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The easiest way to create HTML code indicating that the acronym WML stands for Wireless Markup Language is to simply include the acronym in an HTML <a> tag and an abbreviation tag (not an acronym tag):
This is the recommended code for both HTML 4 browsers and HTML 5 browsers. Some browsers, most notably IE, do not activate help when the title attribute is coded on the <abbr> tag, but they do work as expected for titles on the <a> tag. The <abbr> tag inherits its title attribute from the parent <a> tag.
If you are creating HTML code for the definition of Wireless Markup Language, the meaning of the acronym WML, then include a <dfn> definition tag around the <abbr> abbreviation tag and follow the entire HTML code for the hypertext link with the definition of the term:
<p>A <a href="http://www.Acronyms.net/terms/w/Wireless-Markup-Language/" title="Wireless Markup Language" onclick="if (confirm('WML stands for Wireless Markup Language')) return false;"> <dfn><abbr title="Wireless Markup Language">WML</abbr></a> is ...(definition of Wireless Markup Language)....</p>
The <dfn> tag gets the term being defined from the title attribute of the <abbr> tag. The result should look like this (hovering your mouse over the WML acronym shows the expanded meaning of the acronym):
A
WML
is ...(definition of "Wireless Markup Language")....
If you are creating HTML code that simply expands the acronym then indicate that it is the WML acronymn which is being defined using an HTML <dfn> tag with a title attribute around the <abbr> tag and follow the HTML for the hypertext link with the acronym definition:
<p>When we use the acronym <a href="http://www.Acronyms.net/terms/w/Wireless-Markup-Language/" title="Wireless Markup Language" onclick="if (confirm('WML stands for Wireless Markup Language')) return false;"> <dfn title="WML"><abbr title="Wireless Markup Language">WML</abbr></dfn></a> it is the abbreviation for Wireless Markup Language.</p>
The result should look like this (hovering your mouse over the WML acronym shows the definition):
When we use the acronym
WML
it is the abbreviation for Wireless Markup Language.
Acronym Vocabulary URI Declaration
For the remaining examples, the Acronym Vocabulary namespace URI needs to be declared for use with element tag names and attribute values. For an HTML web page, the beginning of the file should look like this:
<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?><!DOCTYPE html [ <!ENTITY at "http://Acronyms.net/terms/"> <!ENTITY av "http://Acronyms.net/vocabulary/">]><html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" xmlns:av="&av;"> <head> <style type="text/css"> .hide { display: none } </style> ...
This only needs to be done once per document file.