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diff --git a/Semantic HTML.md b/Semantic HTML.md new file mode 100644 index 0000000..cc4a892 --- /dev/null +++ b/Semantic HTML.md @@ -0,0 +1,20 @@ +--- +tags: + - html + - web +--- +Writing semantic HTML means using elements that convey the meaning of their content. So instead of using `<div>`, and `<span>` for example use `<header>` and `<h1>` etc, or `<nav>` for navigations. + +The browser builds an **AOM** (Accessibility Object Model); it uses semantic elements to build a map with meaning of the elements. Used for accessibility purposes. + +### Roles +Defined by [ARIA](https://w3c.github.io/aria/#dfn-role). All elements can have a `role` attribute, sementic elements have it implicitly. +For example used by screenreaders. + +`<header>` and `<nav>` are semantic landmarks. Landmarks are the main sections of a webpage. A `<header>` not in the top-level is no landmark; it is the header of a section. Same goes for the `<nav>`, it is only a landmark if it is inside the top-level `<header>` + +Don't use too many "landmark" roles; it creates noise for screenreaders and makes it difficult to understand the structure. + +Headings: `<h1>` go until h6. Site header if nested in top-level header element. Page header if nested in main element. Subsection header if nested in section or article. + +An example of using semantic HTML at [[Holy Grail Layout]]
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