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HTML
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HTML

Standard for structuring and describing a document on the World Wide Web. The HTML standard provides labels for constituent parts of a document (for example headings and paragraphs) and permits the inclusion of images, sounds, and ‘hyperlinks’ to other documents. A browser program is then used to convert this information into a graphical document on-screen. The specifications for HTML version 4, called Dynamic HTML, were adopted at the end of 1997.

HTML is a specific example of SGML (standard generalized markup language, the international standard for text encoding). As such it is not a rigid standard but is constantly being improved to incorporate new features and allow greater freedom of design.



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? Mentioned in ? References in periodicals archive
 
NET and Dynamic HyperText Markup Language were used to create the screens the users see.
Parts images can be scanned from print manuals, discs and drawing files for conversion into Hypertext Markup Language (HTML) for Web publishing.
The article describes the origins of HTML, the Hypertext Markup Language, currently the lingua franca of the Web that originated with SGML, the Standard Generalized Markup Language.
 
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