Abstract

This specification defines the 5th major revision of the core language of the World Wide Web: the Hypertext Markup Language (HTML). In this version, new features are introduced to help Web application authors, new elements are introduced based on research into prevailing authoring practices, and special attention has been given to defining clear conformance criteria for user agents in an effort to improve interoperability.

Status of This document

This section describes the status of this document at the time of its publication. Other documents may supersede this document. A list of current W3C publications and the most recently formally published revision of this technical report can be found in the W3C technical reports index at http://www.w3.org/TR/.

If you wish to make comments regarding this document, please send them to public-html-comments@w3.org (subscribe, archives) or whatwg@whatwg.org (subscribe, archives), or submit them using our public bug database. All feedback is welcome.

The working groups maintains a list of all bug reports that the editor has not yet tried to address and a list of issues for which the chairs have not yet declared a decision. The editor also maintains a list of all e-mails that he has not yet tried to address. These bugs, issues, and e-mails apply to multiple HTML-related specifications, not just this one.

Implementors should be aware that this specification is not stable. Implementors who are not taking part in the discussions are likely to find the specification changing out from under them in incompatible ways. Vendors interested in implementing this specification before it eventually reaches the Candidate Recommendation stage should join the aforementioned mailing lists and take part in the discussions.

The publication of this document by the W3C as a W3C Working Draft does not imply that all of the participants in the W3C HTML working group endorse the contents of the specification. Indeed, for any section of the specification, one can usually find many members of the working group or of the W3C as a whole who object strongly to the current text, the existence of the section at all, or the idea that the working group should even spend time discussing the concept of that section.

The latest stable version of the editor's draft of this specification is always available on the W3C CVS server and in the WHATWG Subversion repository. The latest editor's working copy (which may contain unfinished text in the process of being prepared) contains the latest draft text of this specification (amongst others). For more details, please see the WHATWG FAQ.

There are various ways to follow the change history for the HTML specifications:

E-mail notifications of changes
HTML-Diffs mailing list (diff-marked HTML versions for each change): http://lists.w3.org/Archives/Public/public-html-diffs/latest
Commit-Watchers mailing list (complete source diffs): http://lists.whatwg.org/listinfo.cgi/commit-watchers-whatwg.org
Real-time notifications of changes:
Generated diff-marked HTML versions for each change: http://twitter.com/HTML5
All (non-editorial) changes to the spec source: http://twitter.com/WHATWG
Browsable version-control record of all changes:
CVSWeb interface with side-by-side diffs: http://dev.w3.org/cvsweb/html5/
Annotated summary with unified diffs: http://html5.org/tools/web-apps-tracker
Raw Subversion interface: svn checkout http://svn.whatwg.org/webapps/

The W3C HTML Working Group is the W3C working group responsible for this specification's progress along the W3C Recommendation track. This specification is the 24 June 2010 Working Draft snapshot.

Work on this specification is also done at the WHATWG. The W3C HTML working group actively pursues convergence with the WHATWG, as required by the W3C HTML working group charter.

This document was produced by a group operating under the 5 February 2004 W3C Patent Policy. W3C maintains a public list of any patent disclosures made in connection with the deliverables of the group; that page also includes instructions for disclosing a patent. An individual who has actual knowledge of a patent which the individual believes contains Essential Claim(s) must disclose the information in accordance with section 6 of the W3C Patent Policy.

Table of Contents

  1. 1 Introduction
    1. 1.1 Background
    2. 1.2 Audience
    3. 1.3 Scope
    4. 1.4 History
    5. 1.5 Design notes
      1. 1.5.1 Serializability of script execution
      2. 1.5.2 Compliance with other specifications
    6. 1.6 HTML vs XHTML
    7. 1.7 Structure of this specification
      1. 1.7.1 How to read this specification
      2. 1.7.2 Typographic conventions
    8. 1.8 A quick introduction to HTML
    9. 1.9 Conformance requirements for authors
      1. 1.9.1 Presentational markup
      2. 1.9.2 Syntax errors
      3. 1.9.3 Restrictions on content models and on attribute values
    10. 1.10 Recommended reading
  2. 2 Common infrastructure
    1. 2.1 Terminology
      1. 2.1.1 Resources
      2. 2.1.2 XML
      3. 2.1.3 DOM trees
      4. 2.1.4 Scripting
      5. 2.1.5 Plugins
      6. 2.1.6 Character encodings
    2. 2.2 Conformance requirements
      1. 2.2.1 Dependencies
      2. 2.2.2 Extensibility
    3. 2.3 Case-sensitivity and string comparison
    4. 2.4 Common microsyntaxes
      1. 2.4.1 Common parser idioms
      2. 2.4.2 Boolean attributes
      3. 2.4.3 Keywords and enumerated attributes
      4. 2.4.4 Numbers
        1. 2.4.4.1 Non-negative integers
        2. 2.4.4.2 Signed integers
        3. 2.4.4.3 Real numbers
        4. 2.4.4.4 Percentages and lengths
        5. 2.4.4.5 Lists of integers
        6. 2.4.4.6 Lists of dimensions
      5. 2.4.5 Dates and times
        1. 2.4.5.1 Months
        2. 2.4.5.2 Dates
        3. 2.4.5.3 Times
        4. 2.4.5.4 Local dates and times
        5. 2.4.5.5 Global dates and times
        6. 2.4.5.6 Weeks
        7. 2.4.5.7 Vaguer moments in time
      6. 2.4.6 Colors
      7. 2.4.7 Space-separated tokens
      8. 2.4.8 Comma-separated tokens
      9. 2.4.9 References
      10. 2.4.10 Media queries
    5. 2.5 URLs
      1. 2.5.1 Terminology
      2. 2.5.2 Dynamic changes to base URLs
      3. 2.5.3 Interfaces for URL manipulation
    6. 2.6 Fetching resources
      1. 2.6.1 Protocol concepts
      2. 2.6.2 Encrypted HTTP and related security concerns
      3. 2.6.3 Determining the type of a resource
    7. 2.7 Common DOM interfaces
      1. 2.7.1 Reflecting content attributes in IDL attributes
      2. 2.7.2 Collections
        1. 2.7.2.1 HTMLCollection
        2. 2.7.2.2 HTMLAllCollection
        3. 2.7.2.3 HTMLFormControlsCollection
        4. 2.7.2.4 HTMLOptionsCollection
      3. 2.7.3 DOMTokenList
      4. 2.7.4 DOMSettableTokenList
      5. 2.7.5 Safe passing of structured data
      6. 2.7.6 DOMStringMap
      7. 2.7.7 DOM feature strings
      8. 2.7.8 Exceptions
      9. 2.7.9 Garbage collection
    8. 2.8 Namespaces
  3. 3 Semantics, structure, and APIs of HTML documents
    1. 3.1 Documents
      1. 3.1.1 Documents in the DOM
      2. 3.1.2 Security
      3. 3.1.3 Resource metadata management
      4. 3.1.4 DOM tree accessors
      5. 3.1.5 Creating documents
    2. 3.2 Elements
      1. 3.2.1 Semantics
      2. 3.2.2 Elements in the DOM
      3. 3.2.3 Global attributes
        1. 3.2.3.1 The id attribute
        2. 3.2.3.2 The title attribute
        3. 3.2.3.3 The lang and xml:lang attributes
        4. 3.2.3.4 The xml:base attribute (XML only)
        5. 3.2.3.5 The dir attribute
        6. 3.2.3.6 The class attribute
        7. 3.2.3.7 The style attribute
        8. 3.2.3.8 Embedding custom non-visible data
      4. 3.2.4 Element definitions
        1. 3.2.4.1 Attributes
      5. 3.2.5 Content models
        1. 3.2.5.1 Kinds of content
          1. 3.2.5.1.1 Metadata content
          2. 3.2.5.1.2 Flow content
          3. 3.2.5.1.3 Sectioning content
          4. 3.2.5.1.4 Heading content
          5. 3.2.5.1.5 Phrasing content
          6. 3.2.5.1.6 Embedded content
          7. 3.2.5.1.7 Interactive content
        2. 3.2.5.2 Transparent content models
        3. 3.2.5.3 Paragraphs
      6. 3.2.6 Annotations for assistive technology products (ARIA)
    3. 3.3 APIs in HTML documents
    4. 3.4 Interactions with XPath and XSLT
    5. 3.5 Dynamic markup insertion
      1. 3.5.1 Opening the input stream
      2. 3.5.2 Closing the input stream
      3. 3.5.3 document.write()
      4. 3.5.4 document.writeln()
      5. 3.5.5 innerHTML
      6. 3.5.6 outerHTML
      7. 3.5.7 insertAdjacentHTML()
  4. 4 The elements of HTML
    1. 4.1 The root element
      1. 4.1.1 The html element
    2. 4.2 Document metadata
      1. 4.2.1 The head element
      2. 4.2.2 The title element
      3. 4.2.3 The base element
      4. 4.2.4 The link element
      5. 4.2.5 The meta element
        1. 4.2.5.1 Standard metadata names
        2. 4.2.5.2 Other metadata names
        3. 4.2.5.3 Pragma directives
        4. 4.2.5.4 Other pragma directives
        5. 4.2.5.5 Specifying the document's character encoding
      6. 4.2.6 The style element
      7. 4.2.7 Styling
    3. 4.3 Scripting
      1. 4.3.1 The script element
        1. 4.3.1.1 Scripting languages
        2. 4.3.1.2 Restrictions for contents of script elements
        3. 4.3.1.3 Inline documentation for external scripts
      2. 4.3.2 The noscript element
    4. 4.4 Sections
      1. 4.4.1 The body element
      2. 4.4.2 The section element
      3. 4.4.3 The nav element
      4. 4.4.4 The article element
      5. 4.4.5 The aside element
      6. 4.4.6 The h1, h2, h3, h4, h5, and h6 elements
      7. 4.4.7 The hgroup element
      8. 4.4.8 The header element
      9. 4.4.9 The footer element
      10. 4.4.10 The address element
      11. 4.4.11 Headings and sections
        1. 4.4.11.1 Creating an outline
    5. 4.5 Grouping content
      1. 4.5.1 The p element
      2. 4.5.2 The hr element
      3. 4.5.3 The pre element
      4. 4.5.4 The blockquote element
      5. 4.5.5 The ol element
      6. 4.5.6 The ul element
      7. 4.5.7 The li element
      8. 4.5.8 The dl element
      9. 4.5.9 The dt element
      10. 4.5.10 The dd element
      11. 4.5.11 The figure element
      12. 4.5.12 The figcaption element
      13. 4.5.13 The div element
    6. 4.6 Text-level semantics
      1. 4.6.1 The a element
      2. 4.6.2 The em element
      3. 4.6.3 The strong element
      4. 4.6.4 The small element
      5. 4.6.5 The cite element
      6. 4.6.6 The q element
      7. 4.6.7 The dfn element
      8. 4.6.8 The abbr element
      9. 4.6.9 The time element
      10. 4.6.10 The code element
      11. 4.6.11 The var element
      12. 4.6.12 The samp element
      13. 4.6.13 The kbd element
      14. 4.6.14 The sub and sup elements
      15. 4.6.15 The i element
      16. 4.6.16 The b element
      17. 4.6.17 The mark element
      18. 4.6.18 The ruby element
      19. 4.6.19 The rt element
      20. 4.6.20 The rp element
      21. 4.6.21 The bdo element
      22. 4.6.22 The span element
      23. 4.6.23 The br element
      24. 4.6.24 The wbr element
      25. 4.6.25 Usage summary
    7. 4.7 Edits
      1. 4.7.1 The ins element
      2. 4.7.2 The del element
      3. 4.7.3 Attributes common to ins and del elements
      4. 4.7.4 Edits and paragraphs
      5. 4.7.5 Edits and lists
    8. 4.8 Embedded content
      1. 4.8.1 The img element
        1. 4.8.1.1 Requirements for providing text to act as an alternative for images
          1. 4.8.1.1.1 A link or button containing nothing but the image
          2. 4.8.1.1.2 A phrase or paragraph with an alternative graphical representation: charts, diagrams, graphs, maps, illustrations
          3. 4.8.1.1.3 A short phrase or label with an alternative graphical representation: icons, logos
          4. 4.8.1.1.4 Text that has been rendered to a graphic for typographical effect
          5. 4.8.1.1.5 A graphical representation of some of the surrounding text
          6. 4.8.1.1.6 A purely decorative image that doesn't add any information
          7. 4.8.1.1.7 A group of images that form a single larger picture with no links
          8. 4.8.1.1.8 A group of images that form a single larger picture with links
          9. 4.8.1.1.9 A key part of the content
          10. 4.8.1.1.10 An image not intended for the user
          11. 4.8.1.1.11 An image in an e-mail or private document intended for a specific person who is known to be able to view images
          12. 4.8.1.1.12 General guidelines
          13. 4.8.1.1.13 Guidance for markup generators
          14. 4.8.1.1.14 Guidance for conformance checkers
      2. 4.8.2 The iframe element
      3. 4.8.3 The embed element
      4. 4.8.4 The object element
      5. 4.8.5 The param element
      6. 4.8.6 The video element
      7. 4.8.7 The audio element
      8. 4.8.8 The source element
      9. 4.8.9 Media elements
        1. 4.8.9.1 Error codes
        2. 4.8.9.2 Location of the media resource
        3. 4.8.9.3 MIME types
        4. 4.8.9.4 Network states
        5. 4.8.9.5 Loading the media resource
        6. 4.8.9.6 Offsets into the media resource
        7. 4.8.9.7 The ready states
        8. 4.8.9.8 Playing the media resource
        9. 4.8.9.9 Seeking
        10. 4.8.9.10 User interface
        11. 4.8.9.11 Time ranges
        12. 4.8.9.12 Event summary
        13. 4.8.9.13 Security and privacy considerations
      10. 4.8.10 The canvas element
        1. 4.8.10.1 Color spaces and color correction
        2. 4.8.10.2 Security with canvas elements
      11. 4.8.11 The map element
      12. 4.8.12 The area element
      13. 4.8.13 Image maps
        1. 4.8.13.1 Authoring
        2. 4.8.13.2 Processing model
      14. 4.8.14 MathML
      15. 4.8.15 SVG
      16. 4.8.16 Dimension attributes
    9. 4.9 Tabular data
      1. 4.9.1 The table element
      2. 4.9.2 The caption element
      3. 4.9.3 The colgroup element
      4. 4.9.4 The col element
      5. 4.9.5 The tbody element
      6. 4.9.6 The thead element
      7. 4.9.7 The tfoot element
      8. 4.9.8 The tr element
      9. 4.9.9 The td element
      10. 4.9.10 The th element
      11. 4.9.11 Attributes common to td and th elements
      12. 4.9.12 Processing model
        1. 4.9.12.1 Forming a table
        2. 4.9.12.2 Forming relationships between data cells and header cells
      13. 4.9.13 Examples
    10. 4.10 Forms
      1. 4.10.1 Introduction
        1. 4.10.1.1 Writing a form's user interface
        2. 4.10.1.2 Implementing the server-side processing for a form
        3. 4.10.1.3 Configuring a form to communicate with a server
        4. 4.10.1.4 Client-side form validation
      2. 4.10.2 Categories
      3. 4.10.3 The form element
      4. 4.10.4 The fieldset element
      5. 4.10.5 The legend element
      6. 4.10.6 The label element
      7. 4.10.7 The input element
        1. 4.10.7.1 States of the type attribute
          1. 4.10.7.1.1 Hidden state
          2. 4.10.7.1.2 Text state and Search state
          3. 4.10.7.1.3 Telephone state
          4. 4.10.7.1.4 URL state
          5. 4.10.7.1.5 E-mail state
          6. 4.10.7.1.6 Password state
          7. 4.10.7.1.7 Date and Time state
          8. 4.10.7.1.8 Date state
          9. 4.10.7.1.9 Month state
          10. 4.10.7.1.10 Week state
          11. 4.10.7.1.11 Time state
          12. 4.10.7.1.12 Local Date and Time state
          13. 4.10.7.1.13 Number state
          14. 4.10.7.1.14 Range state
          15. 4.10.7.1.15 Color state
          16. 4.10.7.1.16 Checkbox state
          17. 4.10.7.1.17 Radio Button state
          18. 4.10.7.1.18 File Upload state
          19. 4.10.7.1.19 Submit Button state
          20. 4.10.7.1.20 Image Button state
          21. 4.10.7.1.21 Reset Button state
          22. 4.10.7.1.22 Button state
        2. 4.10.7.2 Common input element attributes
          1. 4.10.7.2.1 The autocomplete attribute
          2. 4.10.7.2.2 The list attribute
          3. 4.10.7.2.3 The readonly attribute
          4. 4.10.7.2.4 The size attribute
          5. 4.10.7.2.5 The required attribute
          6. 4.10.7.2.6 The multiple attribute
          7. 4.10.7.2.7 The maxlength attribute
          8. 4.10.7.2.8 The pattern attribute
          9. 4.10.7.2.9 The min and max attributes
          10. 4.10.7.2.10 The step attribute
          11. 4.10.7.2.11 The placeholder attribute
        3. 4.10.7.3 Common input element APIs
        4. 4.10.7.4 Common event behaviors
      8. 4.10.8 The button element
      9. 4.10.9 The select element
      10. 4.10.10 The datalist element
      11. 4.10.11 The optgroup element
      12. 4.10.12 The option element
      13. 4.10.13 The textarea element
      14. 4.10.14 The keygen element
      15. 4.10.15 The output element
      16. 4.10.16 The progress element
      17. 4.10.17 The meter element
      18. 4.10.18 Association of controls and forms
      19. 4.10.19 Attributes common to form controls
        1. 4.10.19.1 Naming form controls
        2. 4.10.19.2 Enabling and disabling form controls
        3. 4.10.19.3 A form control's value
        4. 4.10.19.4 Autofocusing a form control
        5. 4.10.19.5 Limiting user input length
        6. 4.10.19.6 Form submission
      20. 4.10.20 Constraints
        1. 4.10.20.1 Definitions
        2. 4.10.20.2 Constraint validation
        3. 4.10.20.3 The constraint validation API
        4. 4.10.20.4 Security
      21. 4.10.21 Form submission
        1. 4.10.21.1 Introduction
        2. 4.10.21.2 Implicit submission
        3. 4.10.21.3 Form submission algorithm
        4. 4.10.21.4 URL-encoded form data
        5. 4.10.21.5 Multipart form data
        6. 4.10.21.6 Plain text form data
      22. 4.10.22 Resetting a form
      23. 4.10.23 Event dispatch
    11. 4.11 Interactive elements
      1. 4.11.1 The details element
      2. 4.11.2 The summary element
      3. 4.11.3 The command element
      4. 4.11.4 The menu element
        1. 4.11.4.1 Introduction
        2. 4.11.4.2 Building menus and toolbars
        3. 4.11.4.3 Context menus
        4. 4.11.4.4 Toolbars
      5. 4.11.5 Commands
        1. 4.11.5.1 Using the a element to define a command
        2. 4.11.5.2 Using the button element to define a command
        3. 4.11.5.3 Using the input element to define a command
        4. 4.11.5.4 Using the option element to define a command
        5. 4.11.5.5 Using the command element to define a command
        6. 4.11.5.6 Using the accesskey attribute on a label element to define a command
        7. 4.11.5.7 Using the accesskey attribute on a legend element to define a command
        8. 4.11.5.8 Using the accesskey attribute to define a command on other elements
    12. 4.12 Links
      1. 4.12.1 Hyperlink elements
      2. 4.12.2 Following hyperlinks
      3. 4.12.3 Link types
        1. 4.12.3.1 Link type "alternate"
        2. 4.12.3.2 Link type "archives"
        3. 4.12.3.3 Link type "author"
        4. 4.12.3.4 Link type "bookmark"
        5. 4.12.3.5 Link type "external"
        6. 4.12.3.6 Link type "help"
        7. 4.12.3.7 Link type "icon"
        8. 4.12.3.8 Link type "license"
        9. 4.12.3.9 Link type "nofollow"
        10. 4.12.3.10 Link type "noreferrer"
        11. 4.12.3.11 Link type "pingback"
        12. 4.12.3.12 Link type "prefetch"
        13. 4.12.3.13 Link type "search"
        14. 4.12.3.14 Link type "stylesheet"
        15. 4.12.3.15 Link type "sidebar"
        16. 4.12.3.16 Link type "tag"
        17. 4.12.3.17 Hierarchical link types
          1. 4.12.3.17.1 Link type "index"
          2. 4.12.3.17.2 Link type "up"
        18. 4.12.3.18 Sequential link types
          1. 4.12.3.18.1 Link type "first"
          2. 4.12.3.18.2 Link type "last"
          3. 4.12.3.18.3 Link type "next"
          4. 4.12.3.18.4 Link type "prev"
        19. 4.12.3.19 Other link types
    13. 4.13 Common idioms without dedicated elements
      1. 4.13.1 Tag clouds
      2. 4.13.2 Conversations
      3. 4.13.3 Footnotes
    14. 4.14 Matching HTML elements using selectors
      1. 4.14.1 Case-sensitivity
      2. 4.14.2 Pseudo-classes
  5. 5 Loading Web pages
    1. 5.1 Browsing contexts
      1. 5.1.1 Nested browsing contexts
        1. 5.1.1.1 Navigating nested browsing contexts in the DOM
      2. 5.1.2 Auxiliary browsing contexts
        1. 5.1.2.1 Navigating auxiliary browsing contexts in the DOM
      3. 5.1.3 Secondary browsing contexts
      4. 5.1.4 Security
      5. 5.1.5 Groupings of browsing contexts
      6. 5.1.6 Browsing context names
    2. 5.2 The Window object
      1. 5.2.1 Security
      2. 5.2.2 APIs for creating and navigating browsing contexts by name
      3. 5.2.3 Accessing other browsing contexts
      4. 5.2.4 Named access on the Window object
      5. 5.2.5 Garbage collection and browsing contexts
      6. 5.2.6 Browser interface elements
      7. 5.2.7 The WindowProxy object
    3. 5.3 Origin
      1. 5.3.1 Relaxing the same-origin restriction
    4. 5.4 Session history and navigation
      1. 5.4.1 The session history of browsing contexts
      2. 5.4.2 The History interface
      3. 5.4.3 The Location interface
        1. 5.4.3.1 Security
      4. 5.4.4 Implementation notes for session history
    5. 5.5 Browsing the Web
      1. 5.5.1 Navigating across documents
      2. 5.5.2 Page load processing model for HTML files
      3. 5.5.3 Page load processing model for XML files
      4. 5.5.4 Page load processing model for text files
      5. 5.5.5 Page load processing model for images
      6. 5.5.6 Page load processing model for content that uses plugins
      7. 5.5.7 Page load processing model for inline content that doesn't have a DOM
      8. 5.5.8 Navigating to a fragment identifier
      9. 5.5.9 History traversal
        1. 5.5.9.1 Event definitions
      10. 5.5.10 Unloading documents
        1. 5.5.10.1 Event definition
      11. 5.5.11 Aborting a document load
    6. 5.6 Offline Web applications
      1. 5.6.1 Introduction
        1. 5.6.1.1 Event summary
      2. 5.6.2 Application caches
      3. 5.6.3 The cache manifest syntax
        1. 5.6.3.1 A sample manifest
        2. 5.6.3.2 Writing cache manifests
        3. 5.6.3.3 Parsing cache manifests
      4. 5.6.4 Downloading or updating an application cache
      5. 5.6.5 The application cache selection algorithm
      6. 5.6.6 Changes to the networking model
      7. 5.6.7 Expiring application caches
      8. 5.6.8 Application cache API
      9. 5.6.9 Browser state
  6. 6 Web application APIs
    1. 6.1 Scripting
      1. 6.1.1 Introduction
      2. 6.1.2 Enabling and disabling scripting
      3. 6.1.3 Processing model
        1. 6.1.3.1 Definitions
        2. 6.1.3.2 Calling scripts
        3. 6.1.3.3 Creating scripts
        4. 6.1.3.4 Killing scripts
      4. 6.1.4 Event loops
        1. 6.1.4.1 Definitions
        2. 6.1.4.2 Processing model
        3. 6.1.4.3 Generic task sources
      5. 6.1.5 The javascript: protocol
      6. 6.1.6 Events
        1. 6.1.6.1 Event handlers
        2. 6.1.6.2 Event handlers on elements, Document objects, and Window objects
        3. 6.1.6.3 Event firing
        4. 6.1.6.4 Events and the Window object
        5. 6.1.6.5 Runtime script errors
    2. 6.2 Timers
    3. 6.3 User prompts
      1. 6.3.1 Simple dialogs
      2. 6.3.2 Printing
      3. 6.3.3 Dialogs implemented using separate documents
    4. 6.4 System state and capabilities
      1. 6.4.1 Client identification
      2. 6.4.2 Custom scheme and content handlers
        1. 6.4.2.1 Security and privacy
        2. 6.4.2.2 Sample user interface
      3. 6.4.3 Manually releasing the storage mutex
  7. 7 User interaction
    1. 7.1 The hidden attribute
    2. 7.2 Activation
    3. 7.3 Scrolling elements into view
    4. 7.4 Focus
      1. 7.4.1 Sequential focus navigation
      2. 7.4.2 Focus management
      3. 7.4.3 Document-level focus APIs
      4. 7.4.4 Element-level focus APIs
    5. 7.5 The accesskey attribute
    6. 7.6 The text selection APIs
      1. 7.6.1 APIs for the browsing context selection
      2. 7.6.2 APIs for the text field selections
    7. 7.7 The contenteditable attribute
      1. 7.7.1 User editing actions
      2. 7.7.2 Making entire documents editable
    8. 7.8 Spelling and grammar checking
    9. 7.9 Drag and drop
      1. 7.9.1 Introduction
      2. 7.9.2 The DragEvent and DataTransfer interfaces
      3. 7.9.3 Events fired during a drag-and-drop action
      4. 7.9.4 Drag-and-drop processing model
        1. 7.9.4.1 When the drag-and-drop operation starts or ends in another document
        2. 7.9.4.2 When the drag-and-drop operation starts or ends in another application
      5. 7.9.5 The draggable attribute
      6. 7.9.6 Security risks in the drag-and-drop model
    10. 7.10 Undo history
      1. 7.10.1 Definitions
      2. 7.10.2 The UndoManager interface
      3. 7.10.3 Undo: moving back in the undo transaction history
      4. 7.10.4 Redo: moving forward in the undo transaction history
      5. 7.10.5 The UndoManagerEvent interface and the undo and redo events
      6. 7.10.6 Implementation notes
    11. 7.11 Editing APIs
  8. 8 The HTML syntax
    1. 8.1 Writing HTML documents
      1. 8.1.1 The DOCTYPE
      2. 8.1.2 Elements
        1. 8.1.2.1 Start tags
        2. 8.1.2.2 End tags
        3. 8.1.2.3 Attributes
        4. 8.1.2.4 Optional tags
        5. 8.1.2.5 Restrictions on content models
        6. 8.1.2.6 Restrictions on the contents of raw text and RCDATA elements
      3. 8.1.3 Text
        1. 8.1.3.1 Newlines
      4. 8.1.4 Character references
      5. 8.1.5 CDATA sections
      6. 8.1.6 Comments
    2. 8.2 Parsing HTML documents
      1. 8.2.1 Overview of the parsing model
      2. 8.2.2 The input stream
        1. 8.2.2.1 Determining the character encoding
        2. 8.2.2.2 Character encodings
        3. 8.2.2.3 Preprocessing the input stream
        4. 8.2.2.4 Changing the encoding while parsing
      3. 8.2.3 Parse state
        1. 8.2.3.1 The insertion mode
        2. 8.2.3.2 The stack of open elements
        3. 8.2.3.3 The list of active formatting elements
        4. 8.2.3.4 The element pointers
        5. 8.2.3.5 Other parsing state flags
      4. 8.2.4 Tokenization
        1. 8.2.4.1 Data state
        2. 8.2.4.2 Character reference in data state
        3. 8.2.4.3 RCDATA state
        4. 8.2.4.4 Character reference in RCDATA state
        5. 8.2.4.5 RAWTEXT state
        6. 8.2.4.6 Script data state
        7. 8.2.4.7 PLAINTEXT state
        8. 8.2.4.8 Tag open state
        9. 8.2.4.9 End tag open state
        10. 8.2.4.10 Tag name state
        11. 8.2.4.11 RCDATA less-than sign state
        12. 8.2.4.12 RCDATA end tag open state
        13. 8.2.4.13 RCDATA end tag name state
        14. 8.2.4.14 RAWTEXT less-than sign state
        15. 8.2.4.15 RAWTEXT end tag open state
        16. 8.2.4.16 RAWTEXT end tag name state
        17. 8.2.4.17 Script data less-than sign state
        18. 8.2.4.18 Script data end tag open state
        19. 8.2.4.19 Script data end tag name state
        20. 8.2.4.20 Script data escape start state
        21. 8.2.4.21 Script data escape start dash state
        22. 8.2.4.22 Script data escaped state
        23. 8.2.4.23 Script data escaped dash state
        24. 8.2.4.24 Script data escaped dash dash state
        25. 8.2.4.25 Script data escaped less-than sign state
        26. 8.2.4.26 Script data escaped end tag open state
        27. 8.2.4.27 Script data escaped end tag name state
        28. 8.2.4.28 Script data double escape start state
        29. 8.2.4.29 Script data double escaped state
        30. 8.2.4.30 Script data double escaped dash state
        31. 8.2.4.31 Script data double escaped dash dash state
        32. 8.2.4.32 Script data double escaped less-than sign state
        33. 8.2.4.33 Script data double escape end state
        34. 8.2.4.34 Before attribute name state
        35. 8.2.4.35 Attribute name state
        36. 8.2.4.36 After attribute name state
        37. 8.2.4.37 Before attribute value state
        38. 8.2.4.38 Attribute value (double-quoted) state
        39. 8.2.4.39 Attribute value (single-quoted) state
        40. 8.2.4.40 Attribute value (unquoted) state
        41. 8.2.4.41 Character reference in attribute value state
        42. 8.2.4.42 After attribute value (quoted) state
        43. 8.2.4.43 Self-closing start tag state
        44. 8.2.4.44 Bogus comment state
        45. 8.2.4.45 Markup declaration open state
        46. 8.2.4.46 Comment start state
        47. 8.2.4.47 Comment start dash state
        48. 8.2.4.48 Comment state
        49. 8.2.4.49 Comment end dash state
        50. 8.2.4.50 Comment end state
        51. 8.2.4.51 Comment end bang state
        52. 8.2.4.52 Comment end space state
        53. 8.2.4.53 DOCTYPE state
        54. 8.2.4.54 Before DOCTYPE name state
        55. 8.2.4.55 DOCTYPE name state
        56. 8.2.4.56 After DOCTYPE name state
        57. 8.2.4.57 After DOCTYPE public keyword state
        58. 8.2.4.58 Before DOCTYPE public identifier state
        59. 8.2.4.59 DOCTYPE public identifier (double-quoted) state
        60. 8.2.4.60 DOCTYPE public identifier (single-quoted) state
        61. 8.2.4.61 After DOCTYPE public identifier state
        62. 8.2.4.62 Between DOCTYPE public and system identifiers state
        63. 8.2.4.63 After DOCTYPE system keyword state
        64. 8.2.4.64 Before DOCTYPE system identifier state
        65. 8.2.4.65 DOCTYPE system identifier (double-quoted) state
        66. 8.2.4.66 DOCTYPE system identifier (single-quoted) state
        67. 8.2.4.67 After DOCTYPE system identifier state
        68. 8.2.4.68 Bogus DOCTYPE state
        69. 8.2.4.69 CDATA section state
        70. 8.2.4.70 Tokenizing character references
      5. 8.2.5 Tree construction
        1. 8.2.5.1 Creating and inserting elements
        2. 8.2.5.2 Closing elements that have implied end tags
        3. 8.2.5.3 Foster parenting
        4. 8.2.5.4 The "initial" insertion mode
        5. 8.2.5.5 The "before html" insertion mode
        6. 8.2.5.6 The "before head" insertion mode
        7. 8.2.5.7 The "in head" insertion mode
        8. 8.2.5.8 The "in head noscript" insertion mode
        9. 8.2.5.9 The "after head" insertion mode
        10. 8.2.5.10 The "in body" insertion mode
        11. 8.2.5.11 The "text" insertion mode
        12. 8.2.5.12 The "in table" insertion mode
        13. 8.2.5.13 The "in table text" insertion mode
        14. 8.2.5.14 The "in caption" insertion mode
        15. 8.2.5.15 The "in column group" insertion mode
        16. 8.2.5.16 The "in table body" insertion mode
        17. 8.2.5.17 The "in row" insertion mode
        18. 8.2.5.18 The "in cell" insertion mode
        19. 8.2.5.19 The "in select" insertion mode
        20. 8.2.5.20 The "in select in table" insertion mode
        21. 8.2.5.21 The "in foreign content" insertion mode
        22. 8.2.5.22 The "after body" insertion mode
        23. 8.2.5.23 The "in frameset" insertion mode
        24. 8.2.5.24 The "after frameset" insertion mode
        25. 8.2.5.25 The "after after body" insertion mode
        26. 8.2.5.26 The "after after frameset" insertion mode
      6. 8.2.6 The end
      7. 8.2.7 Coercing an HTML DOM into an infoset
      8. 8.2.8 An introduction to error handling and strange cases in the parser
        1. 8.2.8.1 Misnested tags: <b><i></b></i>
        2. 8.2.8.2 Misnested tags: <b><p></b></p>
        3. 8.2.8.3 Unexpected markup in tables
        4. 8.2.8.4 Scripts that modify the page as it is being parsed
    3. 8.3 Serializing HTML fragments
    4. 8.4 Parsing HTML fragments
    5. 8.5 Named character references
  9. 9 The XHTML syntax
    1. 9.1 Writing XHTML documents
    2. 9.2 Parsing XHTML documents
    3. 9.3 Serializing XHTML fragments
    4. 9.4 Parsing XHTML fragments
  10. 10 Rendering
    1. 10.1 Introduction
    2. 10.2 The CSS user agent style sheet and presentational hints
      1. 10.2.1 Introduction
      2. 10.2.2 Display types
      3. 10.2.3 Margins and padding
      4. 10.2.4 Alignment
      5. 10.2.5 Fonts and colors
      6. 10.2.6 Punctuation and decorations
      7. 10.2.7 Resetting rules for inherited properties
      8. 10.2.8 The hr element
      9. 10.2.9 The fieldset element
    3. 10.3 Replaced elements
      1. 10.3.1 Embedded content
      2. 10.3.2 Images
      3. 10.3.3 Attributes for embedded content and images
      4. 10.3.4 Image maps
      5. 10.3.5 Toolbars
    4. 10.4 Bindings
      1. 10.4.1 Introduction
      2. 10.4.2 The button element
      3. 10.4.3 The details element
      4. 10.4.4 The input element as a text entry widget
      5. 10.4.5 The input element as domain-specific widgets
      6. 10.4.6 The input element as a range control
      7. 10.4.7 The input element as a color well
      8. 10.4.8 The input element as a check box and radio button widgets
      9. 10.4.9 The input element as a file upload control
      10. 10.4.10 The input element as a button
      11. 10.4.11 The marquee element
      12. 10.4.12 The meter element
      13. 10.4.13 The progress element
      14. 10.4.14 The select element
      15. 10.4.15 The textarea element
      16. 10.4.16 The keygen element
      17. 10.4.17 The time element
    5. 10.5 Frames and framesets
    6. 10.6 Interactive media
      1. 10.6.1 Links, forms, and navigation
      2. 10.6.2 The title attribute
      3. 10.6.3 Editing hosts
    7. 10.7 Print media
  11. 11 Obsolete features
    1. 11.1 Obsolete but conforming features
      1. 11.1.1 Warnings for obsolete but conforming features
    2. 11.2 Non-conforming features
    3. 11.3 Requirements for implementations
      1. 11.3.1 The applet element
      2. 11.3.2 The marquee element
      3. 11.3.3 Frames
      4. 11.3.4 Other elements, attributes and APIs
  12. 12 IANA considerations
    1. 12.1 text/html
    2. 12.2 text/html-sandboxed
    3. 12.3 application/xhtml+xml
    4. 12.4 text/cache-manifest
  13. Index
    1. Elements
    2. Element content categories
    3. Attributes
    4. Interfaces
    5. Events
  14. References
  15. Acknowledgements