD
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Required Parts
<DD>characters...
All Parts
<DD>characters... <A> <IMG> <BR> <EM> <STRONG> <CODE> <SAMP> <KBD> <VAR>
 <CITE> <TT> <B> <I> <P> <UL> <OL> <DIR> <MENU> <DL> <PRE> <BLOCKQUOTE>
<FORM> <ISINDEX> </DD>
Allowed In Content Of...
<DL>
------------------------------------------------------------------------
DIR
Required Parts
<DIR></DIR>
All Parts
<DIR><LI> </DIR>
Allowed In Content Of...
<BLOCKQUOTE> <BODY> <DD> <FORM> <LI>
------------------------------------------------------------------------
DL
Required Parts
<DL></DL>
All Parts
<DL COMPACT><DT> <DD> </DL>
Allowed In Content Of...
<BLOCKQUOTE> <BODY> <DD> <FORM> <LI>
------------------------------------------------------------------------
DT
Required Parts
<DT>characters...
All Parts
<DT>characters... <A> <IMG> <BR> <EM> <STRONG> <CODE> <SAMP> <KBD> <VAR>
 <CITE> <TT> <B> <I> </DT>
Allowed In Content Of...
<DL>
------------------------------------------------------------------------
EM
Required Parts
<EM>characters... </EM>
Berners-Lee, Connolly, et. al. Page 75
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All Parts
<EM>characters... <A> <IMG> <BR> <EM> <STRONG> <CODE> <SAMP> <KBD> <VAR>
 <CITE> <TT> <B> <I> </EM>
Allowed In Content Of...
<A> <ADDRESS> <B> <CITE> <CODE> <DD> <DT> <EM> <H1> <H2> <H3> <H4> <H5>
<H6> <I> <KBD> <LI> <P> <PRE> <SAMP> <STRONG> <TT> <VAR>
------------------------------------------------------------------------
FORM
Required Parts
<FORM ACTION="..." ></FORM>
All Parts
<FORM ACTION="..." METHOD="..." ENCTYPE="..." ><H1> <H2> <H3> <H4> <H5>
<H6> <P> <UL> <OL> <DIR> <MENU> <DL> <PRE> <BLOCKQUOTE> <ISINDEX> <HR>
<ADDRESS> <INPUT> <SELECT> <TEXTAREA> </FORM>
Allowed In Content Of...
<BLOCKQUOTE> <BODY> <DD> <LI>
------------------------------------------------------------------------
H1
Required Parts
<H1>characters... </H1>
All Parts
<H1>characters... <A> <IMG> <BR> <EM> <STRONG> <CODE> <SAMP> <KBD> <VAR>
 <CITE> <TT> <B> <I> </H1>
Allowed In Content Of...
<BLOCKQUOTE> <BODY> <FORM>
------------------------------------------------------------------------
H2
Required Parts
<H2>characters... </H2>
All Parts
<H2>characters... <A> <IMG> <BR> <EM> <STRONG> <CODE> <SAMP> <KBD> <VAR>
 <CITE> <TT> <B> <I> </H2>
Allowed In Content Of...
<BLOCKQUOTE> <BODY> <FORM>
------------------------------------------------------------------------
H3
Required Parts
<H3>characters... </H3>
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All Parts
<H3>characters... <A> <IMG> <BR> <EM> <STRONG> <CODE> <SAMP> <KBD> <VAR>
 <CITE> <TT> <B> <I> </H3>
Allowed In Content Of...
<BLOCKQUOTE> <BODY> <FORM>
------------------------------------------------------------------------
H4
Required Parts
<H4>characters... </H4>
All Parts
<H4>characters... <A> <IMG> <BR> <EM> <STRONG> <CODE> <SAMP> <KBD> <VAR>
 <CITE> <TT> <B> <I> </H4>
Allowed In Content Of...
<BLOCKQUOTE> <BODY> <FORM>
------------------------------------------------------------------------
H5
Required Parts
<H5>characters... </H5>
All Parts
<H5>characters... <A> <IMG> <BR> <EM> <STRONG> <CODE> <SAMP> <KBD> <VAR>
 <CITE> <TT> <B> <I> </H5>
Allowed In Content Of...
<BLOCKQUOTE> <BODY> <FORM>
------------------------------------------------------------------------
H6
Required Parts
<H6>characters... </H6>
All Parts
<H6>characters... <A> <IMG> <BR> <EM> <STRONG> <CODE> <SAMP> <KBD> <VAR>
 <CITE> <TT> <B> <I> </H6>
Allowed In Content Of...
<BLOCKQUOTE> <BODY> <FORM>
------------------------------------------------------------------------
HEAD
Required Parts
All Parts
<HEAD><TITLE> <ISINDEX> <BASE> <META> <NEXTID> <LINK> </HEAD>
Allowed In Content Of...
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<HTML>
------------------------------------------------------------------------
HR
Required Parts
<HR>
All Parts
<HR>
Allowed In Content Of...
<BLOCKQUOTE> <BODY> <FORM> <PRE>
------------------------------------------------------------------------
HTML
Required Parts
All Parts
<HTML VERSION="..." ><HEAD> <BODY> </HTML>
Allowed In Content Of...
------------------------------------------------------------------------
I
Required Parts
<I>characters... </I>
All Parts
<I>characters... <A> <IMG> <BR> <EM> <STRONG> <CODE> <SAMP> <KBD> <VAR>
<CITE> <TT> <B> <I> </I>
Allowed In Content Of...
<A> <ADDRESS> <B> <CITE> <CODE> <DD> <DT> <EM> <H1> <H2> <H3> <H4> <H5>
<H6> <I> <KBD> <LI> <P> <PRE> <SAMP> <STRONG> <TT> <VAR>
------------------------------------------------------------------------
IMG
Required Parts
<IMG SRC="..." >
All Parts
<IMG SRC="..." ALT="..." ALIGN="..." ISMAP>
Allowed In Content Of...
<A> <ADDRESS> <B> <CITE> <CODE> <DD> <DT> <EM> <H1> <H2> <H3> <H4> <H5>
<H6> <I> <KBD> <LI> <P> <SAMP> <STRONG> <TT> <VAR>
------------------------------------------------------------------------
INPUT
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Required Parts
<INPUT>
All Parts
<INPUT TYPE="..." NAME="..." VALUE="..." SRC="..." CHECKED SIZE="..."
MAXLENGTH="..." ALIGN="..." >
Allowed In Content Of...
<FORM>
------------------------------------------------------------------------
ISINDEX
Required Parts
<ISINDEX>
All Parts
<ISINDEX>
Allowed In Content Of...
<BLOCKQUOTE> <BODY> <DD> <FORM> <HEAD> <LI>
------------------------------------------------------------------------
KBD
Required Parts
<KBD>characters... </KBD>
All Parts
<KBD>characters... <A> <IMG> <BR> <EM> <STRONG> <CODE> <SAMP> <KBD>
<VAR> <CITE> <TT> <B> <I> </KBD>
Allowed In Content Of...
<A> <ADDRESS> <B> <CITE> <CODE> <DD> <DT> <EM> <H1> <H2> <H3> <H4> <H5>
<H6> <I> <KBD> <LI> <P> <PRE> <SAMP> <STRONG> <TT> <VAR>
------------------------------------------------------------------------
LI
Required Parts
<LI>characters...
All Parts
<LI>characters... <A> <IMG> <BR> <EM> <STRONG> <CODE> <SAMP> <KBD> <VAR>
 <CITE> <TT> <B> <I> <P> <UL> <OL> <DIR> <MENU> <DL> <PRE> <BLOCKQUOTE>
<FORM> <ISINDEX> </LI>
Allowed In Content Of...
<DIR> <MENU> <OL> <UL>
------------------------------------------------------------------------
LINK
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Required Parts
<LINK HREF="..." >
All Parts
<LINK HREF="..." REL="..." REV="..." URN="..." TITLE="..."
METHODS="..." >
Allowed In Content Of...
<HEAD>
------------------------------------------------------------------------
MENU
Required Parts
<MENU></MENU>
All Parts
<MENU><LI> </MENU>
Allowed In Content Of...
<BLOCKQUOTE> <BODY> <DD> <FORM> <LI>
------------------------------------------------------------------------
META
Required Parts
<META CONTENT="..." >
All Parts
<META HTTP-EQUIV="..." NAME="..." CONTENT="..." >
Allowed In Content Of...
<HEAD>
------------------------------------------------------------------------
NEXTID
Required Parts
<NEXTID N="..." >
All Parts
<NEXTID N="..." >
Allowed In Content Of...
<HEAD>
------------------------------------------------------------------------
OL
Required Parts
<OL></OL>
All Parts
<OL><LI> </OL>
Allowed In Content Of...
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<BLOCKQUOTE> <BODY> <DD> <FORM> <LI>
------------------------------------------------------------------------
OPTION
Required Parts
<OPTION>characters...
All Parts
<OPTION SELECTED VALUE="..." >characters... </OPTION>
Allowed In Content Of...
<SELECT>
------------------------------------------------------------------------
P
Required Parts
<P>characters...
All Parts
<P>characters... <A> <IMG> <BR> <EM> <STRONG> <CODE> <SAMP> <KBD> <VAR>
<CITE> <TT> <B> <I> </P>
Allowed In Content Of...
<BLOCKQUOTE> <BODY> <DD> <FORM> <LI>
------------------------------------------------------------------------
PRE
Required Parts
<PRE>characters... </PRE>
All Parts
<PRE WIDTH="..." >characters... <A> <HR> <BR> <TT> <B> <I> <EM> <STRONG>
 <CODE> <SAMP> <KBD> <VAR> <CITE> </PRE>
Allowed In Content Of...
<BLOCKQUOTE> <BODY> <DD> <FORM> <LI>
------------------------------------------------------------------------
SAMP
Required Parts
<SAMP>characters... </SAMP>
All Parts
<SAMP>characters... <A> <IMG> <BR> <EM> <STRONG> <CODE> <SAMP> <KBD>
<VAR> <CITE> <TT> <B> <I> </SAMP>
Allowed In Content Of...
<A> <ADDRESS> <B> <CITE> <CODE> <DD> <DT> <EM> <H1> <H2> <H3> <H4> <H5>
<H6> <I> <KBD> <LI> <P> <PRE> <SAMP> <STRONG> <TT> <VAR>
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------------------------------------------------------------------------
SELECT
Required Parts
<SELECT NAME="..." ></SELECT>
All Parts
<SELECT NAME="..." SIZE="..." MULTIPLE><OPTION> </SELECT>
Allowed In Content Of...
<FORM>
------------------------------------------------------------------------
STRONG
Required Parts
<STRONG>characters... </STRONG>
All Parts
<STRONG>characters... <A> <IMG> <BR> <EM> <STRONG> <CODE> <SAMP> <KBD>
<VAR> <CITE> <TT> <B> <I> </STRONG>
Allowed In Content Of...
<A> <ADDRESS> <B> <CITE> <CODE> <DD> <DT> <EM> <H1> <H2> <H3> <H4> <H5>
<H6> <I> <KBD> <LI> <P> <PRE> <SAMP> <STRONG> <TT> <VAR>
------------------------------------------------------------------------
TEXTAREA
Required Parts
<TEXTAREA NAME="..." ROWS="..." COLS="..." >characters... </TEXTAREA>
All Parts
<TEXTAREA NAME="..." ROWS="..." COLS="..." >characters... </TEXTAREA>
Allowed In Content Of...
<FORM>
------------------------------------------------------------------------
TITLE
Required Parts
<TITLE>characters... </TITLE>
All Parts
<TITLE>characters... </TITLE>
Allowed In Content Of...
<HEAD>
------------------------------------------------------------------------
TT
Berners-Lee, Connolly, et. al. Page 82
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Required Parts
<TT>characters... </TT>
All Parts
<TT>characters... <A> <IMG> <BR> <EM> <STRONG> <CODE> <SAMP> <KBD> <VAR>
 <CITE> <TT> <B> <I> </TT>
Allowed In Content Of...
<A> <ADDRESS> <B> <CITE> <CODE> <DD> <DT> <EM> <H1> <H2> <H3> <H4> <H5>
<H6> <I> <KBD> <LI> <P> <PRE> <SAMP> <STRONG> <TT> <VAR>
------------------------------------------------------------------------
UL
Required Parts
<UL></UL>
All Parts
<UL COMPACT><LI> </UL>
Allowed In Content Of...
<BLOCKQUOTE> <BODY> <DD> <FORM> <LI>
------------------------------------------------------------------------
VAR
Required Parts
<VAR>characters... </VAR>
All Parts
<VAR>characters... <A> <IMG> <BR> <EM> <STRONG> <CODE> <SAMP> <KBD>
<VAR> <CITE> <TT> <B> <I> </VAR>
Allowed In Content Of...
<A> <ADDRESS> <B> <CITE> <CODE> <DD> <DT> <EM> <H1> <H2> <H3> <H4> <H5>
<H6> <I> <KBD> <LI> <P> <PRE> <SAMP> <STRONG> <TT> <VAR>
 6.2 Recommended Level 0 Element Reference
 This listing eliminates deprecated idioms. Consult this
 reference when generating new documents aimed at minimally
 conforming implementations. This reference is available as
 hypertext at
 http://www.hal.com/%7Econnolly/html-spec/L0Pindex.html
HTML DTD Reference
Generated from
-//IETF//DTD HTML Level 0 Recommended//EN//2.0
Alphabetical Index
A, ADDRESS, BASE, BLOCKQUOTE, BODY, BR, DD, DIR, DL, DT, H1, H2, H3,
Berners-Lee, Connolly, et. al. Page 83
 HTML 2.0 November 28, 1994
H4, H5, H6, HEAD, HR, HTML, IMG, ISINDEX, LI, LINK, MENU, META,
NEXTID, OL, P, PRE, TITLE, UL,
------------------------------------------------------------------------
A
Required Parts
<A>characters... </A>
All Parts
<A HREF="..." NAME="..." >characters... <IMG> <BR> </A>
Allowed In Content Of...
<ADDRESS> <DD> <DT> <H1> <H2> <H3> <H4> <H5> <H6> <LI> <P> <PRE>
------------------------------------------------------------------------
ADDRESS
Required Parts
<ADDRESS>characters... </ADDRESS>
All Parts
<ADDRESS>characters... <A> <IMG> <BR> </ADDRESS>
Allowed In Content Of...
<BLOCKQUOTE> <BODY>
------------------------------------------------------------------------
BASE
Required Parts
<BASE HREF="..." >
All Parts
<BASE HREF="..." >
Allowed In Content Of...
<HEAD>
------------------------------------------------------------------------
BLOCKQUOTE
Required Parts
<BLOCKQUOTE></BLOCKQUOTE>
All Parts
<BLOCKQUOTE><H1> <H2> <H3> <H4> <H5> <H6> <P> <UL> <OL> <DIR> <MENU>
<DL> <PRE> <BLOCKQUOTE> <HR> <ADDRESS> </BLOCKQUOTE>
Allowed In Content Of...
<BLOCKQUOTE> <BODY> <DD> <LI>
------------------------------------------------------------------------
BODY
Berners-Lee, Connolly, et. al. Page 84
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Required Parts
All Parts
<BODY><H1> <H2> <H3> <H4> <H5> <H6> <P> <UL> <OL> <DIR> <MENU> <DL>
<PRE> <BLOCKQUOTE> <HR> <ADDRESS> </BODY>
Allowed In Content Of...
<HTML>
------------------------------------------------------------------------
BR
Required Parts
<BR>
All Parts
<BR>
Allowed In Content Of...
<A> <ADDRESS> <DD> <DT> <H1> <H2> <H3> <H4> <H5> <H6> <LI> <P> <PRE>
------------------------------------------------------------------------
DD
Required Parts
<DD>characters...
All Parts
<DD>characters... <A> <IMG> <BR> <P> <UL> <OL> <DIR> <MENU> <DL> <PRE>
<BLOCKQUOTE> </DD>
Allowed In Content Of...
<DL>
------------------------------------------------------------------------
DIR
Required Parts
<DIR></DIR>
All Parts
<DIR><LI> </DIR>
Allowed In Content Of...
<BLOCKQUOTE> <BODY> <DD> <LI>
------------------------------------------------------------------------
DL
Required Parts
<DL></DL>
All Parts
<DL COMPACT><DT> <DD> </DL>
Berners-Lee, Connolly, et. al. Page 85
 HTML 2.0 November 28, 1994
Allowed In Content Of...
<BLOCKQUOTE> <BODY> <DD> <LI>
------------------------------------------------------------------------
DT
Required Parts
<DT>characters...
All Parts
<DT>characters... <A> <IMG> <BR> </DT>
Allowed In Content Of...
<DL>
------------------------------------------------------------------------
H1
Required Parts
<H1>characters... </H1>
All Parts
<H1>characters... <A> <IMG> <BR> </H1>
Allowed In Content Of...
<BLOCKQUOTE> <BODY>
------------------------------------------------------------------------
H2
Required Parts
<H2>characters... </H2>
All Parts
<H2>characters... <A> <IMG> <BR> </H2>
Allowed In Content Of...
<BLOCKQUOTE> <BODY>
------------------------------------------------------------------------
H3
Required Parts
<H3>characters... </H3>
All Parts
<H3>characters... <A> <IMG> <BR> </H3>
Allowed In Content Of...
<BLOCKQUOTE> <BODY>
------------------------------------------------------------------------
H4
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Required Parts
<H4>characters... </H4>
All Parts
<H4>characters... <A> <IMG> <BR> </H4>
Allowed In Content Of...
<BLOCKQUOTE> <BODY>
------------------------------------------------------------------------
H5
Required Parts
<H5>characters... </H5>
All Parts
<H5>characters... <A> <IMG> <BR> </H5>
Allowed In Content Of...
<BLOCKQUOTE> <BODY>
------------------------------------------------------------------------
H6
Required Parts
<H6>characters... </H6>
All Parts
<H6>characters... <A> <IMG> <BR> </H6>
Allowed In Content Of...
<BLOCKQUOTE> <BODY>
------------------------------------------------------------------------
HEAD
Required Parts
All Parts
<HEAD><TITLE> <ISINDEX> <BASE> <META> <NEXTID> </HEAD>
Allowed In Content Of...
<HTML>
------------------------------------------------------------------------
HR
Required Parts
<HR>
All Parts
<HR>
Allowed In Content Of...
<BLOCKQUOTE> <BODY> <PRE>
Berners-Lee, Connolly, et. al. Page 87
 HTML 2.0 November 28, 1994
------------------------------------------------------------------------
HTML
Required Parts
All Parts
<HTML VERSION="..." ><HEAD> <BODY> </HTML>
Allowed In Content Of...
------------------------------------------------------------------------
IMG
Required Parts
<IMG SRC="..." ALT="..." >
All Parts
<IMG SRC="..." ALT="..." ALIGN="..." ISMAP>
Allowed In Content Of...
<A> <ADDRESS> <DD> <DT> <H1> <H2> <H3> <H4> <H5> <H6> <LI> <P>
------------------------------------------------------------------------
ISINDEX
Required Parts
<ISINDEX>
All Parts
<ISINDEX>
Allowed In Content Of...
<HEAD>
------------------------------------------------------------------------
LI
Required Parts
<LI>characters...
All Parts
<LI>characters... <A> <IMG> <BR> <P> <UL> <OL> <DIR> <MENU> <DL> <PRE>
<BLOCKQUOTE> </LI>
Allowed In Content Of...
<DIR> <MENU> <OL> <UL>
------------------------------------------------------------------------
LINK
Required Parts
<LINK HREF="..." >
Berners-Lee, Connolly, et. al. Page 88
 HTML 2.0 November 28, 1994
All Parts
<LINK HREF="..." >
Allowed In Content Of...
------------------------------------------------------------------------
MENU
Required Parts
<MENU></MENU>
All Parts
<MENU><LI> </MENU>
Allowed In Content Of...
<BLOCKQUOTE> <BODY> <DD> <LI>
------------------------------------------------------------------------
META
Required Parts
<META CONTENT="..." >
All Parts
<META HTTP-EQUIV="..." NAME="..." CONTENT="..." >
Allowed In Content Of...
<HEAD>
------------------------------------------------------------------------
NEXTID
Required Parts
<NEXTID N="..." >
All Parts
<NEXTID N="..." >
Allowed In Content Of...
<HEAD>
------------------------------------------------------------------------
OL
Required Parts
<OL></OL>
All Parts
<OL><LI> </OL>
Allowed In Content Of...
<BLOCKQUOTE> <BODY> <DD> <LI>
------------------------------------------------------------------------
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P
Required Parts
<P>characters...
All Parts
<P>characters... <A> <IMG> <BR> </P>
Allowed In Content Of...
<BLOCKQUOTE> <BODY> <DD> <LI>
------------------------------------------------------------------------
PRE
Required Parts
<PRE>characters... </PRE>
All Parts
<PRE WIDTH="..." >characters... <A> <HR> <BR> </PRE>
Allowed In Content Of...
<BLOCKQUOTE> <BODY> <DD> <LI>
------------------------------------------------------------------------
TITLE
Required Parts
<TITLE>characters... </TITLE>
All Parts
<TITLE>characters... </TITLE>
Allowed In Content Of...
<HEAD>
------------------------------------------------------------------------
UL
Required Parts
<UL></UL>
All Parts
<UL COMPACT><LI> </UL>
Allowed In Content Of...
<BLOCKQUOTE> <BODY> <DD> <LI>
7. Glossary
 The HTML specification uses these words with precise
 meanings:
 attribute
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 A syntactical component of an HTML element which is
 often used to specify a characteristic quality of an
 element, other than type or content.
 document type definition (DTD)
 A DTD is a collection of declarations (entity, element,
 attribute, link, map, etc.) in SGML syntax that defines
 the components and structures available for a class
 (type) of documents.
 element
 A component of the hierarchical structure defined by the
 document type definition; it is identified in a document
 instance by descriptive markup, usually a start-tag and
 an end-tag.
 HTML
 HyperText Markup Language.
 HTML user agent
 Any tool used with HTML documents.
 HTML document
 A collection of information represented as a sequence of
 characters. An HTML document consists of data characters
 and markup. In particular, the markup describes a
 structure conforming to the HTML document type
 definition.
 HTTP
 A generic stateless object-oriented protocol, which may
 be used for many similar tasks by extending the
 commands, or "methods", used. For example, you might use
 HTTP for name servers and distributed object-oriented
 systems, With HTTP, the negotiation of data
 representation allows systems to be built independent of
 the development of new representations. For more
 information see:
 http://info.cern.ch/hypertext/WWW/Protocols/HTTP/HTTP2.html
 (document) instance
 The document itself including the actual content with
 the actual markup. Can be a single document or part of a
Berners-Lee, Connolly, et. al. Page 91
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 document instance set that follows the DTD.
 markup
 Text added to the data of a document to convey
 information about it. There are four different kinds of
 markup: descriptive markup (tags), references, markup
 declarations, and processing instructions.
 Multipurpose Internet Mail Extensions (MIME)
 An extension to Internet email which provides the
 ability to transfer non-textual data, such as graphics,
 audio and fax. It is defined in RFC 1341.
 representation
 The encoding of information for interchange. For
 example, HTML is a representation of hypertext.
 rendering
 Formatting and presenting information.
 SGML
 Standard Generalized Markup Language is a data encoding
 that allows the information in documents to be shared -
 either by other document publishing systems or by
 applications for electronic delivery, configuration
 management, database management, inventory control, etc.
 Defined in ISO 8879:1986 Information Processing Text and
 Office Systems; Standard Generalized Markup Language
 (SGML).
 SGMLS
 An SGML parser by James Clark, jjc@jclark.com, derived
 from the ARCSGML parser materials which were written by
 Charles F. Goldfarb. The source is available at
 ftp.ifi.uio.no/pub/SGML/SGMLS.
 tag
 Descriptive markup. There are two kinds of tags; start-
 tags and end-tags.
 URI
 Universal Resource Identifiers (URIs) is the name for a
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 generic WWW identifier. The URI specification simply
 defines the syntax for encoding arbitrary naming or
 addressing schemes, and has a list of such schemes. See
 also: http://info.cern.ch/hypertext/WWW/Addressing/Addressing.html
 WWW
 A hypertext-based, distributed information system
 created by researchers at CERN in Switzerland. Users may
 create, edit or browse hypertext documents. The clients
 and servers are freely available.See also:
 http://info.cern.ch/hypertext/WWW/TheProject.html
 7.1 Imperatives
 may
 The implementation is not obliged to follow this in any
 way.
 must
 If this is not followed, the implementation does not
 conform to this specification.
 shall
 If this is not followed, the implementation does not
 conform to this specification.
 should
 If this is not followed, though the implementation
 officially conforms to the specification, undesirable
 results may occur in practice.
 typical
 Typical rendering is described for many elements. This
 is not a mandatory part of the specification but is
 given as guidance for designers and to help explain the
 uses for which the elements were intended.
8. References
 The HTML specification cites these works:
 HTTP
 HTTP: A Protocol for Networked Information. This
Berners-Lee, Connolly, et. al. Page 93
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 document is available at
 http://info.cern.ch/hypertext/WWW/Protocols/HTTP/HTTP2.h
 tml.
 MIME
 N. Borenstein, N. Freed, MIME (Multipurpose Internet
 Mail Extensions) Part One: Mechanisms for Specifying and
 Describing the Format of Internet Message Bodies,
 09/23/1993. (Pages=81) (Format=.txt, .ps) (Obsoletes
 RFC1341) (Updated by RFC1590).
 SGML
 ISO Standard 8879:1986 Information Processing Text and
 Office Systems; Standard Generalized Markup Language
 (SGML).
 SGMLS
 An SGML parser by James Clark, jjc@jclark.com, derived
 from the ARCSGML parser materials which were written by
 Charles F. Goldfarb. The source is available at
 ftp.ifi.uio.no/pub/SGML/SGMLS.
 URI
 Universal Resource Identifiers. Available by anonymous
 FTP as Postscript (info.cern.ch/pub/www/doc/url.ps) or
 text (info.cern.ch/pub/www/doc/url.txt)
 WWW
 The World Wide Web , a global information initiative.
 For bootstrap information, telnet info.cern.ch or find
 documents by ftp://info.cern.ch/pub/www/doc.
9. Acknowledgments
 The HTML document type was designed by Tim Berners-Lee
 at CERN as part of the 1990 World Wide Web project. In
 1992, Dan Connolly wrote the HTML Document Type
 Definition (DTD) and a brief HTML specification.
 Since 1993, a wide variety of Internet participants have
 contributed to the evolution of HTML, which has included
 the addition of in-line images introduced by the NCSA
 Mosaic software for WWW. Dave Raggett played an
 important role in deriving the FORMS material from the
 HTML+ specification.
Berners-Lee, Connolly, et. al. Page 94
 HTML 2.0 November 28, 1994
 Dan Connolly and Karen Olson Muldrow rewrote the HTML
 Specification in 1994.
 Special thanks to the many people who have contributed
 to this specification:
 - Terry Allen; O'Reilly & Associates; terry@ora.com
 - Marc Andreessen; Netscape Communications Corp;
 marca@mcom.com
 - Paul Burchard; The Geometry Center, University of
 Minnesota; burchard@geom.umn.edu
 - James Clark; jjc@jclark.com
 - Daniel W. Connolly; HaL Computer Systems; connolly@hal.com
 - Roy Fielding; University of California, Irvine;
 fielding@ics.uci.edu
 - Peter Flynn; University College Cork, Ireland; pflynn@www.ucc.ie
 - Jay Glicksman; Enterprise Integration Technology; jay@eit.com
 - Paul Grosso; ArborText, Inc.; paul@arbortext.com
 - Eduardo Gutentag; Sun Microsystems; eduardo@Eng.Sun.com
 - Bill Hefley; Software Engineering Institute,
 Carnegie Mellon University; weh@sei.cmu.edu
 - Chung-Jen Ho; Xerox Corporation; cho@xsoft.xerox.com
 - Mike Knezovich; Spyglass, Inc.; mike@spyglass.com
 - Tim Berners-Lee; CERN; timbl@info.cern.ch
 - Tom Magliery; NCSA; mag@ncsa.uiuc.edu
 - Murray Maloney; Toronto Development Centre, The
 Santa Cruz Operation (SCO); murray@sco.com
 - Larry Masinter; Xerox Palo Alto Research Center;
 masinter@parc.xerox.com
 - Karen Olson Muldrow; HaL Computer Systems; karen@hal.com
 - Bill Perry, Spry, Inc., wmperry@spry.com
Berners-Lee, Connolly, et. al. Page 95
 HTML 2.0 November 28, 1994
 - Dave Raggett, Hewlett Packard, dsr@hplb.hpl.hp.com
 - E. Corprew Reed; Cold Spring Harbor Laboratory; corp@cshl.org
 - Yuri Rubinsky; SoftQuad, Inc.; yuri@sq.com
 - Eric Schieler; Spyglass, Inc.; eschieler@spyglass.com
 - Eric W. Sink; Spyglass, Inc.; eric@spyglass.com
 - Stuart Weibel; OCLC Office of Research; weibel@oclc.org
 - Chris Wilson; Spry, Inc.; cwilson@spry.com
10. Author's Addresses
 Tim Berners-Lee
 timbl@quag.lcs.mit.edu
 Daniel W. Connolly
 Hal Software Systems
 3006A Longhorn Blvd.
 Austin, TX 78758
 phone: (512) 834-9962 extension 5010
 fax: (512) 823-9963
 URL: http://www.hal.com/~connolly
 email: connolly@hal.com

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