“>” vs “/>”) and when attribute values need to be quoted. It describes such things as how void elements should be marked up (e.g. This includes which tags are required and which can be inferred, and the rules for those inferences.
The serialization defines how mark-up is used to describe these elements and attributes within a text document. Which elements are permitted inside which other elements, which attributes are allowed on which element, along with the purpose and meaning of each element and attribute. The language defines the vocabulary of the elements and attributes, and their content model, i.e. Languages and Serializations HTML and XHTML are defined in terms of a language and a serialization. Also, 'file' is used as a generic term to mean a file, document, input stream, octet stream, etc to avoid having to make fine distinctions. What follows below is based on HTML5 terminology. Terminology One of the difficulties of describing this is clearly that the terminology within the official specifications has changed over the years, since HTML was first introduced.
We are constantly updating and editing the database to make sure that we have the best driver updates available.