Some basic HTML tags developers/designers use regularly explained below.
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– you can use it for longer, multi-lines quotations from a different source than the rest of the content. They are usually indented by browsers
- – the text within a cite tag should be the name of a third-party work such as a literary work, opera, play, etc.
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– this tag can hold any content; it is a block-level element so upon adding it, the content inside it will be on a new line, separated from the surrounding elements and the content inside could take the entire horizontal/vertical space, restricted only by its own container/parent tags
- – this tag is an inline-element and does not change the layout of the content inside it; it is useful for enclosing text that would be later processed with JavaScript, amongst other uses.
- – This inline element is usually rendered in bold by browsers
- – use this inline element for emphasized text
- – enclose text that should be in a smaller font size in the tag; such as legal information
- – this tag can be used to denote important text that is still not considered a heading