The HyperText Markup Language, often known as HTML, is a markup language that is used to create texts that are intended to be viewed on a web browser. The use of technologies such as Cascading Style Sheets (CSS) and programming languages such as JavaScript may make this process easier.
Web browsers accept HTML documents from a web application or from internal memory and render the HTML documents into multimedia web pages, which are referred to as web pages. HTML is a semantic markup language that defines the structure of a web page, and it initially contained signals for the look of the content.
HTML elements are the building pieces that make up HTML pages and are used to display information. Images and other objects, such as interactive forms, may be embedded within the generated page using HTML structures. HTML is a markup language that allows you to construct organised documents by expressing structural semantics for text elements such as headers, paragraphs, lists, links, quotations, and other things. Tags, which are written with angle brackets, are used to denote the boundaries of HTML elements. Using tags such as image /> and input />, you may directly insert material into a web page. Additional tags, such as p>, surround and give information about the document's content, and they may contain other tags as sub-elements in their own right. Browsers do not display the HTML tags, but rather utilise them to understand the content of the page on which they are being shown.
Programs written in a scripting language such as JavaScript may be embedded in HTML, which can have an impact on the behaviour and content of web pages. The appearance and layout of content are defined by the use of CSS. Since 1997, the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C), the previous keeper of the HTML standard and the current maintainer of the CSS standard, has promoted the use of CSS rather than explicit presentational HTML to enhance the user experience on the internet.