HTML Basics

HTML Introduction HTML Basic HTML Comments HTML Tags/Elements HTML Attributes HTML Formatting HTML Block and Inline HTML Charsets HTML Classes HTML Colors HTML Div HTML Headings HTML Id HTML Iframes HTML Images HTML File Paths HTML Tables HTML Layout HTML Lists HTML Links <a> HTML Paragraphs HTML Quotations HTML JavaScript HTML Emojis HTML URL Encode HTML Entities HTML Computercode HTML Symbols HTML Styles

HTML Forms

HTML Forms HTML Form Elements HTML Form Attributes HTML Input Attributes HTML Input Regex HTML Input Form Attributes HTML Input Types

HTML SEO

HTML Head HTML Page Title HTML Responsive HTML Semantics HTML Favicon

HTML Graphics

HTML Canvas HTML SVG

HTML Media

HTML Media HTML Audio HTML Video

HTML Reference

a abbr acronym address applet area article aside audio b base basefont bdi bdo big blockquote body br button canvas caption center cite code col colgroup data datalist dd del details dfn dialog dir div dl DOCTYPE dt em embed fieldset figcaption figure font footer form frame frameset h1_-_h6 head header hgroup hr html i iframe img input ins kbd label legend li link main map mark menu meta meter nav noframes noscript object ol optgroup option output p param picture pre progress q rp rt ruby s samp script search section select small source span strike strong style sub summary sup svg table tbody td template textarea tfoot th thead time title tr track tt u ul var video wbr

HTML Comments

HTML Comments are used to insert comments in the HTML code. These comments are not displayed on the web page, but they are useful for developers to make notes or provide explanations about the code. HTML comments start with <!-- and end with -->.

Here is an example of how HTML Comments work:

<!-- This is a comment in HTML -->
<p>This is a paragraph of text.</p>

In the example above, the comment <!-- This is a comment in HTML --> is not visible on the web page, but the paragraph <p>This is a paragraph of text.</p> is displayed. Here is another example with more fictional data:

<!-- This is a comment about a table -->
<table>
<tr>
<th>Name</th>
<th>Age</th>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>John</td>
<td>25</td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>Jane</td>
<td>30</td>
</tr>
</table>

In the example above, the comment <!-- This is a comment about a table --> is not displayed, but the table content is visible on the web page, showing a table with two columns (Name and Age) and two rows with fictional data.

Remember to use HTML comments to provide explanations, notes, or reminders within your HTML code. Comments can help you and other developers understand the code better and make it easier to maintain and update in the future.