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Browse: The line break item - HTML: HyperText Markup Language
HTML creates a line feed in the text (carriage return). A item is inserted at every point where the text is to be interrupted, as you can see from the example above. After the text starts again at the beginning of the next line of the text area.
Please note: Do not use to define borders between paragraph; wrapping them in items and use the marginal style sheet feature to adjust their sizes. Indicates where the next line after the breaktest should begin. has a clearly delineated sole function - to generate a line feed in a text area.
If you want to make a border on items, you can do it yourself to enlarge the distance between the text rows in the pad, but this is poor practise - you should use the line-height feature. The following example uses items to generate line feeds between the different rows of a mailing address:
The creation of seperate text sections with is not only a poor practise, but also a problem for those who are navigating with the help of display readings. Screenreaders can announce the existence of the item, but not the contents of s. using items and use the CSS property like margins to check the distance.
Which is a web browser?
Numerous web browser with different functions are available and configured for operation on different OS. Popular browser types are Microsoft's Microsoft Explorer, Mozilla's Firefox, Google Chrome, Apple's Safari and Opera. Every popular browser has portable version, which are easy to access web on portable device.
Internet navigators date back to the later 1980s, when the British scholar Tim Berners-Lee came up with the idea that lead to the World Wide Web (WWW). As a result, there was a need for a programme that could properly view and retrieve the HTML pages - the web navigator. Mosaic, a new web browsing application, was created in 1993 and quickly became a widely used application due to its ability to create interfaces.
Mosaic developer Marc Andreesen quit the company in 1994 to create his own proprietary web browsers using Mosaic. Netscape Navigator, he named it, and it quickly conquered over 90 per cent of the emerging web browsing population. Soon thereafter, in 1995, it was in fierce opposition to Microsoft's Microsoft Explorer, which was free with Windows 95 (and later Windows versions) packaged.
There was no point in buying Navigator if Internet Explorer was free, and as a consequence Navigator (and Netscape) were sunk. Though Mosaic and Netscape no longer exist, the era of the web browsers was started and still goes on today as more and more web sites are created.