A number of attributes in HTML 4.0 are common to most elements. These attributes are divided into core attributes, internationalization attributes, and scripting events.
The ID
attribute uniquely identifies an element within a document. No two elements can have the same ID
value in a single document. The attribute's value must begin with a letter in the range A-Z or a-z and may be followed by letters (A-Za-z), digits (0-9), hyphens ("-"), underscores ("_"), colons (":"), and periods (".").
The following example uses the ID
attribute to identify each of the first two paragraphs of a document:
<P ID=firstp>My first paragraph.</P>
<P ID=secondp>My second paragaph.</P>
The paragraphs in the example could have style rules associated with them through their ID
attributes. The following Cascading Style Sheet defines unique colors for the two paragraphs:
P#firstp {
color: navy;
background: transparent
}
P#secondp {
color: black;
background: transparent
}
The paragraphs in the initial example could also be used as a target anchor for links:
<P>See <A HREF="#firstp">the opening paragraph</A> for more information.</P>
Most browsers do not support the ID attribute for link anchors. For current browsers, authors should use <A NAME>...</A> within the element instead of ID . |
|
Since ID and NAME share the same name space, authors cannot use the same value for an ID attribute and a NAME attribute in the same document. Also note that while NAME may contain entities, the ID attribute value may not. |
The CLASS
attribute specifies the element to be a member of one or more classes. Classes allow authors to define specific kinds of a given element. For example, an author could use <CODE CLASS=Java>
when giving Java code and <CODE CLASS=Perl>
when giving Perl code.
Unlike with the ID
attribute, any number of elements can share the same class. An element may also belong to multiple classes; the CLASS
attribute value is a space-separated list of class names.
Most current browsers do not support multiple classes. Such browsers typically ignore a CLASS attribute that specifies multiple classes. |
The CLASS
attribute is particularly useful when combined with style sheets. For example, consider the following navigation bar:
<DIV CLASS=navbar>
<P>
<A HREF="/">Home</A> | <A HREF="./">Index</A> | <A HREF="/search.html">Search</A>
</P>
<P>
<A HREF="/"><IMG SRC="logo.gif" ALT="" TITLE="WDG Logo"></A>
</P>
</DIV>
This example's use of the CLASS
attribute allows style rules to easily be added. The following Cascading Style Sheet suggests a presentation for the preceding example:
.navbar {
margin-top: 2em;
padding-top: 1em;
border-top: solid thin navy
}
.navbar IMG { float: right }
@media print {
.navbar { display: none }
}
The STYLE
attribute allows authors to specify style rules inline for a single occurrence of an element. An example follows:
<P>A popular font for on-screen reading is <SPAN STYLE="font-family: Verdana">Verdana</SPAN>.</P>
When the STYLE
attribute is used, a default style sheet language must be specified for the document by setting the Content-Style-Type
HTTP
header to the media type of the style sheet language. The previous example could use the following META element in the document's HEAD:
<META HTTP-EQUIV="Content-Style-Type" CONTENT="text/css">
In most cases, use of the CLASS or ID attributes is a better choice than using STYLE
since ID
and CLASS
can be selectively applied to different media and since they provide a separation of content and presentation that often simplifies maintenance.
The TITLE
attribute provides a title for an element and is commonly implemented as a "tooltip" on visual browsers, though many browsers lack support for TITLE
. The attribute is most useful with A, LINK, IMG, and OBJECT elements, where it provides a title for the linked or embedded resource. Some examples follow:
- <A HREF="mailto:someone@somwhere.com" TITLE="Feedback on UHR">uhr@somewhere.com</A>
- <A HREF="http://www.gograph.com" TITLE="Ultimate Online Web Comunnity">Web Utilities</A>
- <LINK REL=Alternate HREF="index.fr.html" HREFLANG=fr LANG=fr TITLE="Version française">
- <OBJECT CLASSID="java:Yahtzee.class" CODETYPE="application/java" WIDTH=400 HEIGHT=250 STANDBY="Ready to play Yahtzee?" TITLE="My Yahtzee Game">
<IMG SRC="yahtzee.gif" ALT="" TITLE="A Yahtzee animation">
Yahtzee is my <EM>favorite</EM> game!
</OBJECT>
TITLE
is also helpful with the ABBR and ACRONYM elements to provide the long form of the abbreviation.
Examples:
- He weighs 180 <ABBR TITLE=pounds>lbs.</ABBR>
- <ABBR TITLE="Parti Québécois" LANG=fr-CA>PQ</ABBR>
- <ACRONYM TITLE="North Atlantic Treaty Organization">NATO</ACRONYM>
The LANG
attribute specifies the language of an element's attribute values and its content, including all contained elements that do not specify their own LANG
attribute. While the LANG
attribute is not widely supported, its use may help search engines index a document by its language while allowing speech synthesizers to use language-dependent pronunciation rules. As well, visual browsers can use the language's proper quotation marks when rendering the Q element.
The attribute value is case-insensitive, and should be specified according to RFC
1766; examples include en
for English, en-US
for American English, and ja
for Japanese. Whitespace is not allowed in the language code.
Use of the LANG
attribute also allows authors to easily change the style of text depending on the language. For example, a bilingual document may have one language in italics if rendered visually or a different voice if rendered aurally. The HTML
of such a document might be as follows:
<!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.0//EN"
"http://www.w3.org/TR/REC-html40/strict.dtd">
<TITLE>Welcome - Bienvenue</TITLE>
<H2>
<SPAN LANG=en>Welcome</SPAN> -
<SPAN LANG=fr>Bienvenue</SPAN>
</H2>
<P LANG=en>
This paragraph is in English.
</P>
<P LANG=fr>
Ce paragraphe est en français.
</P>
...
A document's primary language may be set using the LANG
attribute on the HTML element, or, alternatively, by using the Content-Language
HTTP
header.
The DIR
attribute specifies the directionality of text--left-to-right (DIR=ltr, the default) or right-to-left (DIR=rtl). Characters in Unicode are assigned a directionality, left-to-right or right-to-left, to allow the text to be rendered properly. For example, while English characters are presented left-to-right, Hebrew characters are presented right-to-left.
Unicode defines a bidirectional algorithm that must be applied whenever a document contains right-to-left characters. While this algorithm usually gives the proper presentation, some situations leave directionally neutral text and require the DIR
attribute to specify the base directionality.
Text is often directionally neutral when there are multiple embeddings of content with a different directionality. For example, an English sentence that contains a Hebrew phrase that contains an English quotation would require the DIR
attribute to define the directionality of the Hebrew phrase. The Hebrew phrase, including the English quotation, should be contained within a SPAN element with DIR=rtl
.
A number of attributes that define client-side scripting events are common to most elements. The attribute value is a script--typically a function call or a few short statements--that is executed when the event occurs. The value may contain entities (e.g., ").
The following example features JavaScript code to handle two events of a submit button, giving the user a reminder in the status bar when the mouse moves over the button and clearing the status bar when the mouse moves away.
Note that the attribute values are delimited by single quotes since double quotes are used within them. |
<INPUT TYPE=submit ONMOUSEOVER='window.status="First Name is missing";' ONMOUSEOUT='window.status="";'>
When an event attribute is used, a default scripting language must be specified for the document by setting the Content-Script-Type
HTTP
header to the media type of the scripting language. The previous example could use the following META element in the document's HEAD:
<META HTTP-EQUIV="Content-Script-Type" CONTENT="text/javascript">
The common event attributes are device-dependent and largely tailored for the graphical user interface.
The available events are as follows:
ONCLICK
- when the mouse button is clicked on an element;ONDBLCLICK
- when the mouse button is double-clicked on an element;ONMOUSEDOWN
- when the mouse button is pressed over an element;ONMOUSEUP
- when the mouse button is released over an element;ONMOUSEOVER
- when the mouse is moved onto an element;ONMOUSEMOVE
- when the mouse is moved while over an element;ONMOUSEOUT
- when the mouse is moved away from an element;ONKEYPRESS
- when a key is pressed and released over an element;ONKEYDOWN
- when a key is pressed down over an element;ONKEYUP
- when a key is released over an element.