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Modul 4 Quotation Citation Comment

This document discusses several HTML elements for formatting text including <q> for short quotations, <blockquote> for longer quotations, <abbr> for abbreviations, <address> for contact information, <cite> for titles of works, <bdo> for bi-directional text, and HTML comment tags for adding comments to code. It provides examples of how each element is formatted and used in web pages.
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
42 views8 pages

Modul 4 Quotation Citation Comment

This document discusses several HTML elements for formatting text including <q> for short quotations, <blockquote> for longer quotations, <abbr> for abbreviations, <address> for contact information, <cite> for titles of works, <bdo> for bi-directional text, and HTML comment tags for adding comments to code. It provides examples of how each element is formatted and used in web pages.
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Modul 4

Quotation

Citation

Comment
HTML <q> for Short Quotations
The HTML <q> element defines a short quotation.
Browsers usually insert quotation marks around the
<q> element.
HTML <blockquote> for Quotations
The HTML <blockquote> element defines a section
that is quoted from another source.
Browsers usually indent <blockquote> elements.
HTML <abbr> for Abbreviations
The HTML <abbr> element defines an abbreviation or an
acronym.
Marking abbreviations can give useful information to
browsers, translation systems and search-engines.
HTML <address> for Contact
Information
The HTML <address> element defines contact information
(author/owner) of a document or an article.
The <address> element is usually displayed in italic. Most browsers
will add a line break before and after the element.
HTML <cite> for Work Title
The HTML <cite> element defines the title of a work.
Browsers usually display <cite> elements in italic.
HTML <bdo> for Bi-Directional
Override
The HTML <bdo> element defines bi-directional
override.
The <bdo> element is used to override the current text
direction:
HTML Comment Tags
You can add comments to your HTML source by using the following
syntax:

Notice that there is an exclamation point (!) in the opening tag, but not
in the closing tag.
With comments you can place notifications and reminders in your
HTML

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