ActivityMonitoringAnalysis ApplicationChain CInputOutputLibrary DistributedFaultTolerance DynamicProgramming EclipseUMLConcepts GridComputing L01SmartSitePublishing L02SmartSitePublishing L03SmartSitePublishing L04SmartSitePublishing LinuxResources ModelDrivenTransformation ObjectFileFormat ProcessDocumentation ProductDataManagement SoftwareDebugging_1 SoftwareDebugging_2 WhatIsCORBA AutovalTraining.pdf IAmALightPole.pdf stf-r-abstraction.pdf |
In the previous article we discussed how an embedded html document can be used to publish content. This article we will discuss a few tags and styles that help you format and style headers. < h3 > This is a header declared using the tag h3 < /h3 >< h3 class=hh > The h3 tag using the style hh looks like this < /h3 >< h3 class=mh > The same h3 tag using the style mh looks like this < /h3 >< h3 class=sh > The h3 tag using the style sh looks like this < /h3 >< h3 class=sph > The h3 tag using the style sph looks like this < /h3 >< h3 class=sp > The h3 tag using the style sp looks like this < /h3 >< h3 class=ch > The h3 tag using the style ch looks like this < /h3 >< h3 class=sp1 > The h3 tag using the style sp1 looks like this < /h3 >< h3 class=subh > The h3 tag using the style subh looks like this < /h3 >< h3 class=fh > The h3 tag using the style fh looks like this < /h3 >< h3 class=logo > The h3 tag using the style logo looks like this < /h3 >< h3 class=heading > The h3 tag using the style heading looks like this < /h3 >< h3 class=title > The h3 tag using the style title looks like this < /h3 >Besides h3, other header tags include h1, h2, h4 etc. |