Next: HTML Splitting, Up: Generating HTML [Contents][Index]
First, the HTML generated by makeinfo
is standard
HTML 4. When first written, it also tried to be compatible with
earlier standards (e.g., HTML 2.0, RFC-1866).
Please report output from an
error-free run of makeinfo
which has practical browser
portability problems as a bug (see Reporting Bugs).
Some known exceptions to HTML 3.2 (using
‘--init-file=html32.pm’ produced strict HTML 3.2 output, but
this has not been tested lately;
see Invoking texi2any
):
@multitable
command
(see Multi-column Tables), but they should degrade reasonably in
browsers without table support.
span
, thead
,
abbr
, acronym
.
To achieve maximum portability and accessibility among browsers (both graphical and text-based), systems, and users, the HTML output is intentionally quite plain and generic. It has always been our goal for users to be able to customize the output to their wishes via CSS (see HTML CSS) or other means (see Customization Variables). If you cannot accomplish a reasonable customization, feel free to report that.
However, we do not wish to depart from our basic goal of widest readability for the core output. For example, using fancy CSS may make it possible for the HTML output to more closely resemble the TeX output in some details, but this result is not even close to being worth the ensuing difficulties.
It is also intentionally not our goal, and not even possible, to pass through every conceivable validation test without any diagnostics. Different validation tests have different goals, often about pedantic enforcement of some standard or another. Our overriding goal is to help users, not blindly comply with standards.
To repeat what was said at the top: please report output from an
error-free run of makeinfo
which has practical browser
portability problems as a bug (see Reporting Bugs).
A few other general points about the HTML output follow.
Navigation bar: By default, a navigation bar is inserted at the
start of each node, analogous to Info output. If the
‘--no-headers’ option is used, the navigation bar is only
inserted at the beginning of split files. Header <link>
elements in split output can support Info-like navigation with
browsers like Lynx and Emacs W3 which implement this HTML 1.0
feature.
Footnotes: for HTML, when the footnote style is ‘end’, or if the output is not split, footnotes are put at the end of the output. If the footnote style is set to ‘separate’, and the output is split, they are placed in a separate file. See Footnote Styles.
Raw HTML: makeinfo
will include segments of Texinfo
source between @ifhtml
and @end ifhtml
in the HTML
output (but not any of the other conditionals, by default). Source
between @html
and @end html
is passed without change
to the output (i.e., suppressing the normal escaping of input
‘<’, ‘>’ and ‘&’ characters which have special
significance in HTML). See Conditional Commands.
Next: HTML Splitting, Up: Generating HTML [Contents][Index]