What
is HTML5?
HTML5 will be the new standard for
HTML, XHTML, and the HTML DOM.
The previous version of HTML came in
1999. The web has changed a lot since then.
HTML5 is still a work in progress.
However, most modern browsers have some HTML5 support.
How
Did HTML5 Get Started?
HTML5 is a cooperation between the
World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) and the Web Hypertext Application Technology
Working Group (WHATWG).
WHATWG was working with web forms
and applications, and W3C was working with XHTML 2.0. In 2006, they decided to
cooperate and create a new version of HTML.
Some rules for HTML5 were
established:
- New features should be based on HTML, CSS, DOM, and JavaScript
- Reduce the need for external plugins (like Flash)
- Better error handling
- More markup to replace scripting
- HTML5 should be device independent
- The development process should be visible to the public
New
Features
Some of the most interesting new
features in HTML5:
- The canvas element for drawing
- The video and audio elements for media playback
- Better support for local offline storage
- New content specific elements, like article, footer, header, nav, section
- New form controls, like calendar, date, time, email, url, search
Browser
Support
HTML5 is not yet an official
standard, and no browsers have full HTML5 support.
But all major browsers (Safari,
Chrome, Firefox, Opera, Internet Explorer) continue to add new HTML5 features
to their latest versions.
 
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