2.5 HTML Semantics

HTML is about meaning

The purpose of HTML tags is to deliver meaning to a document. Don’t be concerned about how your webpage looks like. Focus on the significance of each tag you’ll use.

Depending on the content you’re writing, you can choose the appropriate element that matches the meaning of your text.

This range of elements is wide enough to both accomodate for general purpose matter (like paragraphs or lists), and more specific content like <output> (to display the result of a calculation) or <progress> (to display the progress of a task).

Structure elements: organizing your page

Structure elements allow you to organize the main parts of your page. They usually contain other HTML elements.

Here’s what a typical webpage could include:

  • <header> as the first element of the page, that can include the logo and the tagline.
  • <nav> as a list of links that go to the different pages of the website.
  • <h1> as the title of the page.
  • <article> as the main content of the page, like a blog post.
  • <footer> as the last element of the page, located at the bottom.

Text elements: defining your content

Inside these structure elements, you usually find text elements meant to define the purpose of your content.

You’ll mainly use:

  • <p> for paragraphs
  • <ul> for (unordered) lists
  • <ol> for (ordered) lists
  • <li> for individual list items
  • <blockquote> for quotes

Inline elements: distinguishing your text

Because text elements can be long but with varied content, inline elements allow to distinguish parts of your text.

There are a lot of inline elements available, but you’ll usually come across the following:

  • <strong> for important words
  • <em> for emphasized words
  • <a> for links
  • <small> for less important words
  • <abbr> for abbreviations like W3C
<article>
  <h1>Main title of the page</h1>
  <h2>A subtitle</h2>
  <p>
    Something something an other stuff and some <em>emphasis</em> and even <strong>important</strong> words.
  </p>
  <p>
    Another paragraph.
  </p>
  <ul>
    <li>One</li>
    <li>Two</li>
    <li>Three</li>
  </ul>
  <blockquote>
    Once said
  </blockquote>
</article>
<aside>
  <h3>My latest posts</h3>
  <ul>
    <li><a href="#">One</a></li>
    <li><a href="#">One</a></li>
    <li><a href="#">One</a></li>
  </ul>
</aside>

Generic elements

When apparently no semantic element seems suited for your content but you still want to insert an HTML element (either for grouping or styling purposes), you can settle for one of the two generic elements:

  • <div> for block-level elements
  • <span> for inline elements

Although these HTML elements don’t actually mean anything, they will come in handy when we’ll start using CSS.

Don’t overthink semantics

There are about 100 semantic HTML elements to choose from. That’s a lot. It can be overwhelming to go through that list and choose the appropriate element for your content.

But don’t spend too much time worrying about that. If you stick to the following list for now, you’ll be well enough:

Structure Text Inline
header
h1
h2
h3
nav
footer
article
section
p
ul
ol
li
blockquote
a
strong
em
q
abbr
small
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