html anchors code example
Example 1: html links
<a href="url">link text</a>
Example 2: html links
<!-- How to link to a website? -->
<a href="url"> Some text... </a>
<!-- How to create a link to another file? -->
<a href="path to de file"> Some text... </a>
<!-- How to create a link to a subsection within the document? -->
<!-- Example: object to which we want to jump to: -->
<h1 id="some id"> Title </h1>
<!-- linked text: -->
<a href="#some id"> Some text... </a>
<!-- How to associate a link to an image? -->
<a href="url">
<img src="path to image" alt="" style="width:42px;height:42px;">
</a>
Example 3: anchor tag
The HTML <a> element (or anchor element), with its href attribute,
creates a hyperlink to web pages, files, email addresses, locations
in the same page, or anything else a URL can address. Content within
each <a> should indicate the link's destination.
Use:
<a href="https://example.com"> </a>
Example 4: a tag
<a href="https://www.google.com">Visit google.com!</a>
Example 5: html anchor tag
The <a> tag defines a hyperlink, which is used to link from one page to another.
The most important attribute of the <a> element is the href attribute, which indicates the link's destination.
By default, links will appear as follows in all browsers:
1. An unvisited link is underlined and blue
2. A visited link is underlined and purple
3. An active link is underlined and red
Creating a link to programmingquest.com:
<a href="https://www.programmingquest.com">Visit ProgrammingQuest</a>