Network Working Group                                    T. Berners-Lee
Request for Comments: 1866                                      MIT/W3C
Category: Standards Track                                   D. Connolly
                                                         November 1995


                   Hypertext Markup Language - 2.0

Status of this Memo

  This document specifies an Internet standards track protocol for the
  Internet community, and requests discussion and suggestions for
  improvements.  Please refer to the current edition of the "Internet
  Official Protocol Standards" (STD 1) for the standardization state
  and status of this protocol.  Distribution of this memo is unlimited.

Abstract

  The Hypertext Markup Language (HTML) is a simple markup language used
  to create hypertext documents that are platform independent. HTML
  documents are SGML documents with generic semantics that are
  appropriate for representing information from a wide range of
  domains. HTML markup can represent hypertext news, mail,
  documentation, and hypermedia; menus of options; database query
  results; simple structured documents with in-lined graphics; and
  hypertext views of existing bodies of information.

  HTML has been in use by the World Wide Web (WWW) global information
  initiative since 1990. This specification roughly corresponds to the
  capabilities of HTML in common use prior to June 1994. HTML is an
  application of ISO Standard 8879:1986 Information Processing Text and
  Office Systems; Standard Generalized Markup Language (SGML).

  The "text/html" Internet Media Type (RFC 1590) and MIME Content Type
  (RFC 1521) is defined by this specification.

Table of Contents

   1.     Introduction ........................................... 2
   1.1    Scope .................................................. 3
   1.2    Conformance ............................................ 3
   2.     Terms .................................................. 6
   3.     HTML as an Application of SGML .........................10
   3.1    SGML Documents .........................................10
   3.2    HTML Lexical Syntax ................................... 12
   3.3    HTML Public Text Identifiers .......................... 17
   3.4    Example HTML Document ................................. 17
   4.     HTML as an Internet Media Type ........................ 18



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   4.1    text/html media type .................................. 18
   4.2    HTML Document Representation .......................... 19
   5.     Document Structure .................................... 20
   5.1    Document Element: HTML ................................ 21
   5.2    Head: HEAD ............................................ 21
   5.3    Body: BODY ............................................ 24
   5.4    Headings: H1 ... H6 ................................... 24
   5.5    Block Structuring Elements ............................ 25
   5.6    List Elements ......................................... 28
   5.7    Phrase Markup ......................................... 30
   5.8    Line Break: BR ........................................ 34
   5.9    Horizontal Rule: HR ................................... 34
   5.10   Image: IMG ............................................ 34
   6.     Characters, Words, and Paragraphs ..................... 35
   6.1    The HTML Document Character Set ....................... 36
   7.     Hyperlinks ............................................ 36
   7.1    Accessing Resources ................................... 37
   7.2    Activation of Hyperlinks .............................. 38
   7.3    Simultaneous Presentation of Image Resources .......... 38
   7.4    Fragment Identifiers .................................. 38
   7.5    Queries and Indexes ................................... 39
   7.6    Image Maps ............................................ 39
   8.     Forms ................................................. 40
   8.1    Form Elements ......................................... 40
   8.2    Form Submission ....................................... 45
   9.     HTML Public Text ...................................... 49
   9.1    HTML DTD .............................................. 49
   9.2    Strict HTML DTD ....................................... 61
   9.3    Level 1 HTML DTD ...................................... 62
   9.4    Strict Level 1 HTML DTD ............................... 63
   9.5    SGML Declaration for HTML ............................. 64
   9.6    Sample SGML Open Entity Catalog for HTML .............. 65
   9.7    Character Entity Sets ................................. 66
   10.    Security Considerations ............................... 69
   11.    References ............................................ 69
   12.    Acknowledgments ....................................... 71
   12.1   Authors' Addresses .................................... 71
   13.    The HTML Coded Character Set .......................... 72
   14.    Proposed Entities ..................................... 75

1. Introduction

  The HyperText Markup Language (HTML) is a simple data format used to
  create hypertext documents that are portable from one platform to
  another. HTML documents are SGML documents with generic semantics
  that are appropriate for representing information from a wide range
  of domains.




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  As HTML is an application of SGML, this specification assumes a
  working knowledge of [SGML].

1.1. Scope

  HTML has been in use by the World-Wide Web (WWW) global information
  initiative since 1990. Previously, informal documentation on HTML has
  been available from a number of sources on the Internet. This
  specification brings together, clarifies, and formalizes a set of
  features that roughly corresponds to the capabilities of HTML in
  common use prior to June 1994. A number of new features to HTML are
  being proposed and experimented in the Internet community.

  This document thus defines a HTML 2.0 (to distinguish it from the
  previous informal specifications). Future (generally upwardly
  compatible) versions of HTML with new features will be released with
  higher version numbers.

  HTML is an application of ISO Standard 8879:1986, "Information
  Processing Text and Office Systems; Standard Generalized Markup
  Language" (SGML). The HTML Document Type Definition (DTD) is a formal
  definition of the HTML syntax in terms of SGML.

  This specification also defines HTML as an Internet Media
  Type[IMEDIA] and MIME Content Type[MIME] called `text/html'. As such,
  it defines the semantics of the HTML syntax and how that syntax
  should be interpreted by user agents.

1.2. Conformance

  This specification governs the syntax of HTML documents and aspects
  of the behavior of HTML user agents.

1.2.1. Documents

  A document is a conforming HTML document if:

       * It is a conforming SGML document, and it conforms to the
       HTML DTD (see 9.1, "HTML DTD").

           NOTE - There are a number of syntactic idioms that
           are not supported or are supported inconsistently in
           some historical user agent implementations. These
           idioms are identified in notes like this throughout
           this specification.

       * It conforms to the application conventions in this
       specification. For example, the value of the HREF attribute



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       of the <A> element must conform to the URI syntax.

       * Its document character set includes [ISO-8859-1] and
       agrees with [ISO-10646]; that is, each code position listed
       in 13, "The HTML Coded Character Set" is included, and each
       code position in the document character set is mapped to the
       same character as [ISO-10646] designates for that code
       position.

           NOTE - The document character set is somewhat
           independent of the character encoding scheme used to
           represent a document. For example, the `ISO-2022-JP'
           character encoding scheme can be used for HTML
           documents, since its repertoire is a subset of the
           [ISO-10646] repertoire. The critical distinction is
           that numeric character references agree with
           [ISO-10646] regardless of how the document is
           encoded.

1.2.2. Feature Test Entities

  The HTML DTD defines a standard HTML document type and several
  variations, by way of feature test entities. Feature test entities
  are declarations in the HTML DTD that control the inclusion or
  exclusion of portions of the DTD.

   HTML.Recommended
           Certain features of the language are necessary for
           compatibility with widespread usage, but they may
           compromise the structural integrity of a document. This
           feature test entity selects a more prescriptive document
           type definition that eliminates those features. It is
           set to `IGNORE' by default.

           For example, in order to preserve the structure of a
           document, an editing user agent may translate HTML
           documents to the recommended subset, or it may require
           that the documents be in the recommended subset for
           import.

   HTML.Deprecated
           Certain features of the language are necessary for
           compatibility with earlier versions of the
           specification, but they tend to be used and implemented
           inconsistently, and their use is deprecated. This
           feature test entity enables a document type definition
           that allows these features. It is set to `INCLUDE' by
           default.



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           Documents generated by translation software or editing
           software should not contain deprecated idioms.

1.2.3. User Agents

  An HTML user agent conforms to this specification if:

       * It parses the characters of an HTML document into data
       characters and markup according to [SGML].

           NOTE - In the interest of robustness and
           extensibility, there are a number of widely deployed
           conventions for handling non-conforming documents.
           See 4.2.1, "Undeclared Markup Error Handling" for
           details.

       * It supports the `ISO-8859-1' character encoding scheme and
       processes each character in the ISO Latin Alphabet No. 1 as
       specified in 6.1, "The HTML Document Character Set".

           NOTE - To support non-western writing systems, HTML
           user agents are encouraged to support
           `ISO-10646-UCS-2' or similar character encoding
           schemes and as much of the character repertoire of
           [ISO-10646] as is practical.

       * It behaves identically for documents whose parsed token
       sequences are identical.

       For example, comments and the whitespace in tags disappear
       during tokenization, and hence they do not influence the
       behavior of conforming user agents.

       * It allows the user to traverse (or at least attempt to
       traverse, resources permitting) all hyperlinks from <A>
       elements in an HTML document.

  An HTML user agent is a level 2 user agent if, additionally:

       * It allows the user to express all form field values
       specified in an HTML document and to (attempt to) submit the
       values as requests to information services.









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2. Terms

   absolute URI
           a URI in absolute form; for example, as per [URL]

   anchor
           one of two ends of a hyperlink; typically, a phrase
           marked as an <A> element.

   base URI
           an absolute URI used in combination with a relative URI
           to determine another absolute URI.

   character
           An atom of information, for example a letter or a digit.
           Graphic characters have associated glyphs, whereas
           control characters have associated processing semantics.

   character encoding
   scheme
           A function whose domain is the set of sequences of
           octets, and whose range is the set of sequences of
           characters from a character repertoire; that is, a
           sequence of octets and a character encoding scheme
           determines a sequence of characters.

   character repertoire
           A finite set of characters; e.g. the range of a coded
           character set.

   code position
           An integer. A coded character set and a code position
           from its domain determine a character.

   coded character set
           A function whose domain is a subset of the integers and
           whose range is a character repertoire. That is, for some
           set of integers (usually of the form {0, 1, 2, ..., N}
           ), a coded character set and an integer in that set
           determine a character. Conversely, a character and a
           coded character set determine the character's code
           position (or, in rare cases, a few code positions).

   conforming HTML user
   agent
           A user agent that conforms to this specification in its
           processing of the Internet Media Type `text/html'.




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   data character
           Characters other than markup, which make up the content
           of elements.

   document character set
           a coded character set whose range includes all
           characters used in a document. Every SGML document has
           exactly one document character set. Numeric character
           references are resolved via the document character set.

   DTD
           document type definition. Rules that apply SGML to the
           markup of documents of a particular type, including a
           set of element and entity declarations. [SGML]

   element
           A component of the hierarchical structure defined by a
           document type definition; it is identified in a document
           instance by descriptive markup, usually a start-tag and
           end-tag. [SGML]

   end-tag
           Descriptive markup that identifies the end of an
           element. [SGML]

   entity
           data with an associated notation or interpretation; for
           example, a sequence of octets associated with an
           Internet Media Type. [SGML]

   fragment identifier
           the portion of an HREF attribute value following the `#'
           character which modifies the presentation of the
           destination of a hyperlink.

   form data set
           a sequence of name/value pairs; the names are given by
           an HTML document and the values are given by a user.

   HTML document
           An SGML document conforming to this document type
           definition.

   hyperlink
           a relationship between two anchors, called the head and
           the tail. The link goes from the tail to the head. The
           head and tail are also known as destination and source,
           respectively.



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   markup
           Syntactically delimited characters added to the data of
           a document to represent its structure. There are four
           different kinds of markup: descriptive markup (tags),
           references, markup declarations, and processing
           instructions. [SGML]

   may
           A document or user interface is conforming whether this
           statement applies or not.

   media type
           an Internet Media Type, as per [IMEDIA].

   message entity
           a head and body. The head is a collection of name/value
           fields, and the body is a sequence of octets. The head
           defines the content type and content transfer encoding
           of the body. [MIME]

   minimally conforming
   HTML user agent
           A user agent that conforms to this specification except
           for form processing. It may only process level 1 HTML
           documents.

   must
           Documents or user agents in conflict with this statement
           are not conforming.

   numeric character
   reference
           markup that refers to a character by its code position
           in the document character set.

   SGML document
           A sequence of characters organized physically as a set
           of entities and logically into a hierarchy of elements.
           An SGML document consists of data characters and markup;
           the markup describes the structure of the information
           and an instance of that structure. [SGML]

   shall
           If a document or user agent conflicts with this
           statement, it does not conform to this specification.






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   should
           If a document or user agent conflicts with this
           statement, undesirable results may occur in practice
           even though it conforms to this specification.

   start-tag
           Descriptive markup that identifies the start of an
           element and specifies its generic identifier and
           attributes. [SGML]

   syntax-reference
   character set
           A coded character set whose range includes all
           characters used for markup; e.g. name characters and
           delimiter characters.

   tag
           Markup that delimits an element. A tag includes a name
           which refers to an element declaration in the DTD, and
           may include attributes. [SGML]

   text entity
           A finite sequence of characters. A text entity typically
           takes the form of a sequence of octets with some
           associated character encoding scheme, transmitted over
           the network or stored in a file. [SGML]

   typical
           Typical processing is described for many elements. This
           is not a mandatory part of the specification but is
           given as guidance for designers and to help explain the
           uses for which the elements were intended.

   URI
           A Uniform Resource Identifier is a formatted string that
           serves as an identifier for a resource, typically on the
           Internet. URIs are used in HTML to identify the anchors
           of hyperlinks. URIs in common practice include Uniform
           Resource Locators (URLs)[URL] and Relative URLs
           [RELURL].

   user agent
           A component of a distributed system that presents an
           interface and processes requests on behalf of a user;
           for example, a www browser or a mail user agent.






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   WWW
           The World-Wide Web is a hypertext-based, distributed
           information system created by researchers at CERN in
           Switzerland. <URL:http://www.w3.org/>

3. HTML as an Application of SGML

  HTML is an application of ISO 8879:1986 -- Standard Generalized
  Markup Language (SGML). SGML is a system for defining structured
  document types and markup languages to represent instances of those
  document types[SGML]. The public text -- DTD and SGML declaration --
  of the HTML document type definition are provided in 9, "HTML Public
  Text".

  The term "HTML" refers to both the document type defined here and the
  markup language for representing instances of this document type.

3.1. SGML Documents

  An HTML document is an SGML document; that is, a sequence of
  characters organized physically into a set of entities, and logically
  as a hierarchy of elements.

  In the SGML specification, the first production of the SGML syntax
  grammar separates an SGML document into three parts: an SGML
  declaration, a prologue, and an instance. For the purposes of this
  specification, the prologue is a DTD. This DTD describes another
  grammar: the start symbol is given in the doctype declaration, the
  terminals are data characters and tags, and the productions are
  determined by the element declarations. The instance must conform to
  the DTD, that is, it must be in the language defined by this grammar.

  The SGML declaration determines the lexicon of the grammar. It
  specifies the document character set, which determines a character
  repertoire that contains all characters that occur in all text
  entities in the document, and the code positions associated with
  those characters.

  The SGML declaration also specifies the syntax-reference character
  set of the document, and a few other parameters that bind the
  abstract syntax of SGML to a concrete syntax. This concrete syntax
  determines how the sequence of characters of the document is mapped
  to a sequence of terminals in the grammar of the prologue.








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  For example, consider the following document:

   <!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//IETF//DTD HTML 2.0//EN">
   <title>Parsing Example</title>
   <p>Some text. <em>&#42;wow&#42;</em></p>

  An HTML user agent should use the SGML declaration that is given in
  9.5, "SGML Declaration for HTML". According to its document character
  set, `&#42;' refers to an asterisk character, `*'.

  The instance above is regarded as the following sequence of
  terminals:

       1. start-tag: TITLE

       2. data characters: "Parsing Example"

       3. end-tag: TITLE

       4. start-tag: P

       5. data characters "Some text."

       6. start-tag: EM

       7. data characters: "*wow*"

       8. end-tag: EM

       9. end-tag: P





















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  The start symbol of the DTD grammar is HTML, and the productions are
  given in the public text identified by `-//IETF//DTD HTML 2.0//EN'
  (9.1, "HTML DTD"). The terminals above parse as:

      HTML
       |
       \-HEAD
       |  |
       |  \-TITLE
       |      |
       |      \-<TITLE>
       |      |
       |      \-"Parsing Example"
       |      |
       |      \-</TITLE>
       |
       \-BODY
         |
         \-P
           |
           \-<P>
           |
           \-"Some text. "
           |
           \-EM
           |  |
           |  \-<EM>
           |  |
           |  \-"*wow*"
           |  |
           |  \-</EM>
           |
           \-</P>

  Some of the elements are delimited explicitly by tags, while the
  boundaries of others are inferred. The <HTML> element contains a
  <HEAD> element and a <BODY> element. The <HEAD> contains <TITLE>,
  which is explicitly delimited by start- and end-tags.

3.2. HTML Lexical Syntax

  SGML specifies an abstract syntax and a reference concrete syntax.
  Aside from certain quantities and capacities (e.g. the limit on the
  length of a name), all HTML documents use the reference concrete
  syntax. In particular, all markup characters are in the repertoire of
  [ISO-646]. Data characters are drawn from the document character set
  (see 6, "Characters, Words, and Paragraphs").




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  A complete discussion of SGML parsing, e.g. the mapping of a sequence
  of characters to a sequence of tags and data, is left to the SGML
  standard[SGML]. This section is only a summary.

3.2.1. Data Characters

  Any sequence of characters that do not constitute markup (see 9.6
  "Delimiter Recognition" of [SGML]) are mapped directly to strings of
  data characters. Some markup also maps to data character strings.
  Numeric character references map to single-character strings, via the
  document character set. Each reference to one of the general entities
  defined in the HTML DTD maps to a single-character string.

  For example,

   abc&lt;def    => "abc","<","def"
   abc&#60;def   => "abc","<","def"

  The terminating semicolon on entity or numeric character references
  is only necessary when the character following the reference would
  otherwise be recognized as part of the name (see 9.4.5 "Reference
  End" in [SGML]).

   abc &lt def     => "abc ","<"," def"
   abc &#60 def    => "abc ","<"," def"

  An ampersand is only recognized as markup when it is followed by a
  letter or a `#' and a digit:

   abc & lt def    => "abc & lt def"
   abc &# 60 def    => "abc &# 60 def"

  A useful technique for translating plain text to HTML is to replace
  each '<', '&', and '>' by an entity reference or numeric character
  reference as follows:

                    ENTITY      NUMERIC
          CHARACTER REFERENCE   CHAR REF     CHARACTER DESCRIPTION
          --------- ----------  -----------  ---------------------
            &       &amp;       &#38;        Ampersand
            <       &lt;        &#60;        Less than
            >       &gt;        &#62;        Greater than

       NOTE - There are SGML mechanisms, CDATA and RCDATA
       declared content, that allow most `<', `>', and `&'
       characters to be entered without the use of entity
       references. Because these mechanisms tend to be used and
       implemented inconsistently, and because they conflict



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       with techniques for reducing HTML to 7 bit ASCII for
       transport, they are deprecated in this version of HTML.
       See 5.5.2.1, "Example and Listing: XMP, LISTING".

3.2.2. Tags

  Tags delimit elements such as headings, paragraphs, lists, character
  highlighting, and links. Most HTML elements are identified in a
  document as a start-tag, which gives the element name and attributes,
  followed by the content, followed by the end tag. Start-tags are
  delimited by `<' and `>'; end tags are delimited by `</' and `>'. An
  example is:

  <H1>This is a Heading</H1>

  Some elements only have a start-tag without an end-tag. For example,
  to create a line break, use the `<BR>' tag.  Additionally, the end
  tags of some other elements, such as Paragraph (`</P>'), List Item
  (`</LI>'), Definition Term (`</DT>'), and Definition Description
  (`</DD>') elements, may be omitted.

  The content of an element is a sequence of data character strings and
  nested elements. Some elements, such as anchors, cannot be nested.
  Anchors and character highlighting may be put inside other
  constructs. See the HTML DTD, 9.1, "HTML DTD" for full details.

     NOTE - The SGML declaration for HTML specifies SHORTTAG YES, which
     means that there are other valid syntaxes for tags, such as NET
     tags, `<EM/.../'; empty start tags, `<>'; and empty end-tags,
     `</>'. Until support for these idioms is widely deployed, their
     use is strongly discouraged.

3.2.3. Names

  A name consists of a letter followed by letters, digits, periods, or
  hyphens. The length of a name is limited to 72 characters by the
  `NAMELEN' parameter in the SGML declaration for HTML, 9.5, "SGML
  Declaration for HTML". Element and attribute names are not case
  sensitive, but entity names are.  For example, `<BLOCKQUOTE>',
  `<BlockQuote>', and `<blockquote>' are equivalent, whereas `&amp;' is
  different from `&AMP;'.

  In a start-tag, the element name must immediately follow the tag open
  delimiter `<'.







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3.2.4. Attributes

  In a start-tag, white space and attributes are allowed between the
  element name and the closing delimiter. An attribute specification
  typically consists of an attribute name, an equal sign, and a value,
  though some attribute specifications may be just a name token. White
  space is allowed around the equal sign.

  The value of the attribute may be either:

       * A string literal, delimited by single quotes or double
       quotes and not containing any occurrences of the delimiting
       character.

           NOTE - Some historical implementations consider any
           occurrence of the `>' character to signal the end of
           a tag. For compatibility with such implementations,
           when `>' appears in an attribute value, it should be
           represented with a numeric character reference. For
           example, `<IMG SRC="eq1.jpg" alt="a>b">' should be
           written `<IMG SRC="eq1.jpg" alt="a&#62;b">' or `<IMG
           SRC="eq1.jpg" alt="a&gt;b">'.

       * A name token (a sequence of letters, digits, periods, or
       hyphens). Name tokens are not case sensitive.

           NOTE - Some historical implementations allow any
           character except space or `>' in a name token.

  In this example, <img> is the element name, src is the attribute
  name, and `http://host/dir/file.gif' is the attribute value:

  <img src='http://host/dir/file.gif'>

  A useful technique for computing an attribute value literal for a
  given string is to replace each quote and white space character by an
  entity reference or numeric character reference as follows:

                    ENTITY      NUMERIC
          CHARACTER REFERENCE   CHAR REF     CHARACTER DESCRIPTION
          --------- ----------  -----------  ---------------------
            HT                  &#9;         Tab
            LF                  &#10;        Line Feed
            CR                  &#13;        Carriage Return
            SP                  &#32;        Space
            "       &quot;      &#34;        Quotation mark
            &       &amp;       &#38;        Ampersand




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  For example:

  <IMG SRC="image.jpg" alt="First &quot;real&quot; example">

  The `NAMELEN' parameter in the SGML declaration (9.5, "SGML
  Declaration for HTML") limits the length of an attribute value to
  1024 characters.

  Attributes such as ISMAP and COMPACT may be written using a minimized
  syntax (see 7.9.1.2 "Omitted Attribute Name" in [SGML]). The markup:

  <UL COMPACT="compact">

  can be written using a minimized syntax:

  <UL COMPACT>

  NOTE - Some historical implementations only understand the minimized
  syntax.

3.2.5. Comments

  To include comments in an HTML document, use a comment declaration. A
  comment declaration consists of `<!' followed by zero or more
  comments followed by `>'. Each comment starts with `--' and includes
  all text up to and including the next occurrence of `--'. In a
  comment declaration, white space is allowed after each comment, but
  not before the first comment.  The entire comment declaration is
  ignored.

     NOTE - Some historical HTML implementations incorrectly consider
     any `>' character to be the termination of a comment.

  For example:

   <!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//IETF//DTD HTML 2.0//EN">
   <HEAD>
   <TITLE>HTML Comment Example</TITLE>
   <!-- Id: html-sgml.sgm,v 1.5 1995/05/26 21:29:50 connolly Exp  -->
   <!-- another -- -- comment -->
   <!>
   </HEAD>
   <BODY>
   <p> <!- not a comment, just regular old data characters ->







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3.3. HTML Public Text Identifiers

  To identify information as an HTML document conforming to this
  specification, each document must start with one of the following
  document type declarations.

  <!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//IETF//DTD HTML 2.0//EN">

  This document type declaration refers to the HTML DTD in 9.1, "HTML
  DTD".

     NOTE - If the body of a `text/html' message entity does not begin
     with a document type declaration, an HTML user agent should infer
     the above document type declaration.

  <!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//IETF//DTD HTML 2.0 Level 2//EN">

  This document type declaration also refers to the HTML DTD which
  appears in 9.1, "HTML DTD".

  <!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//IETF//DTD HTML 2.0 Level 1//EN">

  This document type declaration refers to the level 1 HTML DTD in 9.3,
  "Level 1 HTML DTD". Form elements must not occur in level 1
  documents.

  <!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//IETF//DTD HTML 2.0 Strict//EN">
  <!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//IETF//DTD HTML 2.0 Strict Level 1//EN">

  These two document type declarations refer to the HTML DTD in 9.2,
  "Strict HTML DTD" and 9.4, "Strict Level 1 HTML DTD". They refer to
  the more structurally rigid definition of HTML.

  HTML user agents may support other document types. In particular,
  they may support other formal public identifiers, or other document
  types altogether. They may support an internal declaration subset
  with supplemental entity, element, and other markup declarations.

3.4. Example HTML Document

   <!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//IETF//DTD HTML 2.0//EN">
   <HTML>
   <!-- Here's a good place to put a comment. -->
   <HEAD>
   <TITLE>Structural Example</TITLE>
   </HEAD><BODY>
   <H1>First Header</H1>
   <P>This is a paragraph in the example HTML file. Keep in mind



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   that the title does not appear in the document text, but that
   the header (defined by H1) does.</P>
   <OL>
   <LI>First item in an ordered list.
   <LI>Second item in an ordered list.
     <UL COMPACT>
     <LI> Note that lists can be nested;
     <LI> Whitespace may be used to assist in reading the
          HTML source.
     </UL>
   <LI>Third item in an ordered list.
   </OL>
   <P>This is an additional paragraph. Technically, end tags are
   not required for paragraphs, although they are allowed. You can
   include character highlighting in a paragraph. <EM>This sentence
   of the paragraph is emphasized.</EM> Note that the &lt;/P&gt;
   end tag has been omitted.
   <P>
   <IMG SRC ="triangle.xbm" alt="Warning: ">
   Be sure to read these <b>bold instructions</b>.
   </BODY></HTML>

4. HTML as an Internet Media Type

  An HTML user agent allows users to interact with resources which have
  HTML representations. At a minimum, it must allow users to examine
  and navigate the content of HTML level 1 documents. HTML user agents
  should be able to preserve all formatting distinctions represented in
  an HTML document, and be able to simultaneously present resources
  referred to by IMG elements (they may ignore some formatting
  distinctions or IMG resources at the request of the user). Level 2
  HTML user agents should support form entry and submission.

4.1. text/html media type

  This specification defines the Internet Media Type [IMEDIA] (formerly
  referred to as the Content Type [MIME]) called `text/html'. The
  following is to be registered with [IANA].

   Media Type name
           text

   Media subtype name
           html

   Required parameters
           none




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   Optional parameters
           level, charset

   Encoding considerations
           any encoding is allowed

   Security considerations
           see 10, "Security Considerations"

   The optional parameters are defined as follows:

   Level
           The level parameter specifies the feature set used in
           the document. The level is an integer number, implying
           that any features of same or lower level may be present
           in the document. Level 1 is all features defined in this
           specification except those that require the <FORM>
           element. Level 2 includes form processing. Level 2 is
           the default.

   Charset
           The charset parameter (as defined in section 7.1.1 of
           RFC 1521[MIME]) may be given to specify the character
           encoding scheme used to represent the HTML document as a
           sequence of octets. The default value is outside the
           scope of this specification; but for example, the
           default is `US-ASCII' in the context of MIME mail, and
           `ISO-8859-1' in the context of HTTP [HTTP].

4.2. HTML Document Representation

  A message entity with a content type of `text/html' represents an
  HTML document, consisting of a single text entity. The `charset'
  parameter (whether implicit or explicit) identifies a character
  encoding scheme. The text entity consists of the characters
  determined by this character encoding scheme and the octets of the
  body of the message entity.

4.2.1. Undeclared Markup Error Handling

  To facilitate experimentation and interoperability between
  implementations of various versions of HTML, the installed base of
  HTML user agents supports a superset of the HTML 2.0 language by
  reducing it to HTML 2.0: markup in the form of a start-tag or end-
  tag, whose generic identifier is not declared is mapped to nothing
  during tokenization. Undeclared attributes are treated similarly. The
  entire attribute specification of an unknown attribute (i.e., the
  unknown attribute and its value, if any) should be ignored. On the



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  other hand, references to undeclared entities should be treated as
  data characters.

  For example:

   <div class=chapter><h1>foo</h1><p>...</div>
     => <H1>,"foo",</H1>,<P>,"..."
   xxx <P ID=z23> yyy
     => "xxx ",<P>," yyy
   Let &alpha; &amp; &beta; be finite sets.
     => "Let &alpha; & &beta; be finite sets."

  Support for notifying the user of such errors is encouraged.

  Information providers are warned that this convention is not binding:
  unspecified behavior may result, as such markup does not conform to
  this specification.

4.2.2. Conventional Representation of Newlines

  SGML specifies that a text entity is a sequence of records, each
  beginning with a record start character and ending with a record end
  character (code positions 10 and 13 respectively) (section 7.6.1,
  "Record Boundaries" in [SGML]).

  [MIME] specifies that a body of type `text/*' is a sequence of lines,
  each terminated by CRLF, that is, octets 13, 10.

  In practice, HTML documents are frequently represented and
  transmitted using an end of line convention that depends on the
  conventions of the source of the document; frequently, that
  representation consists of CR only, LF only, or a CR LF sequence.
  Hence the decoding of the octets will often result in a text entity
  with some missing record start and record end characters.

  Since there is no ambiguity, HTML user agents are encouraged to infer
  the missing record start and end characters.

  An HTML user agent should treat end of line in any of its variations
  as a word space in all contexts except preformatted text. Within
  preformatted text, an HTML user agent should treat any of the three
  common representations of end-of-line as starting a new line.

5. Document Structure

  An HTML document is a tree of elements, including a head and body,
  headings, paragraphs, lists, etc. Form elements are discussed in 8,
  "Forms".



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5.1. Document Element: HTML

  The HTML document element consists of a head and a body, much like a
  memo or a mail message. The head contains the title and optional
  elements. The body is a text flow consisting of paragraphs, lists,
  and other elements.

5.2. Head: HEAD

  The head of an HTML document is an unordered collection of
  information about the document. For example:

   <!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//IETF//DTD HTML 2.0//EN">
   <HEAD>
   <TITLE>Introduction to HTML</TITLE>
   </HEAD>
   ...

5.2.1. Title: TITLE

  Every HTML document must contain a <TITLE> element.

  The title should identify the contents of the document in a global
  context. A short title, such as "Introduction" may be meaningless out
  of context. A title such as "Introduction to HTML Elements" is more
  appropriate.

     NOTE - The length of a title is not limited; however, long titles
     may be truncated in some applications. To minimize this
     possibility, titles should be fewer than 64 characters.

  A user agent may display the title of a document in a history list or
  as a label for the window displaying the document. This differs from
  headings (5.4, "Headings: H1 ... H6"), which are typically displayed
  within the body text flow.

5.2.2. Base Address: BASE

  The optional <BASE> element provides a base address for interpreting
  relative URLs when the document is read out of context (see 7,
  "Hyperlinks"). The value of the HREF attribute must be an absolute
  URI.

5.2.3. Keyword Index: ISINDEX

  The <ISINDEX> element indicates that the user agent should allow the
  user to search an index by giving keywords. See 7.5, "Queries and
  Indexes" for details.



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5.2.4. Link: LINK

  The <LINK> element represents a hyperlink (see 7, "Hyperlinks").  Any
  number of LINK elements may occur in the <HEAD> element of an HTML
  document. It has the same attributes as the <A> element (see 5.7.3,
  "Anchor: A").

  The <LINK> element is typically used to indicate authorship, related
  indexes and glossaries, older or more recent versions, document
  hierarchy, associated resources such as style sheets, etc.

5.2.5. Associated Meta-information: META

  The <META> element is an extensible container for use in identifying
  specialized document meta-information.  Meta-information has two main
  functions:

       * to provide a means to discover that the data set exists
       and how it might be obtained or accessed; and

       * to document the content, quality, and features of a data
       set, indicating its fitness for use.

  Each <META> element specifies a name/value pair. If multiple META
  elements are provided with the same name, their combined contents--
  concatenated as a comma-separated list--is the value associated with
  that name.

       NOTE - The <META> element should not be used where a
       specific element, such as <TITLE>, would be more
       appropriate. Rather than a <META> element with a URI as
       the value of the CONTENT attribute, use a <LINK>
       element.

  HTTP servers may read the content of the document <HEAD> to generate
  header fields corresponding to any elements defining a value for the
  attribute HTTP-EQUIV.

       NOTE - The method by which the server extracts document
       meta-information is unspecified and not mandatory. The
       <META> element only provides an extensible mechanism for
       identifying and embedding document meta-information --
       how it may be used is up to the individual server
       implementation and the HTML user agent.







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   Attributes of the META element:

   HTTP-EQUIV
           binds the element to an HTTP header field. An HTTP
           server may use this information to process the document.
           In particular, it may include a header field in the
           responses to requests for this document: the header name
           is taken from the HTTP-EQUIV attribute value, and the
           header value is taken from the value of the CONTENT
           attribute. HTTP header names are not case sensitive.

   NAME
           specifies the name of the name/value pair. If not
           present, HTTP-EQUIV gives the name.

   CONTENT
           specifies the value of the name/value pair.

   Examples

   If the document contains:

   <META HTTP-EQUIV="Expires"
         CONTENT="Tue, 04 Dec 1993 21:29:02 GMT">
   <meta http-equiv="Keywords" CONTENT="Fred">
   <META HTTP-EQUIV="Reply-to"
         content="[email protected] (Roy Fielding)">
   <Meta Http-equiv="Keywords" CONTENT="Barney">

   then the server may include the following header fields:

   Expires: Tue, 04 Dec 1993 21:29:02 GMT
   Keywords: Fred, Barney
   Reply-to: [email protected] (Roy Fielding)

   as part of the HTTP response to a `GET' or `HEAD' request for
   that document.

   An HTTP server must not use the <META> element to form an HTTP
   response header unless the HTTP-EQUIV attribute is present.

   An HTTP server may disregard any <META> elements that specify
   information controlled by the HTTP server, for example `Server',

   `Date', and `Last-modified'.






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5.2.6. Next Id: NEXTID

  The <NEXTID> element is included for historical reasons only.  HTML
  documents should not contain <NEXTID> elements.

  The <NEXTID> element gives a hint for the name to use for a new <A>
  element when editing an HTML document. It should be distinct from all
  NAME attribute values on <A> elements. For example:

  <NEXTID N=Z27>

5.3. Body: BODY

  The <BODY> element contains the text flow of the document, including
  headings, paragraphs, lists, etc.

  For example:

   <BODY>
   <h1>Important Stuff</h1>
   <p>Explanation about important stuff...
   </BODY>

5.4. Headings: H1 ... H6

  The six heading elements, <H1> through <H6>, denote section headings.
  Although the order and occurrence of headings is not constrained by
  the HTML DTD, documents should not skip levels (for example, from H1
  to H3), as converting such documents to other representations is
  often problematic.

  Example of use:

   <H1>This is a heading</H1>
   Here is some text
   <H2>Second level heading</H2>
   Here is some more text.

   Typical renderings are:

   H1
           Bold, very-large font, centered. One or two blank lines
           above and below.

   H2
           Bold, large font, flush-left. One or two blank lines
           above and below.




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   H3
           Italic, large font, slightly indented from the left
           margin. One or two blank lines above and below.

   H4
           Bold, normal font, indented more than H3. One blank line
           above and below.

   H5
           Italic, normal font, indented as H4. One blank line
           above.

   H6
           Bold, indented same as normal text, more than H5. One
           blank line above.

5.5. Block Structuring Elements

  Block structuring elements include paragraphs, lists, and block
  quotes. They must not contain heading elements, but they may contain
  phrase markup, and in some cases, they may be nested.

5.5.1. Paragraph: P

  The <P> element indicates a paragraph. The exact indentation, leading
  space, etc. of a paragraph is not specified and may be a function of
  other tags, style sheets, etc.

  Typically, paragraphs are surrounded by a vertical space of one line
  or half a line. The first line in a paragraph is indented in some
  cases.

  Example of use:

   <H1>This Heading Precedes the Paragraph</H1>
   <P>This is the text of the first paragraph.
   <P>This is the text of the second paragraph. Although you do not
   need to start paragraphs on new lines, maintaining this
   convention facilitates document maintenance.</P>
   <P>This is the text of a third paragraph.</P>

5.5.2. Preformatted Text: PRE

  The <PRE> element represents a character cell block of text and is
  suitable for text that has been formatted for a monospaced font.

  The <PRE> tag may be used with the optional WIDTH attribute. The
  WIDTH attribute specifies the maximum number of characters for a line



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  and allows the HTML user agent to select a suitable font and
  indentation.

  Within preformatted text:

       * Line breaks within the text are rendered as a move to the
       beginning of the next line.

           NOTE - References to the "beginning of a new line"
           do not imply that the renderer is forbidden from
           using a constant left indent for rendering
           preformatted text. The left indent may be
           constrained by the width required.

       * Anchor elements and phrase markup may be used.

           NOTE - Constraints on the processing of <PRE>
           content may limit or prevent the ability of the HTML
           user agent to faithfully render phrase markup.

       * Elements that define paragraph formatting (headings,
       address, etc.) must not be used.

           NOTE - Some historical documents contain <P> tags in
           <PRE> elements. User agents are encouraged to treat
           this as a line break. A <P> tag followed by a
           newline character should produce only one line
           break, not a line break plus a blank line.

       * The horizontal tab character (code position 9 in the HTML
       document character set) must be interpreted as the smallest
       positive nonzero number of spaces which will leave the
       number of characters so far on the line as a multiple of 8.
       Documents should not contain tab characters, as they are not
       supported consistently.

   Example of use:

   <PRE>
   Line 1.
          Line 2 is to the right of line 1.     <a href="abc">abc</a>
          Line 3 aligns with line 2.            <a href="def">def</a>
   </PRE>








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5.5.2.1. Example and Listing: XMP, LISTING

  The <XMP> and <LISTING> elements are similar to the <PRE> element,
  but they have a different syntax. Their content is declared as CDATA,
  which means that no markup except the end-tag open delimiter-in-
  context is recognized (see 9.6 "Delimiter Recognition" of [SGML]).

     NOTE - In a previous draft of the HTML specification, the syntax
     of <XMP> and <LISTING> elements allowed closing tags to be treated
     as data characters, as long as the tag name was not <XMP> or
     <LISTING>, respectively.

  Since CDATA declared content has a number of unfortunate interactions
  with processing techniques and tends to be used and implemented
  inconsistently, HTML documents should not contain <XMP> nor <LISTING>
  elements -- the <PRE> tag is more expressive and more consistently
  supported.

  The <LISTING> element should be rendered so that at least 132
  characters fit on a line. The <XMP> element should be rendered so
  that at least 80 characters fit on a line but is otherwise identical
  to the <LISTING> element.

     NOTE - In a previous draft, HTML included a <PLAINTEXT> element
     that is similar to the <LISTING> element, except that there is no
     closing tag: all characters after the <PLAINTEXT> start-tag are
     data.

5.5.3. Address: ADDRESS

  The <ADDRESS> element contains such information as address, signature
  and authorship, often at the beginning or end of the body of a
  document.

  Typically, the <ADDRESS> element is rendered in an italic typeface
  and may be indented.

  Example of use:

   <ADDRESS>
   Newsletter editor<BR>
   J.R. Brown<BR>
   JimquickPost News, Jimquick, CT 01234<BR>
   Tel (123) 456 7890
   </ADDRESS>






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5.5.4. Block Quote: BLOCKQUOTE

  The <BLOCKQUOTE> element contains text quoted from another source.

  A typical rendering might be a slight extra left and right indent,
  and/or italic font. The <BLOCKQUOTE> typically provides space above
  and below the quote.

  Single-font rendition may reflect the quotation style of Internet
  mail by putting a vertical line of graphic characters, such as the
  greater than symbol (>), in the left margin.

  Example of use:

   I think the play ends
   <BLOCKQUOTE>
   <P>Soft you now, the fair Ophelia. Nymph, in thy orisons, be all
   my sins remembered.
   </BLOCKQUOTE>
   but I am not sure.

5.6. List Elements

  HTML includes a number of list elements. They may be used in
  combination; for example, a <OL> may be nested in an <LI> element of
  a <UL>.

  The COMPACT attribute suggests that a compact rendering be used.

5.6.1. Unordered List: UL, LI

  The <UL> represents a list of items -- typically rendered as a
  bulleted list.

  The content of a <UL> element is a sequence of <LI> elements.  For
  example:

   <UL>
   <LI>First list item
   <LI>Second list item
    <p>second paragraph of second item
   <LI>Third list item
   </UL>

5.6.2. Ordered List: OL

  The <OL> element represents an ordered list of items, sorted by
  sequence or order of importance. It is typically rendered as a



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  numbered list.

  The content of a <OL> element is a sequence of <LI> elements.  For
  example:

   <OL>
   <LI>Click the Web button to open URI window.
   <LI>Enter the URI number in the text field of the Open URI
   window. The Web document you specified is displayed.
     <ol>
      <li>substep 1
      <li>substep 2
     </ol>
   <LI>Click highlighted text to move from one link to another.
   </OL>

5.6.3. Directory List: DIR

  The <DIR> element is similar to the <UL> element. It represents a
  list of short items, typically up to 20 characters each. Items in a
  directory list may be arranged in columns, typically 24 characters
  wide.

  The content of a <DIR> element is a sequence of <LI> elements.
  Nested block elements are not allowed in the content of <DIR>
  elements. For example:

   <DIR>
   <LI>A-H<LI>I-M
   <LI>M-R<LI>S-Z
   </DIR>

5.6.4. Menu List: MENU

  The <MENU> element is a list of items with typically one line per
  item. The menu list style is typically more compact than the style of
  an unordered list.

  The content of a <MENU> element is a sequence of <LI> elements.
  Nested block elements are not allowed in the content of <MENU>
  elements. For example:

   <MENU>
   <LI>First item in the list.
   <LI>Second item in the list.
   <LI>Third item in the list.
   </MENU>




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5.6.5. Definition List: DL, DT, DD

  A definition list is a list of terms and corresponding definitions.
  Definition lists are typically formatted with the term flush-left and
  the definition, formatted paragraph style, indented after the term.

  The content of a <DL> element is a sequence of <DT> elements and/or
  <DD> elements, usually in pairs. Multiple <DT> may be paired with a
  single <DD> element. Documents should not contain multiple
  consecutive <DD> elements.

  Example of use:

   <DL>
   <DT>Term<DD>This is the definition of the first term.
   <DT>Term<DD>This is the definition of the second term.
   </DL>

  If the DT term does not fit in the DT column (typically one third of
  the display area), it may be extended across the page with the DD
  section moved to the next line, or it may be wrapped onto successive
  lines of the left hand column.

  The optional COMPACT attribute suggests that a compact rendering be
  used, because the list items are small and/or the entire list is
  large.

  Unless the COMPACT attribute is present, an HTML user agent may leave
  white space between successive DT, DD pairs. The COMPACT attribute
  may also reduce the width of the left-hand (DT) column.

   <DL COMPACT>
   <DT>Term<DD>This is the first definition in compact format.
   <DT>Term<DD>This is the second definition in compact format.
   </DL>

5.7. Phrase Markup

  Phrases may be marked up according to idiomatic usage, typographic
  appearance, or for use as hyperlink anchors.

  User agents must render highlighted phrases distinctly from plain
  text. Additionally, <EM> content must be rendered as distinct from
  <STRONG> content, and <B> content must rendered as distinct from <I>
  content.

  Phrase elements may be nested within the content of other phrase
  elements; however, HTML user agents may render nested phrase elements



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  indistinctly from non-nested elements:

  plain <B>bold <I>italic</I></B> may be rendered
  the same as plain <B>bold </B><I>italic</I>

5.7.1. Idiomatic Elements

  Phrases may be marked up to indicate certain idioms.

     NOTE - User agents may support the <DFN> element, not included in
     this specification, as it has been deployed to some extent. It is
     used to indicate the defining instance of a term, and it is
     typically rendered in italic or bold italic.

5.7.1.1. Citation: CITE

     The <CITE> element is used to indicate the title of a book or
     other citation. It is typically rendered as italics. For example:

     He just couldn't get enough of <cite>The Grapes of Wrath</cite>.

5.7.1.2. Code: CODE

     The <CODE> element indicates an example of code, typically
     rendered in a mono-spaced font. The <CODE> element is intended for
     short words or phrases of code; the <PRE> block structuring
     element (5.5.2, "Preformatted Text: PRE") is more appropriate
      for multiple-line listings. For example:

     The expression <code>x += 1</code>
     is short for <code>x = x + 1</code>.

5.7.1.3. Emphasis: EM

     The <EM> element indicates an emphasized phrase, typically
     rendered as italics. For example:

     A singular subject <em>always</em> takes a singular verb.

5.7.1.4. Keyboard: KBD

     The <KBD> element indicates text typed by a user, typically
     rendered in a mono-spaced font. This is commonly used in
     instruction manuals. For example:

     Enter <kbd>FIND IT</kbd> to search the database.





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5.7.1.5. Sample: SAMP

     The <SAMP> element indicates a sequence of literal characters,
     typically rendered in a mono-spaced font. For example:

     The only word containing the letters <samp>mt</samp> is dreamt.

5.7.1.6. Strong Emphasis: STRONG

     The <STRONG> element indicates strong emphasis, typically rendered
     in bold. For example:

     <strong>STOP</strong>, or I'll say "<strong>STOP</strong>" again!

5.7.1.7. Variable: VAR

     The <VAR> element indicates a placeholder variable, typically
     rendered as italic. For example:

     Type <SAMP>html-check <VAR>file</VAR> | more</SAMP>
     to check <VAR>file</VAR> for markup errors.

5.7.2. Typographic Elements

     Typographic elements are used to specify the format of marked
     text.

     Typical renderings for idiomatic elements may vary between user
     agents. If a specific rendering is necessary -- for example, when
     referring to a specific text attribute as in "The italic parts are
     mandatory" -- a typographic element can be used to ensure that the
     intended typography is used where possible.

     NOTE - User agents may support some typographic elements not
     included in this specification, as they have been deployed to some
     extent. The <STRIKE> element indicates horizontal line through the
     characters, and the <U> element indicates an underline.

5.7.2.1. Bold: B

  The <B> element indicates bold text. Where bold typography is
  unavailable, an alternative representation may be used.

5.7.2.2. Italic: I

  The <I> element indicates italic text. Where italic typography is
  unavailable, an alternative representation may be used.




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5.7.2.3. Teletype: TT

  The <TT> element indicates teletype (monospaced )text. Where a
  teletype font is unavailable, an alternative representation may be
  used.

5.7.3. Anchor: A

  The <A> element indicates a hyperlink anchor (see 7, "Hyperlinks").
  At least one of the NAME and HREF attributes should be present.
  Attributes of the <A> element:

   HREF
           gives the URI of the head anchor of a hyperlink.

   NAME
           gives the name of the anchor, and makes it available as
           a head of a hyperlink.

   TITLE
           suggests a title for the destination resource --
           advisory only. The TITLE attribute may be used:

               * for display prior to accessing the destination
               resource, for example, as a margin note or on a
               small box while the mouse is over the anchor, or
               while the document is being loaded;

               * for resources that do not include a title, such as
               graphics, plain text and Gopher menus, for use as a
               window title.

   REL
           The REL attribute gives the relationship(s) described by
           the hyperlink. The value is a whitespace separated list
           of relationship names. The semantics of link
           relationships are not specified in this document.

   REV
           same as the REL attribute, but the semantics of the
           relationship are in the reverse direction. A link from A
           to B with REL="X" expresses the same relationship as a
           link from B to A with REV="X". An anchor may have both
           REL and REV attributes.

   URN
           specifies a preferred, more persistent identifier for
           the head anchor of the hyperlink. The syntax and



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           semantics of the URN attribute are not yet specified.

   METHODS
           specifies methods to be used in accessing the
           destination, as a whitespace-separated list of names.
           The set of applicable names is a function of the scheme
           of the URI in the HREF attribute. For similar reasons as
           for the TITLE attribute, it may be useful to include the
           information in advance in the link. For example, the
           HTML user agent may chose a different rendering as a
           function of the methods allowed; for example, something
           that is searchable may get a different icon.

5.8. Line Break: BR

  The <BR> element specifies a line break between words (see 6,
  "Characters, Words, and Paragraphs"). For example:

   <P> Pease porridge hot<BR>
   Pease porridge cold<BR>
   Pease porridge in the pot<BR>
   Nine days old.

5.9. Horizontal Rule: HR

  The <HR> element is a divider between sections of text; typically a
  full width horizontal rule or equivalent graphic.  For example:

   <HR>
   <ADDRESS>February 8, 1995, CERN</ADDRESS>
   </BODY>

5.10. Image: IMG

  The <IMG> element refers to an image or icon via a hyperlink (see
  7.3, "Simultaneous Presentation of Image Resources").

  HTML user agents may process the value of the ALT attribute as an
  alternative to processing the image resource indicated by the SRC
  attribute.

     NOTE - Some HTML user agents can process graphics linked via
     anchors, but not <IMG> graphics. If a graphic is essential, it
     should be referenced from an <A> element rather than an <IMG>
     element. If the graphic is not essential, then the <IMG> element
     is appropriate.

  Attributes of the <IMG> element:



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   ALIGN
           alignment of the image with respect to the text
           baseline.

               * `TOP' specifies that the top of the image aligns
               with the tallest item on the line containing the
               image.

               * `MIDDLE' specifies that the center of the image
               aligns with the baseline of the line containing the
               image.

               * `BOTTOM' specifies that the bottom of the image
               aligns with the baseline of the line containing the
               image.

   ALT
           text to use in place of the referenced image resource,
           for example due to processing constraints or user
           preference.

   ISMAP
           indicates an image map (see 7.6, "Image Maps").

   SRC
           specifies the URI of the image resource.

               NOTE - In practice, the media types of image
               resources are limited to a few raster graphic
               formats: typically `image/gif', `image/jpeg'. In
               particular, `text/html' resources are not
               intended to be used as image resources.

   Examples of use:

   <IMG SRC="triangle.xbm" ALT="Warning:"> Be sure
   to read these instructions.

   <a href="http://machine/htbin/imagemap/sample">
   <IMG SRC="sample.xbm" ISMAP>
   </a>

6. Characters, Words, and Paragraphs

  An HTML user agent should present the body of an HTML document as a
  collection of typeset paragraphs and preformatted text.  Except for
  preformatted elements (<PRE>, <XMP>, <LISTING>, <TEXTAREA>), each
  block structuring element is regarded as a paragraph by taking the



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  data characters in its content and the content of its descendant
  elements, concatenating them, and splitting the result into words,
  separated by space, tab, or record end characters (and perhaps hyphen
  characters). The sequence of words is typeset as a paragraph by
  breaking it into lines.

6.1. The HTML Document Character Set

  The document character set specified in 9.5, "SGML Declaration for
  HTML" must be supported by HTML user agents. It includes the graphic
  characters of Latin Alphabet No. 1, or simply Latin-1.  Latin-1
  comprises 191 graphic characters, including the alphabets of most
  Western European languages.

     NOTE - Use of the non-breaking space and soft hyphen indicator
     characters is discouraged because support for them is not widely
     deployed.

     NOTE - To support non-western writing systems, a larger character
     repertoire will be specified in a future version of HTML. The
     document character set will be [ISO-10646], or some subset that
     agrees with [ISO-10646]; in particular, all numeric character
     references must use code positions assigned by [ISO-10646].

  In SGML applications, the use of control characters is limited in
  order to maximize the chance of successful interchange over
  heterogeneous networks and operating systems. In the HTML document
  character set only three control characters are allowed: Horizontal
  Tab, Carriage Return, and Line Feed (code positions 9, 13, and 10).

  The HTML DTD references the Added Latin 1 entity set, to allow
  mnemonic representation of selected Latin 1 characters using only the
  widely supported ASCII character repertoire. For example:

  Kurt G&ouml;del was a famous logician and mathematician.

  See 9.7.2, "ISO Latin 1 Character Entity Set" for a table of the
  "Added Latin 1" entities, and 13, "The HTML Coded Character Set" for
  a table of the code positions of [ISO 8859-1] and the control
  characters in the HTML document character set.

7. Hyperlinks

  In addition to general purpose elements such as paragraphs and lists,
  HTML documents can express hyperlinks. An HTML user agent allows the
  user to navigate these hyperlinks.





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  A hyperlink is a relationship between two anchors, called the head
  and the tail of the hyperlink[DEXTER]. Anchors are identified by an
  anchor address: an absolute Uniform Resource Identifier (URI),
  optionally followed by a '#' and a sequence of characters called a
  fragment identifier. For example:

  http://www.w3.org/hypertext/WWW/TheProject.html
  http://www.w3.org/hypertext/WWW/TheProject.html#z31

  In an anchor address, the URI refers to a resource; it may be used in
  a variety of information retrieval protocols to obtain an entity that
  represents the resource, such as an HTML document. The fragment
  identifier, if present, refers to some view on, or portion of the
  resource.

  Each of the following markup constructs indicates the tail anchor of
  a hyperlink or set of hyperlinks:

       * <A> elements with HREF present.

       * <LINK> elements.

       * <IMG> elements.

       * <INPUT> elements with the SRC attribute present.

       * <ISINDEX> elements.

       * <FORM> elements with `METHOD=GET'.

  These markup constructs refer to head anchors by a URI, either
  absolute or relative, or a fragment identifier, or both.

  In the case of a relative URI, the absolute URI in the address of the
  head anchor is the result of combining the relative URI with a base
  absolute URI as in [RELURL]. The base document is taken from the
  document's <BASE> element, if present; else, it is determined as in
  [RELURL].

7.1. Accessing Resources

  Once the address of the head anchor is determined, the user agent may
  obtain a representation of the resource.

  For example, if the base URI is `http://host/x/y.html' and the
  document contains:

  <img src="../icons/abc.gif">



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  then the user agent uses the URI `http://host/icons/abc.gif' to
  access the resource, as in [URL]..

7.2. Activation of Hyperlinks

  An HTML user agent allows the user to navigate the content of the
  document and request activation of hyperlinks denoted by <A>
  elements. HTML user agents should also allow activation of <LINK>
  element hyperlinks.

  To activate a link, the user agent obtains a representation of the
  resource identified in the address of the head anchor. If the
  representation is another HTML document, navigation may begin again
  with this new document.

7.3. Simultaneous Presentation of Image Resources

  An HTML user agent may activate hyperlinks indicated by <IMG> and
  <INPUT> elements concurrently with processing the document; that is,
  image hyperlinks may be processed without explicit request by the
  user. Image resources should be embedded in the presentation at the
  point of the tail anchor, that is the <IMG> or <INPUT> element.

  <LINK> hyperlinks may also be processed without explicit user
  request; for example, style sheet resources may be processed before
  or during the processing of the document.

7.4. Fragment Identifiers

  Any characters following a `#' character in a hypertext address
  constitute a fragment identifier. In particular, an address of the
  form `#fragment' refers to an anchor in the same document.

  The meaning of fragment identifiers depends on the media type of the
  representation of the anchor's resource. For `text/html'
  representations, it refers to the <A> element with a NAME attribute
  whose value is the same as the fragment identifier.  The matching is
  case sensitive. The document should have exactly one such element.
  The user agent should indicate the anchor element, for example by
  scrolling to and/or highlighting the phrase.

  For example, if the base URI is `http://host/x/y.html' and the user
  activated the link denoted by the following markup:

  <p> See: <a href="app1.html#bananas">appendix 1</a>
  for more detail on bananas.





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  Then the user agent accesses the resource identified by
  `http://host/x/app1.html'. Assuming the resource is represented using
  the `text/html' media type, the user agent must locate the <A>
  element whose NAME attribute is `bananas' and begin navigation there.

7.5. Queries and Indexes

  The <ISINDEX> element represents a set of hyperlinks. The user can
  choose from the set by providing keywords to the user agent.  The
  user agent computes the head URI by appending `?' and the keywords to
  the base URI. The keywords are escaped according to [URL] and joined
  by `+'. For example, if a document contains:

   <BASE HREF="http://host/index">
   <ISINDEX>

   and the user provides the keywords `apple' and `berry', then the
   user agent must access the resource
   `http://host/index?apple+berry'.

   <FORM> elements with `METHOD=GET' also represent sets of
   hyperlinks. See 8.2.2, "Query Forms: METHOD=GET" for details.

7.6. Image Maps

  If the ISMAP attribute is present on an <IMG> element, the <IMG>
  element must be contained in an <A> element with an HREF present.
  This construct represents a set of hyperlinks. The user can choose
  from the set by choosing a pixel of the image. The user agent
  computes the head URI by appending `?' and the x and y coordinates of
  the pixel to the URI given in the <A> element.  For example, if a
  document contains:

  <!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//IETF//DTD HTML 2.0//EN">
  <head><title>ImageMap Example</title>
  <BASE HREF="http://host/index"></head>
  <body>
  <p> Choose any of these icons:<br>
  <a href="/cgi-bin/imagemap"><img ismap src="icons.gif"></a>

  and the user chooses the upper-leftmost pixel, the chosen
  hyperlink is the one with the URI
  `http://host/cgi-bin/imagemap?0,0'.








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8. Forms

  A form is a template for a form data set and an associated
  method and action URI. A form data set is a sequence of
  name/value pair fields. The names are specified on the NAME
  attributes of form input elements, and the values are given
  initial values by various forms of markup and edited by the
  user. The resulting form data set is used to access an
  information service as a function of the action and method.

  Forms elements can be mixed in with document structuring
  elements. For example, a <PRE> element may contain a <FORM>
  element, or a <FORM> element may contain lists which contain
  <INPUT> elements. This gives considerable flexibility in
  designing the layout of forms.

  Form processing is a level 2 feature.

8.1. Form Elements

8.1.1. Form: FORM

  The <FORM> element contains a sequence of input elements, along
  with document structuring elements. The attributes are:

   ACTION
           specifies the action URI for the form. The action URI of
           a form defaults to the base URI of the document (see 7,
           "Hyperlinks").

   METHOD
           selects a method of accessing the action URI. The set of
           applicable methods is a function of the scheme of the
           action URI of the form. See 8.2.2, "Query Forms:
           METHOD=GET" and 8.2.3, "Forms with Side-Effects:
           METHOD=POST".

   ENCTYPE
           specifies the media type used to encode the name/value
           pairs for transport, in case the protocol does not
           itself impose a format. See 8.2.1, "The form-urlencoded
           Media Type".

8.1.2. Input Field: INPUT

  The <INPUT> element represents a field for user input. The TYPE
  attribute discriminates between several variations of fields.




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  The <INPUT> element has a number of attributes. The set of applicable
  attributes depends on the value of the TYPE attribute.

8.1.2.1. Text Field: INPUT TYPE=TEXT

  The default value of the TYPE attribute is `TEXT', indicating a
  single line text entry field. (Use the <TEXTAREA> element for multi-
  line text fields.)

  Required attributes are:

   NAME
           name for the form field corresponding to this element.

   The optional attributes are:

   MAXLENGTH
           constrains the number of characters that can be entered
           into a text input field. If the value of MAXLENGTH is
           greater the the value of the SIZE attribute, the field
           should scroll appropriately. The default number of
           characters is unlimited.

   SIZE
           specifies the amount of display space allocated to this
           input field according to its type. The default depends
           on the user agent.

   VALUE
           The initial value of the field.

   For example:

<p>Street Address: <input name=street><br>
Postal City code: <input name=city size=16 maxlength=16><br>
Zip Code: <input name=zip size=10 maxlength=10 value="99999-9999"><br>

8.1.2.2. Password Field: INPUT TYPE=PASSWORD

  An <INPUT> element with `TYPE=PASSWORD' is a text field as above,
  except that the value is obscured as it is entered. (see also: 10,
  "Security Considerations").

  For example:

<p>Name: <input name=login> Password: <input type=password name=passwd>





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8.1.2.3. Check Box: INPUT TYPE=CHECKBOX

  An <INPUT> element with `TYPE=CHECKBOX' represents a boolean choice.
  A set of such elements with the same name represents an n-of-many
  choice field. Required attributes are:

   NAME
           symbolic name for the form field corresponding to this
           element or group of elements.

   VALUE
           The portion of the value of the field contributed by
           this element.

   Optional attributes are:

   CHECKED
           indicates that the initial state is on.

   For example:

 <p>What flavors do you like?
 <input type=checkbox name=flavor value=vanilla>Vanilla<br>
 <input type=checkbox name=flavor value=strawberry>Strawberry<br>
 <input type=checkbox name=flavor value=chocolate checked>Chocolate<br>

8.1.2.4. Radio Button: INPUT TYPE=RADIO

  An <INPUT> element with `TYPE=RADIO' represents a boolean choice. A
  set of such elements with the same name represents a 1-of-many choice
  field. The NAME and VALUE attributes are required as for check boxes.
  Optional attributes are:

   CHECKED
           indicates that the initial state is on.
  At all times, exactly one of the radio buttons in a set is checked.
  If none of the <INPUT> elements of a set of radio buttons specifies
  `CHECKED', then the user agent must check the first radio button of
  the set initially.

  For example:

   <p>Which is your favorite?
   <input type=radio name=flavor value=vanilla>Vanilla<br>
   <input type=radio name=flavor value=strawberry>Strawberry<br>
   <input type=radio name=flavor value=chocolate>Chocolate<br>





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8.1.2.5. Image Pixel: INPUT TYPE=IMAGE

  An <INPUT> element with `TYPE=IMAGE' specifies an image resource to
  display, and allows input of two form fields: the x and y coordinate
  of a pixel chosen from the image. The names of the fields are the
  name of the field with `.x' and `.y' appended.  `TYPE=IMAGE' implies
  `TYPE=SUBMIT' processing; that is, when a pixel is chosen, the form
  as a whole is submitted.

  The NAME attribute is required as for other input fields. The SRC
  attribute is required and the ALIGN is optional as for the <IMG>
  element (see 5.10, "Image: IMG").

  For example:

   <p>Choose a point on the map:
   <input type=image name=point src="map.gif">

8.1.2.6. Hidden Field: INPUT TYPE=HIDDEN

  An <INPUT> element with `TYPE=HIDDEN' represents a hidden field.The
  user does not interact with this field; instead, the VALUE attribute
  specifies the value of the field. The NAME and VALUE attributes are
  required.

  For example:

  <input type=hidden name=context value="l2k3j4l2k3j4l2k3j4lk23">

8.1.2.7. Submit Button: INPUT TYPE=SUBMIT

  An <INPUT> element with `TYPE=SUBMIT' represents an input option,
  typically a button, that instructs the user agent to submit the form.
  Optional attributes are:

   NAME
           indicates that this element contributes a form field
           whose value is given by the VALUE attribute. If the NAME
           attribute is not present, this element does not
           contribute a form field.

   VALUE
           indicates a label for the input (button).

   You may submit this request internally:
   <input type=submit name=recipient value=internal><br>
   or to the external world:
   <input type=submit name=recipient value=world>



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8.1.2.8. Reset Button: INPUT TYPE=RESET

  An <INPUT> element with `TYPE=RESET' represents an input option,
  typically a button, that instructs the user agent to reset the form's
  fields to their initial states. The VALUE attribute, if present,
  indicates a label for the input (button).

  When you are finished, you may submit this request:
  <input type=submit><br>
  You may clear the form and start over at any time: <input type=reset>

8.1.3. Selection: SELECT

  The <SELECT> element constrains the form field to an enumerated list
  of values. The values are given in <OPTION> elements.  Attributes
  are:

   MULTIPLE
           indicates that more than one option may be included in
           the value.

   NAME
           specifies the name of the form field.

   SIZE
           specifies the number of visible items. Select fields of
           size one are typically pop-down menus, whereas select
           fields with size greater than one are typically lists.

   For example:

   <SELECT NAME="flavor">
   <OPTION>Vanilla
   <OPTION>Strawberry
   <OPTION value="RumRasin">Rum and Raisin
   <OPTION selected>Peach and Orange
   </SELECT>

  The initial state has the first option selected, unless a SELECTED
  attribute is present on any of the <OPTION> elements.

8.1.3.1. Option: OPTION

  The Option element can only occur within a Select element. It
  represents one choice, and has the following attributes:

   SELECTED
           Indicates that this option is initially selected.



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   VALUE
           indicates the value to be returned if this option is
           chosen. The field value defaults to the content of the
           <OPTION> element.

  The content of the <OPTION> element is presented to the user to
  represent the option. It is used as a returned value if the VALUE
  attribute is not present.

8.1.4. Text Area: TEXTAREA

  The <TEXTAREA> element represents a multi-line text field.
  Attributes are:

   COLS
           the number of visible columns to display for the text
           area, in characters.

   NAME
           Specifies the name of the form field.

   ROWS
           The number of visible rows to display for the text area,
           in characters.

   For example:

   <TEXTAREA NAME="address" ROWS=6 COLS=64>
   HaL Computer Systems
   1315 Dell Avenue
   Campbell, California 95008
   </TEXTAREA>

  The content of the <TEXTAREA> element is the field's initial value.

  Typically, the ROWS and COLS attributes determine the visible
  dimension of the field in characters. The field is typically rendered
  in a fixed-width font. HTML user agents should allow text to extend
  beyond these limits by scrolling as needed.

8.2. Form Submission

  An HTML user agent begins processing a form by presenting the
  document with the fields in their initial state. The user is allowed
  to modify the fields, constrained by the field type etc.  When the
  user indicates that the form should be submitted (using a submit
  button or image input), the form data set is processed according to
  its method, action URI and enctype.



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  When there is only one single-line text input field in a form, the
  user agent should accept Enter in that field as a request to submit
  the form.

8.2.1. The form-urlencoded Media Type

  The default encoding for all forms is `application/x-www-form-
  urlencoded'. A form data set is represented in this media type as
  follows:

       1. The form field names and values are escaped: space
       characters are replaced by `+', and then reserved characters
       are escaped as per [URL]; that is, non-alphanumeric
       characters are replaced by `%HH', a percent sign and two
       hexadecimal digits representing the ASCII code of the
       character. Line breaks, as in multi-line text field values,
       are represented as CR LF pairs, i.e. `%0D%0A'.

       2. The fields are listed in the order they appear in the
       document with the name separated from the value by `=' and
       the pairs separated from each other by `&'. Fields with null
       values may be omitted. In particular, unselected radio
       buttons and checkboxes should not appear in the encoded
       data, but hidden fields with VALUE attributes present
       should.

           NOTE - The URI from a query form submission can be
           used in a normal anchor style hyperlink.
           Unfortunately, the use of the `&' character to
           separate form fields interacts with its use in SGML
           attribute values as an entity reference delimiter.
           For example, the URI `http://host/?x=1&y=2' must be
           written `<a href="http://host/?x=1&#38;y=2"' or `<a
           href="http://host/?x=1&amp;y=2">'.

           HTTP server implementors, and in particular, CGI
           implementors are encouraged to support the use of
           `;' in place of `&' to save users the trouble of
           escaping `&' characters this way.

8.2.2. Query Forms: METHOD=GET

  If the processing of a form is idempotent (i.e. it has no lasting
  observable effect on the state of the world), then the form method
  should be `GET'. Many database searches have no visible side-effects
  and make ideal applications of query forms.





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  To process a form whose action URL is an HTTP URL and whose method is
  `GET', the user agent starts with the action URI and appends a `?'
  and the form data set, in `application/x-www-form-urlencoded' format
  as above. The user agent then traverses the link to this URI just as
  if it were an anchor (see 7.2, "Activation of Hyperlinks").

     NOTE - The URL encoding may result in very long URIs, which cause
     some historical HTTP server implementations to exhibit defective
     behavior. As a result, some HTML forms are written using
     `METHOD=POST' even though the form submission has no side-effects.

8.2.3. Forms with Side-Effects: METHOD=POST

  If the service associated with the processing of a form has side
  effects (for example, modification of a database or subscription to a
  service), the method should be `POST'.

  To process a form whose action URL is an HTTP URL and whose method is
  `POST', the user agent conducts an HTTP POST transaction using the
  action URI, and a message body of type `application/x-www-form-
  urlencoded' format as above. The user agent should display the
  response from the HTTP POST interaction just as it would display the
  response from an HTTP GET above.

8.2.4. Example Form Submission: Questionnaire Form

  Consider the following document:

   <!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//IETF//DTD HTML 2.0//EN">
   <title>Sample of HTML Form Submission</title>
   <H1>Sample Questionnaire</H1>
   <P>Please fill out this questionnaire:
   <FORM METHOD="POST" ACTION="http://www.w3.org/sample">
   <P>Your name: <INPUT NAME="name" size="48">
   <P>Male <INPUT NAME="gender" TYPE=RADIO VALUE="male">
   <P>Female <INPUT NAME="gender" TYPE=RADIO VALUE="female">
   <P>Number in family: <INPUT NAME="family" TYPE=text>
   <P>Cities in which you maintain a residence:
   <UL>
   <LI>Kent <INPUT NAME="city" TYPE=checkbox VALUE="kent">
   <LI>Miami <INPUT NAME="city" TYPE=checkbox VALUE="miami">
   <LI>Other <TEXTAREA NAME="other" cols=48 rows=4></textarea>
   </UL>
   Nickname: <INPUT NAME="nickname" SIZE="42">
   <P>Thank you for responding to this questionnaire.
   <P><INPUT TYPE=SUBMIT> <INPUT TYPE=RESET>
   </FORM>




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   The initial state of the form data set is:

   name
           ""

   gender
           "male"

   family
           ""

   other
           ""

   nickname
           ""

   Note that the radio input has an initial value, while the
   checkbox has none.

   The user might edit the fields and request that the form be
   submitted. At that point, suppose the values are:

   name
           "John Doe"

   gender
           "male"

   family
           "5"

   city
           "kent"

   city
           "miami"

   other
           "abc\ndefk"

   nickname
           "J&D"

  The user agent then conducts an HTTP POST transaction using the URI
  `http://www.w3.org/sample'. The message body would be (ignore the
  line break):




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  name=John+Doe&gender=male&family=5&city=kent&city=miami&
  other=abc%0D%0Adef&nickname=J%26D

9. HTML Public Text

9.1. HTML DTD

  This is the Document Type Definition for the HyperText Markup
  Language, level 2.

<!--    html.dtd

       Document Type Definition for the HyperText Markup Language
                (HTML DTD)

       $Id: html.dtd,v 1.30 1995/09/21 23:30:19 connolly Exp $

       Author: Daniel W. Connolly <[email protected]>
       See Also: html.decl, html-1.dtd
         http://www.w3.org/hypertext/WWW/MarkUp/MarkUp.html
-->

<!ENTITY % HTML.Version
       "-//IETF//DTD HTML 2.0//EN"

       -- Typical usage:

           <!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//IETF//DTD HTML//EN">
           <html>
           ...
           </html>
       --
       >


<!--============ Feature Test Entities ========================-->

<!ENTITY % HTML.Recommended "IGNORE"
       -- Certain features of the language are necessary for
          compatibility with widespread usage, but they may
          compromise the structural integrity of a document.
          This feature test entity enables a more prescriptive
          document type definition that eliminates
          those features.
       -->

<![ %HTML.Recommended [
       <!ENTITY % HTML.Deprecated "IGNORE">



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]]>

<!ENTITY % HTML.Deprecated "INCLUDE"
       -- Certain features of the language are necessary for
          compatibility with earlier versions of the specification,
          but they tend to be used and implemented inconsistently,
          and their use is deprecated. This feature test entity
          enables a document type definition that eliminates
          these features.
       -->

<!ENTITY % HTML.Highlighting "INCLUDE"
       -- Use this feature test entity to validate that a
          document uses no highlighting tags, which may be
          ignored on minimal implementations.
       -->

<!ENTITY % HTML.Forms "INCLUDE"
       -- Use this feature test entity to validate that a document
          contains no forms, which may not be supported in minimal
          implementations
       -->

<!--============== Imported Names ==============================-->

<!ENTITY % Content-Type "CDATA"
       -- meaning an internet media type
          (aka MIME content type, as per RFC1521)
       -->

<!ENTITY % HTTP-Method "GET | POST"
       -- as per HTTP specification, in progress
       -->

<!--========= DTD "Macros" =====================-->

<!ENTITY % heading "H1|H2|H3|H4|H5|H6">

<!ENTITY % list " UL | OL | DIR | MENU " >


<!--======= Character mnemonic entities =================-->

<!ENTITY % ISOlat1 PUBLIC
 "ISO 8879-1986//ENTITIES Added Latin 1//EN//HTML">
%ISOlat1;

<!ENTITY amp CDATA "&#38;"     -- ampersand          -->



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<!ENTITY gt CDATA "&#62;"      -- greater than       -->
<!ENTITY lt CDATA "&#60;"      -- less than          -->
<!ENTITY quot CDATA "&#34;"    -- double quote       -->


<!--========= SGML Document Access (SDA) Parameter Entities =====-->

<!-- HTML 2.0 contains SGML Document Access (SDA) fixed attributes
in support of easy transformation to the International Committee
for Accessible Document Design (ICADD) DTD
        "-//EC-USA-CDA/ICADD//DTD ICADD22//EN".
ICADD applications are designed to support usable access to
structured information by print-impaired individuals through
Braille, large print and voice synthesis.  For more information on
SDA & ICADD:
       - ISO 12083:1993, Annex A.8, Facilities for Braille,
         large print and computer voice
       - ICADD ListServ
         <ICADD%[email protected]>
       - Usenet news group bit.listserv.easi
       - Recording for the Blind, +1 800 221 4792
-->

<!ENTITY % SDAFORM  "SDAFORM  CDATA  #FIXED"
         -- one to one mapping        -->
<!ENTITY % SDARULE  "SDARULE  CDATA  #FIXED"
         -- context-sensitive mapping -->
<!ENTITY % SDAPREF  "SDAPREF  CDATA  #FIXED"
         -- generated text prefix     -->
<!ENTITY % SDASUFF  "SDASUFF  CDATA  #FIXED"
         -- generated text suffix     -->
<!ENTITY % SDASUSP  "SDASUSP  NAME   #FIXED"
         -- suspend transform process -->


<!--========== Text Markup =====================-->

<![ %HTML.Highlighting [

<!ENTITY % font " TT | B | I ">

<!ENTITY % phrase "EM | STRONG | CODE | SAMP | KBD | VAR | CITE ">

<!ENTITY % text "#PCDATA | A | IMG | BR | %phrase | %font">

<!ELEMENT (%font;|%phrase) - - (%text)*>
<!ATTLIST ( TT | CODE | SAMP | KBD | VAR )
       %SDAFORM; "Lit"



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       >
<!ATTLIST ( B | STRONG )
       %SDAFORM; "B"
       >
<!ATTLIST ( I | EM | CITE )
       %SDAFORM; "It"
       >

<!-- <TT>       Typewriter text                         -->
<!-- <B>        Bold text                               -->
<!-- <I>        Italic text                             -->

<!-- <EM>       Emphasized phrase                       -->
<!-- <STRONG>   Strong emphasis                         -->
<!-- <CODE>     Source code phrase                      -->
<!-- <SAMP>     Sample text or characters               -->
<!-- <KBD>      Keyboard phrase, e.g. user input        -->
<!-- <VAR>      Variable phrase or substitutable        -->
<!-- <CITE>     Name or title of cited work             -->

<!ENTITY % pre.content "#PCDATA | A | HR | BR | %font | %phrase">

]]>

<!ENTITY % text "#PCDATA | A | IMG | BR">

<!ELEMENT BR    - O EMPTY>
<!ATTLIST BR
       %SDAPREF; "&#RE;"
       >

<!-- <BR>       Line break      -->


<!--========= Link Markup ======================-->

<!ENTITY % linkType "NAMES">

<!ENTITY % linkExtraAttributes
       "REL %linkType #IMPLIED
       REV %linkType #IMPLIED
       URN CDATA #IMPLIED
       TITLE CDATA #IMPLIED
       METHODS NAMES #IMPLIED
       ">

<![ %HTML.Recommended [
       <!ENTITY % A.content   "(%text)*"



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       -- <H1><a name="xxx">Heading</a></H1>
               is preferred to
          <a name="xxx"><H1>Heading</H1></a>
       -->
]]>

<!ENTITY % A.content   "(%heading|%text)*">

<!ELEMENT A     - - %A.content -(A)>
<!ATTLIST A
       HREF CDATA #IMPLIED
       NAME CDATA #IMPLIED
       %linkExtraAttributes;
       %SDAPREF; "<Anchor: #AttList>"
       >
<!-- <A>                Anchor; source/destination of link      -->
<!-- <A NAME="...">     Name of this anchor                     -->
<!-- <A HREF="...">     Address of link destination             -->
<!-- <A URN="...">      Permanent address of destination        -->
<!-- <A REL=...>        Relationship to destination             -->
<!-- <A REV=...>        Relationship of destination to this     -->
<!-- <A TITLE="...">    Title of destination (advisory)         -->
<!-- <A METHODS="...">  Operations on destination (advisory)    -->


<!--========== Images ==========================-->

<!ELEMENT IMG    - O EMPTY>
<!ATTLIST IMG
       SRC CDATA  #REQUIRED
       ALT CDATA #IMPLIED
       ALIGN (top|middle|bottom) #IMPLIED
       ISMAP (ISMAP) #IMPLIED
       %SDAPREF; "<Fig><?SDATrans Img: #AttList>#AttVal(Alt)</Fig>"
       >

<!-- <IMG>              Image; icon, glyph or illustration      -->
<!-- <IMG SRC="...">    Address of image object                 -->
<!-- <IMG ALT="...">    Textual alternative                     -->
<!-- <IMG ALIGN=...>    Position relative to text               -->
<!-- <IMG ISMAP>        Each pixel can be a link                -->

<!--========== Paragraphs=======================-->

<!ELEMENT P     - O (%text)*>
<!ATTLIST P
       %SDAFORM; "Para"
       >



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RFC 1866            Hypertext Markup Language - 2.0        November 1995


<!-- <P>        Paragraph       -->


<!--========== Headings, Titles, Sections ===============-->

<!ELEMENT HR    - O EMPTY>
<!ATTLIST HR
       %SDAPREF; "&#RE;&#RE;"
       >

<!-- <HR>       Horizontal rule -->

<!ELEMENT ( %heading )  - -  (%text;)*>
<!ATTLIST H1
       %SDAFORM; "H1"
       >
<!ATTLIST H2
       %SDAFORM; "H2"
       >
<!ATTLIST H3
       %SDAFORM; "H3"
       >
<!ATTLIST H4
       %SDAFORM; "H4"
       >
<!ATTLIST H5
       %SDAFORM; "H5"
       >
<!ATTLIST H6
       %SDAFORM; "H6"
       >

<!-- <H1>       Heading, level 1 -->
<!-- <H2>       Heading, level 2 -->
<!-- <H3>       Heading, level 3 -->
<!-- <H4>       Heading, level 4 -->
<!-- <H5>       Heading, level 5 -->
<!-- <H6>       Heading, level 6 -->


<!--========== Text Flows ======================-->

<![ %HTML.Forms [
       <!ENTITY % block.forms "BLOCKQUOTE | FORM | ISINDEX">
]]>

<!ENTITY % block.forms "BLOCKQUOTE">




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RFC 1866            Hypertext Markup Language - 2.0        November 1995


<![ %HTML.Deprecated [
       <!ENTITY % preformatted "PRE | XMP | LISTING">
]]>

<!ENTITY % preformatted "PRE">

<!ENTITY % block "P | %list | DL
       | %preformatted
       | %block.forms">

<!ENTITY % flow "(%text|%block)*">

<!ENTITY % pre.content "#PCDATA | A | HR | BR">
<!ELEMENT PRE - - (%pre.content)*>
<!ATTLIST PRE
       WIDTH NUMBER #implied
       %SDAFORM; "Lit"
       >

<!-- <PRE>              Preformatted text               -->
<!-- <PRE WIDTH=...>    Maximum characters per line     -->

<![ %HTML.Deprecated [

<!ENTITY % literal "CDATA"
       -- historical, non-conforming parsing mode where
          the only markup signal is the end tag
          in full
       -->

<!ELEMENT (XMP|LISTING) - -  %literal>
<!ATTLIST XMP
       %SDAFORM; "Lit"
       %SDAPREF; "Example:&#RE;"
       >
<!ATTLIST LISTING
       %SDAFORM; "Lit"
       %SDAPREF; "Listing:&#RE;"
       >

<!-- <XMP>              Example section         -->
<!-- <LISTING>          Computer listing        -->

<!ELEMENT PLAINTEXT - O %literal>
<!-- <PLAINTEXT>        Plain text passage      -->

<!ATTLIST PLAINTEXT
       %SDAFORM; "Lit"



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RFC 1866            Hypertext Markup Language - 2.0        November 1995


       >
]]>

<!--========== Lists ==================-->

<!ELEMENT DL    - -  (DT | DD)+>
<!ATTLIST DL
       COMPACT (COMPACT) #IMPLIED
       %SDAFORM; "List"
       %SDAPREF; "Definition List:"
       >

<!ELEMENT DT    - O (%text)*>
<!ATTLIST DT
       %SDAFORM; "Term"
       >

<!ELEMENT DD    - O %flow>
<!ATTLIST DD
       %SDAFORM; "LItem"
       >

<!-- <DL>               Definition list, or glossary    -->
<!-- <DL COMPACT>       Compact style list              -->
<!-- <DT>               Term in definition list         -->
<!-- <DD>               Definition of term              -->

<!ELEMENT (OL|UL) - -  (LI)+>
<!ATTLIST OL
       COMPACT (COMPACT) #IMPLIED
       %SDAFORM; "List"
       >
<!ATTLIST UL
       COMPACT (COMPACT) #IMPLIED
       %SDAFORM; "List"
       >
<!-- <UL>               Unordered list                  -->
<!-- <UL COMPACT>       Compact list style              -->
<!-- <OL>               Ordered, or numbered list       -->
<!-- <OL COMPACT>       Compact list style              -->


<!ELEMENT (DIR|MENU) - -  (LI)+ -(%block)>
<!ATTLIST DIR
       COMPACT (COMPACT) #IMPLIED
       %SDAFORM; "List"
       %SDAPREF; "<LHead>Directory</LHead>"
       >



Berners-Lee & Connolly      Standards Track                    [Page 56]

RFC 1866            Hypertext Markup Language - 2.0        November 1995


<!ATTLIST MENU
       COMPACT (COMPACT) #IMPLIED
       %SDAFORM; "List"
       %SDAPREF; "<LHead>Menu</LHead>"
       >

<!-- <DIR>              Directory list                  -->
<!-- <DIR COMPACT>      Compact list style              -->
<!-- <MENU>             Menu list                       -->
<!-- <MENU COMPACT>     Compact list style              -->

<!ELEMENT LI    - O %flow>
<!ATTLIST LI
       %SDAFORM; "LItem"
       >

<!-- <LI>               List item                       -->

<!--========== Document Body ===================-->

<![ %HTML.Recommended [
       <!ENTITY % body.content "(%heading|%block|HR|ADDRESS|IMG)*"
       -- <h1>Heading</h1>
          <p>Text ...
               is preferred to
          <h1>Heading</h1>
          Text ...
       -->
]]>

<!ENTITY % body.content "(%heading | %text | %block |
                                HR | ADDRESS)*">

<!ELEMENT BODY O O  %body.content>

<!-- <BODY>     Document body   -->

<!ELEMENT BLOCKQUOTE - - %body.content>
<!ATTLIST BLOCKQUOTE
       %SDAFORM; "BQ"
       >

<!-- <BLOCKQUOTE>       Quoted passage  -->

<!ELEMENT ADDRESS - - (%text|P)*>
<!ATTLIST  ADDRESS
       %SDAFORM; "Lit"
       %SDAPREF; "Address:&#RE;"



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RFC 1866            Hypertext Markup Language - 2.0        November 1995


       >

<!-- <ADDRESS>  Address, signature, or byline   -->


<!--======= Forms ====================-->

<![ %HTML.Forms [

<!ELEMENT FORM - - %body.content -(FORM) +(INPUT|SELECT|TEXTAREA)>
<!ATTLIST FORM
       ACTION CDATA #IMPLIED
       METHOD (%HTTP-Method) GET
       ENCTYPE %Content-Type; "application/x-www-form-urlencoded"
       %SDAPREF; "<Para>Form:</Para>"
       %SDASUFF; "<Para>Form End.</Para>"
       >

<!-- <FORM>                     Fill-out or data-entry form     -->
<!-- <FORM ACTION="...">        Address for completed form      -->
<!-- <FORM METHOD=...>          Method of submitting form       -->
<!-- <FORM ENCTYPE="...">       Representation of form data     -->

<!ENTITY % InputType "(TEXT | PASSWORD | CHECKBOX |
                       RADIO | SUBMIT | RESET |
                       IMAGE | HIDDEN )">
<!ELEMENT INPUT - O EMPTY>
<!ATTLIST INPUT
       TYPE %InputType TEXT
       NAME CDATA #IMPLIED
       VALUE CDATA #IMPLIED
       SRC CDATA #IMPLIED
       CHECKED (CHECKED) #IMPLIED
       SIZE CDATA #IMPLIED
       MAXLENGTH NUMBER #IMPLIED
       ALIGN (top|middle|bottom) #IMPLIED
       %SDAPREF; "Input: "
       >

<!-- <INPUT>                    Form input datum                -->
<!-- <INPUT TYPE=...>           Type of input interaction       -->
<!-- <INPUT NAME=...>           Name of form datum              -->
<!-- <INPUT VALUE="...">        Default/initial/selected value  -->
<!-- <INPUT SRC="...">          Address of image                -->
<!-- <INPUT CHECKED>            Initial state is "on"           -->
<!-- <INPUT SIZE=...>           Field size hint                 -->
<!-- <INPUT MAXLENGTH=...>      Data length maximum             -->
<!-- <INPUT ALIGN=...>          Image alignment                 -->



Berners-Lee & Connolly      Standards Track                    [Page 58]

RFC 1866            Hypertext Markup Language - 2.0        November 1995


<!ELEMENT SELECT - - (OPTION+) -(INPUT|SELECT|TEXTAREA)>
<!ATTLIST SELECT
       NAME CDATA #REQUIRED
       SIZE NUMBER #IMPLIED
       MULTIPLE (MULTIPLE) #IMPLIED
       %SDAFORM; "List"
       %SDAPREF;
       "<LHead>Select #AttVal(Multiple)</LHead>"
       >

<!-- <SELECT>                   Selection of option(s)          -->
<!-- <SELECT NAME=...>          Name of form datum              -->
<!-- <SELECT SIZE=...>          Options displayed at a time     -->
<!-- <SELECT MULTIPLE>          Multiple selections allowed     -->

<!ELEMENT OPTION - O (#PCDATA)*>
<!ATTLIST OPTION
       SELECTED (SELECTED) #IMPLIED
       VALUE CDATA #IMPLIED
       %SDAFORM; "LItem"
       %SDAPREF;
       "Option: #AttVal(Value) #AttVal(Selected)"
       >

<!-- <OPTION>                   A selection option              -->
<!-- <OPTION SELECTED>          Initial state                   -->
<!-- <OPTION VALUE="...">       Form datum value for this option-->

<!ELEMENT TEXTAREA - - (#PCDATA)* -(INPUT|SELECT|TEXTAREA)>
<!ATTLIST TEXTAREA
       NAME CDATA #REQUIRED
       ROWS NUMBER #REQUIRED
       COLS NUMBER #REQUIRED
       %SDAFORM; "Para"
       %SDAPREF; "Input Text -- #AttVal(Name): "
       >

<!-- <TEXTAREA>                 An area for text input          -->
<!-- <TEXTAREA NAME=...>        Name of form datum              -->
<!-- <TEXTAREA ROWS=...>        Height of area                  -->
<!-- <TEXTAREA COLS=...>        Width of area                   -->

]]>


<!--======= Document Head ======================-->

<![ %HTML.Recommended [



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RFC 1866            Hypertext Markup Language - 2.0        November 1995


       <!ENTITY % head.extra "">
]]>
<!ENTITY % head.extra "& NEXTID?">

<!ENTITY % head.content "TITLE & ISINDEX? & BASE? %head.extra">

<!ELEMENT HEAD O O  (%head.content) +(META|LINK)>

<!-- <HEAD>     Document head   -->

<!ELEMENT TITLE - -  (#PCDATA)*  -(META|LINK)>
<!ATTLIST TITLE
       %SDAFORM; "Ti"    >

<!-- <TITLE>    Title of document -->

<!ELEMENT LINK - O EMPTY>
<!ATTLIST LINK
       HREF CDATA #REQUIRED
       %linkExtraAttributes;
       %SDAPREF; "Linked to : #AttVal (TITLE) (URN) (HREF)>"    >

<!-- <LINK>             Link from this document                 -->
<!-- <LINK HREF="...">  Address of link destination             -->
<!-- <LINK URN="...">   Lasting name of destination             -->
<!-- <LINK REL=...>     Relationship to destination             -->
<!-- <LINK REV=...>     Relationship of destination to this     -->
<!-- <LINK TITLE="..."> Title of destination (advisory)         -->
<!-- <LINK METHODS="..."> Operations allowed (advisory)         -->

<!ELEMENT ISINDEX - O EMPTY>
<!ATTLIST ISINDEX
       %SDAPREF;
  "<Para>[Document is indexed/searchable.]</Para>">

<!-- <ISINDEX>          Document is a searchable index          -->

<!ELEMENT BASE - O EMPTY>
<!ATTLIST BASE
       HREF CDATA #REQUIRED     >

<!-- <BASE>             Base context document                   -->
<!-- <BASE HREF="...">  Address for this document               -->

<!ELEMENT NEXTID - O EMPTY>
<!ATTLIST NEXTID
       N CDATA #REQUIRED     >




Berners-Lee & Connolly      Standards Track                    [Page 60]

RFC 1866            Hypertext Markup Language - 2.0        November 1995


<!-- <NEXTID>           Next ID to use for link name            -->
<!-- <NEXTID N=...>     Next ID to use for link name            -->

<!ELEMENT META - O EMPTY>
<!ATTLIST META
       HTTP-EQUIV  NAME    #IMPLIED
       NAME        NAME    #IMPLIED
       CONTENT     CDATA   #REQUIRED    >

<!-- <META>                     Generic Meta-information        -->
<!-- <META HTTP-EQUIV=...>      HTTP response header name       -->
<!-- <META NAME=...>            Meta-information name           -->
<!-- <META CONTENT="...">       Associated information          -->

<!--======= Document Structure =================-->

<![ %HTML.Deprecated [
       <!ENTITY % html.content "HEAD, BODY, PLAINTEXT?">
]]>
<!ENTITY % html.content "HEAD, BODY">

<!ELEMENT HTML O O  (%html.content)>
<!ENTITY % version.attr "VERSION CDATA #FIXED '%HTML.Version;'">

<!ATTLIST HTML
       %version.attr;
       %SDAFORM; "Book"
       >

<!-- <HTML>                     HTML Document   -->

9.2. Strict HTML DTD

  This document type declaration refers to the HTML DTD with the
  `HTML.Recommended' entity defined as `INCLUDE' rather than IGNORE;
  that is, it refers to the more structurally rigid definition of HTML.

<!--    html-s.dtd

       Document Type Definition for the HyperText Markup Language
       with strict validation (HTML Strict DTD).

       $Id: html-s.dtd,v 1.3 1995/06/02 18:55:46 connolly Exp $

       Author: Daniel W. Connolly <[email protected]>
       See Also: http://www.w3.org/hypertext/WWW/MarkUp/MarkUp.html
-->




Berners-Lee & Connolly      Standards Track                    [Page 61]

RFC 1866            Hypertext Markup Language - 2.0        November 1995


<!ENTITY % HTML.Version
       "-//IETF//DTD HTML 2.0 Strict//EN"

       -- Typical usage:

           <!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC
               "-//IETF//DTD HTML Strict//EN">
           <html>
           ...
           </html>
       --
       >

<!-- Feature Test Entities -->
<!ENTITY % HTML.Recommended "INCLUDE">

<!ENTITY % html PUBLIC "-//IETF//DTD HTML 2.0//EN">
%html;

9.3. Level 1 HTML DTD

  This document type declaration refers to the HTML DTD with the
  `HTML.Forms' entity defined as `IGNORE' rather than `INCLUDE'.
  Documents which contain <FORM> elements do not conform to this DTD,
  and must use the level 2 DTD.

<!--    html-1.dtd

       Document Type Definition for the HyperText Markup Language
       with Level 1 Extensions (HTML Level 1 DTD).

       $Id: html-1.dtd,v 1.2 1995/03/29 18:53:10 connolly Exp $

       Author: Daniel W. Connolly <[email protected]>
       See Also: http://info.cern.ch/hypertext/WWW/MarkUp/MarkUp.html

-->

<!ENTITY % HTML.Version
       "-//IETF//DTD HTML 2.0 Level 1//EN"

       -- Typical usage:

           <!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC
               "-//IETF//DTD HTML Level 1//EN">
           <html>
           ...
           </html>



Berners-Lee & Connolly      Standards Track                    [Page 62]

RFC 1866            Hypertext Markup Language - 2.0        November 1995


       --
       >

<!-- Feature Test Entities -->
<!ENTITY % HTML.Forms "IGNORE">

<!ENTITY % html PUBLIC "-//IETF//DTD HTML 2.0//EN">
%html;

9.4. Strict Level 1 HTML DTD

  This document type declaration refers to the level 1 HTML DTD with
  the `HTML.Recommended' entity defined as `INCLUDE' rather than
  IGNORE; that is, it refers to the more structurally rigid definition
  of HTML.

<!--    html-1s.dtd

       Document Type Definition for the HyperText Markup Language
       Struct Level 1

       $Id: html-1s.dtd,v 1.3 1995/06/02 18:55:43 connolly Exp $

       Author: Daniel W. Connolly <[email protected]>
       See Also: http://www.w3.org/hypertext/WWW/MarkUp/MarkUp.html
-->

<!ENTITY % HTML.Version
       "-//IETF//DTD HTML 2.0 Strict Level 1//EN"

       -- Typical usage:

           <!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC
               "-//IETF//DTD HTML Strict Level 1//EN">
           <html>
           ...
           </html>
       --
       >

<!-- Feature Test Entities -->


<!ENTITY % HTML.Recommended "INCLUDE">

<!ENTITY % html-1 PUBLIC "-//IETF//DTD HTML 2.0 Level 1//EN">
%html-1;




Berners-Lee & Connolly      Standards Track                    [Page 63]

RFC 1866            Hypertext Markup Language - 2.0        November 1995


9.5. SGML Declaration for HTML

  This is the SGML Declaration for HyperText Markup Language.

<!SGML  "ISO 8879:1986"
--
       SGML Declaration for HyperText Markup Language (HTML).

--

CHARSET
        BASESET  "ISO 646:1983//CHARSET
                  International Reference Version
                  (IRV)//ESC 2/5 4/0"
        DESCSET  0   9   UNUSED
                 9   2   9
                 11  2   UNUSED
                 13  1   13
                 14  18  UNUSED
                 32  95  32
                 127 1   UNUSED
    BASESET   "ISO Registration Number 100//CHARSET
               ECMA-94 Right Part of
               Latin Alphabet Nr. 1//ESC 2/13 4/1"

        DESCSET  128  32   UNUSED
                 160  96    32

CAPACITY        SGMLREF
               TOTALCAP        150000
               GRPCAP          150000
               ENTCAP          150000

SCOPE    DOCUMENT
SYNTAX
        SHUNCHAR CONTROLS 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16
                17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 127
        BASESET  "ISO 646:1983//CHARSET
                  International Reference Version
                  (IRV)//ESC 2/5 4/0"
        DESCSET  0 128 0
        FUNCTION
                 RE          13
                 RS          10
                 SPACE       32
                 TAB SEPCHAR  9
        NAMING   LCNMSTRT ""
                 UCNMSTRT ""



Berners-Lee & Connolly      Standards Track                    [Page 64]

RFC 1866            Hypertext Markup Language - 2.0        November 1995


                 LCNMCHAR ".-"
                 UCNMCHAR ".-"
                 NAMECASE GENERAL YES
                          ENTITY  NO
        DELIM    GENERAL  SGMLREF
                 SHORTREF SGMLREF
        NAMES    SGMLREF
        QUANTITY SGMLREF
                 ATTSPLEN 2100
                 LITLEN   1024
                 NAMELEN  72    -- somewhat arbitrary; taken from
                               internet line length conventions --
                 PILEN    1024
                 TAGLVL   100
                 TAGLEN   2100
                 GRPGTCNT 150
                 GRPCNT   64

FEATURES
 MINIMIZE
   DATATAG  NO
   OMITTAG  YES
   RANK     NO
   SHORTTAG YES
 LINK
   SIMPLE   NO
   IMPLICIT NO
   EXPLICIT NO
 OTHER
   CONCUR   NO
   SUBDOC   NO
   FORMAL   YES
 APPINFO    "SDA"  -- conforming SGML Document Access application
                   --
>
<!--
       $Id: html.decl,v 1.17 1995/06/08 14:59:32 connolly Exp $

       Author: Daniel W. Connolly <[email protected]>

       See also: http://www.w3.org/hypertext/WWW/MarkUp/MarkUp.html
-->

9.6. Sample SGML Open Entity Catalog for HTML

  The SGML standard describes an "entity manager" as the portion or
  component of an SGML system that maps SGML entities into the actual
  storage model (e.g., the file system). The standard itself does not



Berners-Lee & Connolly      Standards Track                    [Page 65]

RFC 1866            Hypertext Markup Language - 2.0        November 1995


  define a particular mapping methodology or notation.

  To assist the interoperability among various SGML tools and systems,
  the SGML Open consortium has passed a technical resolution that
  defines a format for an application-independent entity catalog that
  maps external identifiers and/or entity names to file names.

  Each entry in the catalog associates a storage object identifier
  (such as a file name) with information about the external entity that
  appears in the SGML document. In addition to entries that associate
  public identifiers, a catalog entry can associate an entity name with
  a storage object identifier. For example, the following are possible
  catalog entries:

       -- catalog: SGML Open style entity catalog for HTML --
       -- $Id: catalog,v 1.3 1995/09/21 23:30:23 connolly Exp $ --

       -- Ways to refer to Level 2: most general to most specific --
PUBLIC  "-//IETF//DTD HTML//EN"                 html.dtd
PUBLIC  "-//IETF//DTD HTML 2.0//EN"             html.dtd
PUBLIC  "-//IETF//DTD HTML Level 2//EN"         html.dtd
PUBLIC  "-//IETF//DTD HTML 2.0 Level 2//EN"     html.dtd

       -- Ways to refer to Level 1: most general to most specific --
PUBLIC  "-//IETF//DTD HTML Level 1//EN"         html-1.dtd
PUBLIC  "-//IETF//DTD HTML 2.0 Level 1//EN"     html-1.dtd

       -- Ways to refer to
                Strict Level 2: most general to most specific --
PUBLIC  "-//IETF//DTD HTML Strict//EN"                  html-s.dtd
PUBLIC  "-//IETF//DTD HTML 2.0 Strict//EN"              html-s.dtd
PUBLIC  "-//IETF//DTD HTML Strict Level 2//EN"          html-s.dtd
PUBLIC  "-//IETF//DTD HTML 2.0 Strict Level 2//EN"      html-s.dtd

       -- Ways to refer to
                Strict Level 1: most general to most specific --
PUBLIC  "-//IETF//DTD HTML Strict Level 1//EN"          html-1s.dtd
PUBLIC  "-//IETF//DTD HTML 2.0 Strict Level 1//EN"      html-1s.dtd

       -- ISO latin 1 entity set for HTML --
PUBLIC  "ISO 8879-1986//ENTITIES Added Latin 1//EN//HTML" ISOlat1\
sgml

9.7. Character Entity Sets

  The HTML DTD defines the following entities. They represent
  particular graphic characters which have special meanings in places
  in the markup, or may not be part of the character set available to



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  the writer.

9.7.1. Numeric and Special Graphic Entity Set

  The following table lists each of the characters included from the
  Numeric and Special Graphic entity set, along with its name, syntax
  for use, and description. This list is derived from `ISO Standard
  8879:1986//ENTITIES Numeric and Special Graphic//EN'.  However, HTML
  does not include for the entire entity set -- only the entities
  listed below are included.

   GLYPH   NAME    SYNTAX  DESCRIPTION
   <       lt      &lt;    Less than sign
   >       gt      &gt;    Greater than signn
   &       amp     &amp;   Ampersand
   "       quot    &quot;  Double quote sign

9.7.2. ISO Latin 1 Character Entity Set

  The following public text lists each of the characters specified in
  the Added Latin 1 entity set, along with its name, syntax for use,
  and description. This list is derived from ISO Standard
  8879:1986//ENTITIES Added Latin 1//EN. HTML includes the entire
  entity set.

<!-- (C) International Organization for Standardization 1986
    Permission to copy in any form is granted for use with
    conforming SGML systems and applications as defined in
    ISO 8879, provided this notice is included in all copies.
-->
<!-- Character entity set. Typical invocation:
    <!ENTITY % ISOlat1 PUBLIC
      "ISO 8879-1986//ENTITIES Added Latin 1//EN//HTML">
    %ISOlat1;
-->
<!--    Modified for use in HTML
       $Id: ISOlat1.sgml,v 1.2 1994/11/30 23:45:12 connolly Exp $ -->
<!ENTITY AElig  CDATA "&#198;" -- capital AE diphthong (ligature) -->
<!ENTITY Aacute CDATA "&#193;" -- capital A, acute accent -->
<!ENTITY Acirc  CDATA "&#194;" -- capital A, circumflex accent -->
<!ENTITY Agrave CDATA "&#192;" -- capital A, grave accent -->
<!ENTITY Aring  CDATA "&#197;" -- capital A, ring -->
<!ENTITY Atilde CDATA "&#195;" -- capital A, tilde -->
<!ENTITY Auml   CDATA "&#196;" -- capital A, dieresis or umlaut mark -->
<!ENTITY Ccedil CDATA "&#199;" -- capital C, cedilla -->
<!ENTITY ETH    CDATA "&#208;" -- capital Eth, Icelandic -->
<!ENTITY Eacute CDATA "&#201;" -- capital E, acute accent -->
<!ENTITY Ecirc  CDATA "&#202;" -- capital E, circumflex accent -->



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<!ENTITY Egrave CDATA "&#200;" -- capital E, grave accent -->
<!ENTITY Euml   CDATA "&#203;" -- capital E, dieresis or umlaut mark -->
<!ENTITY Iacute CDATA "&#205;" -- capital I, acute accent -->
<!ENTITY Icirc  CDATA "&#206;" -- capital I, circumflex accent -->
<!ENTITY Igrave CDATA "&#204;" -- capital I, grave accent -->
<!ENTITY Iuml   CDATA "&#207;" -- capital I, dieresis or umlaut mark -->
<!ENTITY Ntilde CDATA "&#209;" -- capital N, tilde -->
<!ENTITY Oacute CDATA "&#211;" -- capital O, acute accent -->
<!ENTITY Ocirc  CDATA "&#212;" -- capital O, circumflex accent -->
<!ENTITY Ograve CDATA "&#210;" -- capital O, grave accent -->
<!ENTITY Oslash CDATA "&#216;" -- capital O, slash -->
<!ENTITY Otilde CDATA "&#213;" -- capital O, tilde -->
<!ENTITY Ouml   CDATA "&#214;" -- capital O, dieresis or umlaut mark -->
<!ENTITY THORN  CDATA "&#222;" -- capital THORN, Icelandic -->
<!ENTITY Uacute CDATA "&#218;" -- capital U, acute accent -->
<!ENTITY Ucirc  CDATA "&#219;" -- capital U, circumflex accent -->
<!ENTITY Ugrave CDATA "&#217;" -- capital U, grave accent -->
<!ENTITY Uuml   CDATA "&#220;" -- capital U, dieresis or umlaut mark -->
<!ENTITY Yacute CDATA "&#221;" -- capital Y, acute accent -->
<!ENTITY aacute CDATA "&#225;" -- small a, acute accent -->
<!ENTITY acirc  CDATA "&#226;" -- small a, circumflex accent -->
<!ENTITY aelig  CDATA "&#230;" -- small ae diphthong (ligature) -->
<!ENTITY agrave CDATA "&#224;" -- small a, grave accent -->
<!ENTITY aring  CDATA "&#229;" -- small a, ring -->
<!ENTITY atilde CDATA "&#227;" -- small a, tilde -->
<!ENTITY auml   CDATA "&#228;" -- small a, dieresis or umlaut mark -->
<!ENTITY ccedil CDATA "&#231;" -- small c, cedilla -->
<!ENTITY eacute CDATA "&#233;" -- small e, acute accent -->
<!ENTITY ecirc  CDATA "&#234;" -- small e, circumflex accent -->
<!ENTITY egrave CDATA "&#232;" -- small e, grave accent -->
<!ENTITY eth    CDATA "&#240;" -- small eth, Icelandic -->
<!ENTITY euml   CDATA "&#235;" -- small e, dieresis or umlaut mark -->
<!ENTITY iacute CDATA "&#237;" -- small i, acute accent -->
<!ENTITY icirc  CDATA "&#238;" -- small i, circumflex accent -->
<!ENTITY igrave CDATA "&#236;" -- small i, grave accent -->
<!ENTITY iuml   CDATA "&#239;" -- small i, dieresis or umlaut mark -->
<!ENTITY ntilde CDATA "&#241;" -- small n, tilde -->
<!ENTITY oacute CDATA "&#243;" -- small o, acute accent -->
<!ENTITY ocirc  CDATA "&#244;" -- small o, circumflex accent -->
<!ENTITY ograve CDATA "&#242;" -- small o, grave accent -->
<!ENTITY oslash CDATA "&#248;" -- small o, slash -->
<!ENTITY otilde CDATA "&#245;" -- small o, tilde -->
<!ENTITY ouml   CDATA "&#246;" -- small o, dieresis or umlaut mark -->
<!ENTITY szlig  CDATA "&#223;" -- small sharp s, German (sz ligature)->
<!ENTITY thorn  CDATA "&#254;" -- small thorn, Icelandic -->
<!ENTITY uacute CDATA "&#250;" -- small u, acute accent -->
<!ENTITY ucirc  CDATA "&#251;" -- small u, circumflex accent -->
<!ENTITY ugrave CDATA "&#249;" -- small u, grave accent -->



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<!ENTITY uuml   CDATA "&#252;" -- small u, dieresis or umlaut mark -->
<!ENTITY yacute CDATA "&#253;" -- small y, acute accent -->
<!ENTITY yuml   CDATA "&#255;" -- small y, dieresis or umlaut mark -->

10. Security Considerations

  Anchors, embedded images, and all other elements which contain URIs
  as parameters may cause the URI to be dereferenced in response to
  user input. In this case, the security considerations of [URL] apply.

  The widely deployed methods for submitting forms requests -- HTTP and
  SMTP -- provide little assurance of confidentiality.  Information
  providers who request sensitive information via forms -- especially
  by way of the `PASSWORD' type input field (see 8.1.2, "Input Field:
  INPUT") -- should be aware and make their users aware of the lack of
  confidentiality.

11. References

   [URI]
           Berners-Lee, T., "Universal Resource Identifiers in WWW:
           A Unifying Syntax for the Expression of Names and
           Addresses of Objects on the Network as used in the
           World- Wide Web",  RFC 1630, CERN, June 1994.
           <URL:ftp://ds.internic.net/rfc/rfc1630.txt>

   [URL]
           Berners-Lee, T., Masinter, L., and M. McCahill, "Uniform
           Resource Locators (URL)", RFC 1738, CERN, Xerox PARC,
           University of Minnesota, December 1994.
           <URL:ftp://ds.internic.net/rfc/rfc1738.txt>

   [HTTP]
           Berners-Lee, T., Fielding, R., and H. Frystyk Nielsen,
           "Hypertext Transfer Protocol - HTTP/1.0", Work in
           Progress, MIT, UC Irvine, CERN, March 1995.

   [MIME]
           Borenstein, N., and N. Freed. "MIME (Multipurpose
           Internet Mail Extensions) Part One: Mechanisms for
           Specifying and Describing the Format of Internet Message
           Bodies", RFC 1521, Bellcore, Innosoft, September 1993.
           <URL:ftp://ds.internic.net/rfc/rfc1521.txt>

   [RELURL]
           Fielding, R., "Relative Uniform Resource Locators", RFC
           1808, June 1995
           <URL:ftp://ds.internic.net/rfc/rfc1808.txt>



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RFC 1866            Hypertext Markup Language - 2.0        November 1995


   [GOLD90]
           Goldfarb, C., "The SGML Handbook", Y. Rubinsky, Ed.,
           Oxford University Press, 1990.

   [DEXTER]
           Frank Halasz and Mayer Schwartz, "The Dexter Hypertext
           Reference Model", Communications of the ACM, pp.
           30-39, vol. 37 no. 2, Feb 1994.

   [IMEDIA]
           Postel, J., "Media Type Registration Procedure",
           RFC 1590, USC/Information Sciences Institute, March 1994.
           <URL:ftp://ds.internic.net/rfc/rfc1590.txt>

   [IANA]
           Reynolds, J., and J. Postel, "Assigned Numbers", STD 2,
           RFC 1700, USC/Information Sciecnes Institute, October
           1994.  <URL:ftp://ds.internic.net/rfc/rfc1700.txt>

   [SQ91]
           SoftQuad. "The SGML Primer", 3rd ed., SoftQuad Inc.,
           1991. <URL:http://www.sq.com/>

   [ISO-646]
           ISO/IEC 646:1991 Information technology -- ISO 7-bit
           coded character set for information interchange
           <URL:http://www.iso.ch/cate/d4777.html>

   [ISO-10646]
           ISO/IEC 10646-1:1993 Information technology -- Universal
           Multiple-Octet Coded Character Set (UCS) -- Part 1:
           Architecture and Basic Multilingual Plane
           <URL:http://www.iso.ch/cate/d18741.html>

   [ISO-8859-1]
           ISO 8859. International Standard -- Information
           Processing -- 8-bit Single-Byte Coded Graphic Character
           Sets -- Part 1: Latin Alphabet No. 1, ISO 8859-1:1987.
           <URL:http://www.iso.ch/cate/d16338.html>

   [SGML]
           ISO 8879. Information Processing -- Text and Office
           Systems - Standard Generalized Markup Language (SGML),
           1986. <URL:http://www.iso.ch/cate/d16387.html>







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12. Acknowledgments

  The HTML document type was designed by Tim Berners-Lee at CERN as
  part of the 1990 World Wide Web project. In 1992, Dan Connolly wrote
  the HTML Document Type Definition (DTD) and a brief HTML
  specification.

  Since 1993, a wide variety of Internet participants have contributed
  to the evolution of HTML, which has included the addition of in-line
  images introduced by the NCSA Mosaic software for WWW. Dave Raggett
  played an important role in deriving the forms material from the
  HTML+ specification.

  Dan Connolly and Karen Olson Muldrow rewrote the HTML Specification
  in 1994. The document was then edited by the HTML working group as a
  whole, with updates being made by Eric Schieler, Mike Knezovich, and
  Eric W. Sink at Spyglass, Inc.  Finally, Roy Fielding restructured
  the entire draft into its current form.

  Special thanks to the many active participants in the HTML working
  group, too numerous to list individually, without whom there would be
  no standards process and no standard. That this document approaches
  its objective of carefully converging a description of current
  practice and formalization of HTML's relationship to SGML is a
  tribute to their effort.

12.1. Authors' Addresses

  Tim Berners-Lee
  Director, W3 Consortium
  MIT Laboratory for Computer Science
  545 Technology Square
  Cambridge, MA 02139, U.S.A.

  Phone: +1 (617) 253 9670
  Fax: +1 (617) 258 8682
  EMail: [email protected]


  Daniel W. Connolly
  Research Technical Staff, W3 Consortium
  MIT Laboratory for Computer Science
  545 Technology Square
  Cambridge, MA 02139, U.S.A.

  Phone: +1 (617) 258 8682
  EMail: [email protected]
  URI: http://www.w3.org/hypertext/WWW/People/Connolly/



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13. The HTML Coded Character Set

  This list details the code positions and characters of the HTML
  document character set, specified in 9.5, "SGML Declaration for
  HTML". This coded character set is based on [ISO-8859-1].

   REFERENCE       DESCRIPTION
   --------------  -----------
   &#00; - &#08;   Unused
   &#09;           Horizontal tab
   &#10;           Line feed
   &#11; - &#12;   Unused
   &#13;           Carriage Return
   &#14; - &#31;   Unused
   &#32;           Space
   &#33;           Exclamation mark
   &#34;           Quotation mark
   &#35;           Number sign
   &#36;           Dollar sign
   &#37;           Percent sign
   &#38;           Ampersand
   &#39;           Apostrophe
   &#40;           Left parenthesis
   &#41;           Right parenthesis
   &#42;           Asterisk
   &#43;           Plus sign
   &#44;           Comma
   &#45;           Hyphen
   &#46;           Period (fullstop)
   &#47;           Solidus (slash)
   &#48; - &#57;   Digits 0-9
   &#58;           Colon
   &#59;           Semi-colon
   &#60;           Less than
   &#61;           Equals sign
   &#62;           Greater than
   &#63;           Question mark
   &#64;           Commercial at
   &#65; - &#90;   Letters A-Z
   &#91;           Left square bracket
   &#92;           Reverse solidus (backslash)
   &#93;           Right square bracket
   &#94;           Caret
   &#95;           Horizontal bar (underscore)
   &#96;           Acute accent
   &#97; - &#122;  Letters a-z
   &#123;          Left curly brace
   &#124;          Vertical bar



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   &#125;          Right curly brace
   &#126;          Tilde
   &#127; - &#159; Unused
   &#160;          Non-breaking Space
   &#161;          Inverted exclamation
   &#162;          Cent sign
   &#163;          Pound sterling
   &#164;          General currency sign
   &#165;          Yen sign
   &#166;          Broken vertical bar
   &#167;          Section sign
   &#168;          Umlaut (dieresis)
   &#169;          Copyright
   &#170;          Feminine ordinal
   &#171;          Left angle quote, guillemotleft
   &#172;          Not sign
   &#173;          Soft hyphen
   &#174;          Registered trademark
   &#175;          Macron accent
   &#176;          Degree sign
   &#177;          Plus or minus
   &#178;          Superscript two
   &#179;          Superscript three
   &#180;          Acute accent
   &#181;          Micro sign
   &#182;          Paragraph sign
   &#183;          Middle dot
   &#184;          Cedilla
   &#185;          Superscript one
   &#186;          Masculine ordinal
   &#187;          Right angle quote, guillemotright
   &#188;          Fraction one-fourth
   &#189;          Fraction one-half
   &#190;          Fraction three-fourths
   &#191;          Inverted question mark
   &#192;          Capital A, grave accent
   &#193;          Capital A, acute accent
   &#194;          Capital A, circumflex accent
   &#195;          Capital A, tilde
   &#196;          Capital A, dieresis or umlaut mark
   &#197;          Capital A, ring
   &#198;          Capital AE dipthong (ligature)
   &#199;          Capital C, cedilla
   &#200;          Capital E, grave accent
   &#201;          Capital E, acute accent
   &#202;          Capital E, circumflex accent
   &#203;          Capital E, dieresis or umlaut mark
   &#204;          Capital I, grave accent



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   &#205;          Capital I, acute accent
   &#206;          Capital I, circumflex accent
   &#207;          Capital I, dieresis or umlaut mark
   &#208;          Capital Eth, Icelandic
   &#209;          Capital N, tilde
   &#210;          Capital O, grave accent
   &#211;          Capital O, acute accent
   &#212;          Capital O, circumflex accent
   &#213;          Capital O, tilde
   &#214;          Capital O, dieresis or umlaut mark
   &#215;          Multiply sign
   &#216;          Capital O, slash
   &#217;          Capital U, grave accent
   &#218;          Capital U, acute accent
   &#219;          Capital U, circumflex accent
   &#220;          Capital U, dieresis or umlaut mark
   &#221;          Capital Y, acute accent
   &#222;          Capital THORN, Icelandic
   &#223;          Small sharp s, German (sz ligature)
   &#224;          Small a, grave accent
   &#225;          Small a, acute accent
   &#226;          Small a, circumflex accent
   &#227;          Small a, tilde
   &#228;          Small a, dieresis or umlaut mark
   &#229;          Small a, ring
   &#230;          Small ae dipthong (ligature)
   &#231;          Small c, cedilla
   &#232;          Small e, grave accent
   &#233;          Small e, acute accent
   &#234;          Small e, circumflex accent
   &#235;          Small e, dieresis or umlaut mark
   &#236;          Small i, grave accent
   &#237;          Small i, acute accent
   &#238;          Small i, circumflex accent
   &#239;          Small i, dieresis or umlaut mark
   &#240;          Small eth, Icelandic
   &#241;          Small n, tilde
   &#242;          Small o, grave accent
   &#243;          Small o, acute accent
   &#244;          Small o, circumflex accent
   &#245;          Small o, tilde
   &#246;          Small o, dieresis or umlaut mark
   &#247;          Division sign
   &#248;          Small o, slash
   &#249;          Small u, grave accent
   &#250;          Small u, acute accent
   &#251;          Small u, circumflex accent
   &#252;          Small u, dieresis or umlaut mark



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   &#253;          Small y, acute accent
   &#254;          Small thorn, Icelandic
   &#255;          Small y, dieresis or umlaut mark

14. Proposed Entities

  The HTML DTD references the "Added Latin 1" entity set, which only
  supplies named entities for a subset of the non-ASCII characters in
  [ISO-8859-1], namely the accented characters. The following entities
  should be supported so that all ISO 8859-1 characters may only be
  referenced symbolically. The names for these entities are taken from
  the appendixes of [SGML].

   <!ENTITY nbsp   CDATA "&#160;" -- no-break space -->
   <!ENTITY iexcl  CDATA "&#161;" -- inverted exclamation mark -->
   <!ENTITY cent   CDATA "&#162;" -- cent sign -->
   <!ENTITY pound  CDATA "&#163;" -- pound sterling sign -->
   <!ENTITY curren CDATA "&#164;" -- general currency sign -->
   <!ENTITY yen    CDATA "&#165;" -- yen sign -->
   <!ENTITY brvbar CDATA "&#166;" -- broken (vertical) bar -->
   <!ENTITY sect   CDATA "&#167;" -- section sign -->
   <!ENTITY uml    CDATA "&#168;" -- umlaut (dieresis) -->
   <!ENTITY copy   CDATA "&#169;" -- copyright sign -->
   <!ENTITY ordf   CDATA "&#170;" -- ordinal indicator, feminine -->
   <!ENTITY laquo  CDATA "&#171;" -- angle quotation mark, left -->
   <!ENTITY not    CDATA "&#172;" -- not sign -->
   <!ENTITY shy    CDATA "&#173;" -- soft hyphen -->
   <!ENTITY reg    CDATA "&#174;" -- registered sign -->
   <!ENTITY macr   CDATA "&#175;" -- macron -->
   <!ENTITY deg    CDATA "&#176;" -- degree sign -->
   <!ENTITY plusmn CDATA "&#177;" -- plus-or-minus sign -->
   <!ENTITY sup2   CDATA "&#178;" -- superscript two -->
   <!ENTITY sup3   CDATA "&#179;" -- superscript three -->
   <!ENTITY acute  CDATA "&#180;" -- acute accent -->
   <!ENTITY micro  CDATA "&#181;" -- micro sign -->
   <!ENTITY para   CDATA "&#182;" -- pilcrow (paragraph sign) -->
   <!ENTITY middot CDATA "&#183;" -- middle dot -->
   <!ENTITY cedil  CDATA "&#184;" -- cedilla -->
   <!ENTITY sup1   CDATA "&#185;" -- superscript one -->
   <!ENTITY ordm   CDATA "&#186;" -- ordinal indicator, masculine -->
   <!ENTITY raquo  CDATA "&#187;" -- angle quotation mark, right -->
   <!ENTITY frac14 CDATA "&#188;" -- fraction one-quarter -->
   <!ENTITY frac12 CDATA "&#189;" -- fraction one-half -->
   <!ENTITY frac34 CDATA "&#190;" -- fraction three-quarters -->
   <!ENTITY iquest CDATA "&#191;" -- inverted question mark -->
   <!ENTITY Agrave CDATA "&#192;" -- capital A, grave accent -->
   <!ENTITY Aacute CDATA "&#193;" -- capital A, acute accent -->
   <!ENTITY Acirc  CDATA "&#194;" -- capital A, circumflex accent -->



Berners-Lee & Connolly      Standards Track                    [Page 75]

RFC 1866            Hypertext Markup Language - 2.0        November 1995


   <!ENTITY Atilde CDATA "&#195;" -- capital A, tilde -->
   <!ENTITY Auml   CDATA "&#196;" -- capital A, dieresis or umlaut mark -->
   <!ENTITY Aring  CDATA "&#197;" -- capital A, ring -->
   <!ENTITY AElig  CDATA "&#198;" -- capital AE diphthong (ligature) -->
   <!ENTITY Ccedil CDATA "&#199;" -- capital C, cedilla -->
   <!ENTITY Egrave CDATA "&#200;" -- capital E, grave accent -->
   <!ENTITY Eacute CDATA "&#201;" -- capital E, acute accent -->
   <!ENTITY Ecirc  CDATA "&#202;" -- capital E, circumflex accent -->
   <!ENTITY Euml   CDATA "&#203;" -- capital E, dieresis or umlaut mark -->
   <!ENTITY Igrave CDATA "&#204;" -- capital I, grave accent -->
   <!ENTITY Iacute CDATA "&#205;" -- capital I, acute accent -->
   <!ENTITY Icirc  CDATA "&#206;" -- capital I, circumflex accent -->
   <!ENTITY Iuml   CDATA "&#207;" -- capital I, dieresis or umlaut mark -->
   <!ENTITY ETH    CDATA "&#208;" -- capital Eth, Icelandic -->
   <!ENTITY Ntilde CDATA "&#209;" -- capital N, tilde -->
   <!ENTITY Ograve CDATA "&#210;" -- capital O, grave accent -->
   <!ENTITY Oacute CDATA "&#211;" -- capital O, acute accent -->
   <!ENTITY Ocirc  CDATA "&#212;" -- capital O, circumflex accent -->
   <!ENTITY Otilde CDATA "&#213;" -- capital O, tilde -->
   <!ENTITY Ouml   CDATA "&#214;" -- capital O, dieresis or umlaut mark -->
   <!ENTITY times  CDATA "&#215;" -- multiply sign -->
   <!ENTITY Oslash CDATA "&#216;" -- capital O, slash -->
   <!ENTITY Ugrave CDATA "&#217;" -- capital U, grave accent -->
   <!ENTITY Uacute CDATA "&#218;" -- capital U, acute accent -->
   <!ENTITY Ucirc  CDATA "&#219;" -- capital U, circumflex accent -->
   <!ENTITY Uuml   CDATA "&#220;" -- capital U, dieresis or umlaut mark -->
   <!ENTITY Yacute CDATA "&#221;" -- capital Y, acute accent -->
   <!ENTITY THORN  CDATA "&#222;" -- capital THORN, Icelandic -->
   <!ENTITY szlig  CDATA "&#223;" -- small sharp s, German (sz ligature) -->
   <!ENTITY agrave CDATA "&#224;" -- small a, grave accent -->
   <!ENTITY aacute CDATA "&#225;" -- small a, acute accent -->
   <!ENTITY acirc  CDATA "&#226;" -- small a, circumflex accent -->
   <!ENTITY atilde CDATA "&#227;" -- small a, tilde -->
   <!ENTITY auml   CDATA "&#228;" -- small a, dieresis or umlaut mark -->
   <!ENTITY aring  CDATA "&#229;" -- small a, ring -->
   <!ENTITY aelig  CDATA "&#230;" -- small ae diphthong (ligature) -->
   <!ENTITY ccedil CDATA "&#231;" -- small c, cedilla -->
   <!ENTITY egrave CDATA "&#232;" -- small e, grave accent -->
   <!ENTITY eacute CDATA "&#233;" -- small e, acute accent -->
   <!ENTITY ecirc  CDATA "&#234;" -- small e, circumflex accent -->
   <!ENTITY euml   CDATA "&#235;" -- small e, dieresis or umlaut mark -->
   <!ENTITY igrave CDATA "&#236;" -- small i, grave accent -->
   <!ENTITY iacute CDATA "&#237;" -- small i, acute accent -->
   <!ENTITY icirc  CDATA "&#238;" -- small i, circumflex accent -->
   <!ENTITY iuml   CDATA "&#239;" -- small i, dieresis or umlaut mark -->
   <!ENTITY eth    CDATA "&#240;" -- small eth, Icelandic -->
   <!ENTITY ntilde CDATA "&#241;" -- small n, tilde -->
   <!ENTITY ograve CDATA "&#242;" -- small o, grave accent -->



Berners-Lee & Connolly      Standards Track                    [Page 76]

RFC 1866            Hypertext Markup Language - 2.0        November 1995


   <!ENTITY oacute CDATA "&#243;" -- small o, acute accent -->
   <!ENTITY ocirc  CDATA "&#244;" -- small o, circumflex accent -->
   <!ENTITY otilde CDATA "&#245;" -- small o, tilde -->
   <!ENTITY ouml   CDATA "&#246;" -- small o, dieresis or umlaut mark -->
   <!ENTITY divide CDATA "&#247;" -- divide sign -->
   <!ENTITY oslash CDATA "&#248;" -- small o, slash -->
   <!ENTITY ugrave CDATA "&#249;" -- small u, grave accent -->
   <!ENTITY uacute CDATA "&#250;" -- small u, acute accent -->
   <!ENTITY ucirc  CDATA "&#251;" -- small u, circumflex accent -->
   <!ENTITY uuml   CDATA "&#252;" -- small u, dieresis or umlaut mark -->
   <!ENTITY yacute CDATA "&#253;" -- small y, acute accent -->
   <!ENTITY thorn  CDATA "&#254;" -- small thorn, Icelandic -->
   <!ENTITY yuml   CDATA "&#255;" -- small y, dieresis or umlaut mark -->






































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