HTML Reference

Quick Reference

The <area> tag defines an area inside an ImageMap, which is an image with one or more clickable areas that take the user to different URLs.

<a href="https://www.1smartchicken.com/blog/index.html">Home Page</a><img src = /images/logo.png alt = "1SMARTchicken Logo" usemap = "#logo" />

<!-- create  map -->
<map name = "logo">

    <area shape="rect" coords="15,15,60,60" alt="Link to Contact Us page" href="/pages/contact-us.html" />

    <area shape="circle" coords="60,60,30" alt="Link to Home page" href="index.html" />

    <area shape="poly" coords="40,21,60,76,14,34,76,222" alt="Link to About Us page" href="/pages/about-us.html" />

</map>

Attributes

The following attributes can be used within the <area> tag.

AttributeValueDescription
alttextSpecifies an alternate text for the area (required)
coordscoordinatesSpecifies the coordinates of the area
downloadfilenameSpecifies that the target will be downloaded when a user clicks on the hyperlink
hrefURLSpecifies the hyperlink target for the area
hreflanglanguage_codeSpecifies the language of the target URL
mediamedia querySpecifies what media/device the target URL is optimized for
referrerpolicyno-referrer
no-referrer-when-downgrade
origin
origin-when-cross-origin
same-origin
strict-origin-when-cross-origin
unsafe-url
Specifies which referrer information to send with the link
relalternate
author
bookmark
help
license
next
nofollow
noreferrer
prefetch
prev
search
tag
Specifies the relationship between the current document and the target URL
shapedefault
rect
circle
poly
Specifies the shape of the area
target_blank
_parent
_self
_top
framename
Specifies where to open the target URL
typemedia_typeSpecifies the media type of the target URL

HTML Notes:

  • In our HTML section the term “tag” and “element” are often used interchangeably to refer to both the tag used to create a page element and the element created by the tag (<p> tag = <p> element = paragraph on the page)
  • HTML5 is not case sensitive; so <P> is the same as <p>, <H1> is the same as <h1>
  • Global attributes can be used with all HTML tags and are therefore not mentioned on every tag page
  • To write clean, readable HTML code, it is best to use indentation whereas elements within elements are indented (tabbed or spaces) to create something that looks like a project outline
  • The browser will automatically remove any extra spaces and lines in your HTML code when the page is displayed
  • Double quotes or single quotes can be used around HTML attribute values, but when the attribute value itself contains one form of quote, it will be necessary to use the other around the attribute

We’d like to acknowledge that we learned a great deal of our coding from W3Schools and TutorialsPoint, borrowing heavily from their teaching process and excellent code examples. We highly recommend both sites to deepen your experience, and further your coding journey. We’re just hitting the basics here at 1SMARTchicken.