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		<div id="Description">
			<table cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" border="0" width="100%" class="main">
				<tr><td valign="top" class="name">&lt;HTML&gt;</td><td valign="top" nowrap class="compatibility">NN <span class="emphasis">all</span> IE <span class="emphasis">all</span> HTML <span class="emphasis">all</span>&nbsp;&nbsp;</td>
				</tr>
				<tr>
					<td colspan="2" class="divider"><img src="dwres:18084" width="100%" height="1"></td>
				</tr>
				<tr>
					<td valign="top" nowrap class="usage"><p class="literal">&lt;HTML&gt;...&lt;/HTML&gt;</p>
					</td><td valign="top" nowrap class="requirements">HTML End Tag: Optional&nbsp;&nbsp;</td>
				</tr>
				<tr>
					<td valign="top" colspan="2" class="description"><p>The <span class="literal">html</span> element is the container of the entire
document content, including the <span class="literal">head</span> element.
Typically, the <span class="literal">html</span> element start tag is the
second line of an HTML file, following the Document Type Definition
(DTD) statement (see the <span class="literal">DOCTYPE</span> element earlier
in this chapter). If no DTD is provided in the file (it assumes the
browser's default DTD), the <span class="literal">html</span>
start tag becomes the first line of the file. The end tag should be
in the last line of the file (but it does not have to stand on its
own line).
</p><p>Although the <span class="literal">html</span> element doesn't
render per se, it is the root positioning context of a document in a
purely W3C-compliant environment. This applies to Netscape 6 and IE
6, the latter only when certain <span class="literal">DOCTYPE</span>
definitions start the document. Otherwise, IE for Windows (this goes
for IE 4 through IE 5.5) treats the <span class="literal">body</span> element
as the root positioning context. If you don't
specify margins, borders, or padding for the <span class="literal">body</span>
element, you probably won't notice the difference.
</p><p>The HTML 4 and XHTML standards do not include explicit support for
<span class="literal">id</span>, <span class="literal">class</span>, or
<span class="literal">style</span> attributes, but modern DHTML browsers
support them.
</p>
					</td>
				</tr>
				<tr>
					<td valign="top" colspan="2" class="CLEARSEPARATION">&nbsp;</td>
				</tr>
				<tr>
					<td valign="top" colspan="2" class="example"><span class="title">Example</span></td>
				</tr>
				<tr>
					<td valign="top" colspan="2" class="CLEARSEPARATION">&nbsp;</td>
				</tr>
				<tr>
					<td><span class="programlisting"><pre>&lt;HTML&gt;
&lt;HEAD&gt;
    ...
&lt;/HEAD&gt;
&lt;BODY&gt;
    ...
&lt;/BODY&gt;
&lt;/HTML&gt;</pre>
						</span></td>
				</tr>
				<tr>
					<td valign="top" colspan="2" class="CLEARSEPARATION">&nbsp;</td>
				</tr>
				<tr>
					<td valign="top" colspan="2" class="objectmodelreference"><span class="title">Element-Specific Attributes</span></td>
				</tr>
				<tr>
      <td valign="top" colspan="2" class="CLEARSEPARATION">&nbsp;</td>
    </tr><tr>
					<td>
						<table border="1"><tbody><tr><td><span class="literal">scroll</span></td><td><span class="literal">version</span></td><td><span class="literal">xmlns</span></td>
								</tr>
							</tbody></table>
					</td>
				</tr>
				<tr>
					<td valign="top" colspan="2" class="CLEARSEPARATION">&nbsp;</td>
				</tr>
				<tr>
					<td valign="top" colspan="2" class="objectmodelreference"><span class="title">Element-Specific Event Handler Attributes</span></td>
				</tr>
				<tr>
					<td><p>None. </p>
					</td>
				</tr>
			</table>
		</div>
		<div id="lang">
					<table cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" border="0" width="100%" class="main">
						<tr><td valign="top" class="name">lang</td><td valign="top" nowrap class="compatibility">NN <span class="emphasis">3</span> IE <span class="emphasis">4</span> HTML <span class="emphasis">4</span>&nbsp;&nbsp;</td>
						</tr>
						<tr>
							<td colspan="2" class="divider"><img src="dwres:18084" width="100%" height="1"></td>
						</tr>
						<tr>
							<td valign="top" nowrap class="usage"><p class="literal">lang="<span class="replaceable">languageCode</span>"</p>
							</td><td valign="top" nowrap class="requirements">Optional&nbsp;&nbsp;</td>
						</tr>
						<tr>
							<td valign="top" colspan="2" class="description"><p>The language being used for the element's attribute
		values and content. A browser can use this information to assist in
		proper rendering of content with respect to details such as treatment
		of ligatures (when supported by a particular font or required by a
		written language), quotation marks, and hyphenation. Other
		applications and search engines might use this information to aid the
		selection of spell-checking dictionaries and the creation of indices.
		</p>
							</td>
						</tr>
						<tr>
							<td valign="top" colspan="2" class="CLEARSEPARATION">&nbsp;</td>
						</tr>
						<tr>
							<td valign="top" colspan="2" class="example"><span class="title">Example</span></td>
						</tr>
						<tr>
							<td valign="top" colspan="2" class="CLEARSEPARATION">&nbsp;</td>
						</tr>
						<tr>
							<td><span class="programlisting"><pre>&lt;SPAN lang="de"&gt;Deutsche Bundesbahn&lt;/SPAN&gt;</pre>
								</span></td>
						</tr>
						<tr>
							<td valign="top" colspan="2" class="CLEARSEPARATION">&nbsp;</td>
						</tr>
						<tr>
							<td valign="top" colspan="2" class="value"><span class="title">Value</span></td>
						</tr>
						<tr>
							<td><p>Case-insensitive language code.</p>
							</td>
						</tr>
						<tr>
							<td valign="top" colspan="2" class="CLEARSEPARATION">&nbsp;</td>
						</tr>
						<tr>
							<td valign="top" nowrap colspan="2" class="default"><span class="title">Default</span></td>
						</tr>
						<tr>
							<td><p>Browser default.</p>
							</td>
						</tr>
						<tr>
							<td valign="top" colspan="2" class="CLEARSEPARATION">&nbsp;</td>
						</tr>
						<tr>
							<td valign="top" colspan="2" class="objectmodelreference"><span class="title">Object Model Reference</span></td>
						</tr>
						<tr>
							<td valign="top" colspan="2" class="CLEARSEPARATION">&nbsp;</td>
						</tr>
						<tr>
							<td><span class="programlisting"><pre>[window.]document.getElementById(<span class="replaceable">elementID).</span>lang</pre>
								</span></td>
						</tr>
					</table>
		</div>
		<div id="scroll">
			<table cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" border="0" width="100%" class="main">
				<tr><td valign="top" class="name">scroll</td><td valign="top" nowrap class="compatibility">NN <span class="emphasis">n/a</span> IE <span class="emphasis">6</span> HTML <span class="emphasis">n/a</span>&nbsp;&nbsp;</td>
				</tr>
				<tr>
					<td colspan="2" class="divider"><img src="dwres:18084" width="100%" height="1"></td>
				</tr>
				<tr>
					<td valign="top" nowrap class="usage"><p class="literal">scroll="<span class="replaceable">featureSwitch</span>"</p>
					</td><td valign="top" nowrap class="requirements">Optional&nbsp;&nbsp;</td>
				</tr>
				<tr>
					<td valign="top" colspan="2" class="description"><p>When IE 6 is in standards-compliant mode (see the
<span class="literal">DOCTYPE</span> element earlier in this chapter), it
treats the <span class="literal">html</span> element as the
"canvas" on which it draws the
document content. By default, the canvas gains scrollbars if the
content overflows the content region of the window. You can force the
display of scrollbars (on or off) regardless of the overflow state by
setting the <span class="literal">scroll</span> attribute in the
<span class="literal">html</span> element. If your pages will also be loading
into older IE/Windows versions, set the same attribute in the
<span class="literal">body</span> element  the
"canvas" for older versions.
</p>
					</td>
				</tr>
				<tr>
					<td valign="top" colspan="2" class="CLEARSEPARATION">&nbsp;</td>
				</tr>
				<tr>
					<td valign="top" colspan="2" class="example"><span class="title">Example</span></td>
				</tr>
				<tr>
					<td valign="top" colspan="2" class="CLEARSEPARATION">&nbsp;</td>
				</tr>
				<tr>
					<td><span class="programlisting"><pre>&lt;HTML scroll="no"&gt;...&lt;/HTML&gt;</pre>
						</span></td>
				</tr>
				<tr>
					<td valign="top" colspan="2" class="CLEARSEPARATION">&nbsp;</td>
				</tr>
				<tr>
					<td valign="top" colspan="2" class="value"><span class="title">Value</span></td>
				</tr>
				<tr>
					<td><p>String constant: <span class="literal">auto</span> | <span class="literal">no</span> |
<span class="literal">yes</span>.
</p>
					</td>
				</tr>
				<tr>
					<td valign="top" colspan="2" class="CLEARSEPARATION">&nbsp;</td>
				</tr>
				<tr>
					<td valign="top" nowrap colspan="2" class="default"><span class="title">Default</span></td>
				</tr>
				<tr>
					<td><p><span class="literal">auto</span></p>
					</td>
				</tr>
				<tr>
					<td valign="top" colspan="2" class="CLEARSEPARATION">&nbsp;</td>
				</tr>
				<tr>
					<td valign="top" colspan="2" class="objectmodelreference"><span class="title">Object Model Reference</span></td>
				</tr>
				<tr>
					<td valign="top" colspan="2" class="CLEARSEPARATION">&nbsp;</td>
				</tr>
				<tr>
					<td><span class="programlisting"><pre>[window.]document.getElementById(<span class="replaceable">elementID</span>).scroll</pre>
						</span></td>
				</tr>
			</table>
		</div>
		<div id="title">
					<table cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" border="0" width="100%" class="main">
						<tr><td valign="top" class="name">title</td><td valign="top" nowrap class="compatibility">NN <span class="emphasis">6</span> IE <span class="emphasis">3</span> HTML <span class="emphasis">3.2</span>&nbsp;&nbsp;</td>
						</tr>
						<tr>
							<td colspan="2" class="divider"><img src="dwres:18084" width="100%" height="1"></td>
						</tr>
						<tr>
							<td valign="top" nowrap class="usage"><p class="literal">title="<span class="replaceable">advisoryText</span>"</p>
							</td><td valign="top" nowrap class="requirements">Optional&nbsp;&nbsp;</td>
						</tr>
						<tr>
							<td valign="top" colspan="2" class="description"><p>An advisory description of the element. For HTML elements that
		produce visible content on the page, IE 4 and later and Netscape 6
		render the content of the <span class="literal">title</span> attribute as a
		tooltip when the cursor rests on the element for a moment. For
		example, the table-related <span class="literal">col</span> element does not
		display content, so its <span class="literal">title</span> attribute is merely
		advisory. To generate tooltips in tables, assign
		<span class="literal">title</span> attributes to elements such as
		<span class="literal">table</span>, <span class="literal">tr</span>,
		<span class="literal">th</span>, or <span class="literal">td</span>.
		</p><p>The font and color properties of the tooltip are governed by the
		browser, and are not modifiable under script control. In IE/Windows,
		the tooltip is the standard small, light-yellow rectangle; in IE/Mac,
		the tooltip displays as a cartoon bubble in the manner of the Mac OS
		bubble help system. Netscape 6 tooltips are the same small rectangle
		on all OS versions. If no attribute is specified, the tooltip does
		not display.
		</p><p>You can assign any descriptive text you like to this attribute. Not
		everyone will see it, however, so do not put mission-critical
		information here. Browsers designed to meet web accessibility
		criteria might use this attribute's information to
		read information about a link or nontext elements to vision-impaired
		web surfers. Therefore, don't ignore this
		potentially helpful aid to describing an element's
		purpose on the page.
		</p><p>Although the compatibility listing for this attribute dates the
		attribute back to Internet Explorer 3 and HTML 3.2, it is newly
		ascribed to many elements starting with IE 4 and HTML 4.0.
		</p>
							</td>
						</tr>
						<tr>
							<td valign="top" colspan="2" class="CLEARSEPARATION">&nbsp;</td>
						</tr>
						<tr>
							<td valign="top" colspan="2" class="example"><span class="title">Example</span></td>
						</tr>
						<tr>
							<td valign="top" colspan="2" class="CLEARSEPARATION">&nbsp;</td>
						</tr>
						<tr>
							<td><span class="programlisting"><pre>&lt;SPAN title="United States of America"&gt;U.S.A.&lt;/SPAN&gt;</pre>
								</span></td>
						</tr>
						<tr>
							<td valign="top" colspan="2" class="CLEARSEPARATION">&nbsp;</td>
						</tr>
						<tr>
							<td valign="top" colspan="2" class="value"><span class="title">Value</span></td>
						</tr>
						<tr>
							<td><p>Any string of characters. The string must be inside a matching pair
		of (single or double) quotation marks.
		</p>
							</td>
						</tr>
						<tr>
							<td valign="top" colspan="2" class="CLEARSEPARATION">&nbsp;</td>
						</tr>
						<tr>
							<td valign="top" nowrap colspan="2" class="default"><span class="title">Default</span></td>
						</tr>
						<tr>
							<td><p>None.</p>
							</td>
						</tr>
						<tr>
							<td valign="top" colspan="2" class="CLEARSEPARATION">&nbsp;</td>
						</tr>
						<tr>
							<td valign="top" colspan="2" class="objectmodelreference"><span class="title">Object Model Reference</span></td>
						</tr>
						<tr>
							<td valign="top" colspan="2" class="CLEARSEPARATION">&nbsp;</td>
						</tr>
						<tr>
							<td><span class="programlisting"><pre>[window.]document.getElementById(<span class="replaceable">elementID).</span>title</pre>
								</span></td>
						</tr>
					</table>
		</div>
		<div id="version">
			<table cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" border="0" width="100%" class="main">
				<tr><td valign="top" class="name">version</td><td valign="top" nowrap class="compatibility">NN <span class="emphasis">6</span> IE <span class="emphasis">6</span> HTML <span class="emphasis">3.2</span>&nbsp;&nbsp;</td>
				</tr>
				<tr>
					<td colspan="2" class="divider"><img src="dwres:18084" width="100%" height="1"></td>
				</tr>
				<tr>
					<td valign="top" nowrap class="usage"><p class="literal">version="<span class="replaceable">string</span>"</p>
					</td><td valign="top" nowrap class="requirements">Optional&nbsp;&nbsp;</td>
				</tr>
				<tr>
					<td valign="top" colspan="2" class="description"><p>The <span class="literal">version</span> attribute is deprecated in HTML 4 and
was never adopted by the major browsers until the desire to claim
standards compliance led the maker to introduce the dead-end
attribute. Originally intended to specify the HTML DTD version
supported by the document, this information is universally supplied
in the separate DTD statement (in the <span class="literal">DOCTYPE</span>
element) above the <span class="literal">html</span> element in the document.
Do not use this attribute.
</p>
					</td>
				</tr>
				<tr>
					<td valign="top" colspan="2" class="CLEARSEPARATION">&nbsp;</td>
				</tr>
				<tr>
					<td valign="top" colspan="2" class="value"><span class="title">Value</span></td>
				</tr>
				<tr>
					<td><p>Any string of characters. The string must be inside a matching pair
of (single or double) quotation marks.
</p>
					</td>
				</tr>
				<tr>
					<td valign="top" colspan="2" class="CLEARSEPARATION">&nbsp;</td>
				</tr>
				<tr>
					<td valign="top" nowrap colspan="2" class="default"><span class="title">Default</span></td>
				</tr>
				<tr>
					<td><p>None. </p>
					</td>
				</tr>
			</table>
		</div><div id="xmlns">
			<table cellpadding="0" cellspacing="0" border="0" width="100%" class="main">
				<tr><td valign="top" class="name">xmlns</td><td valign="top" nowrap class="compatibility">NN <span class="emphasis">n/a</span> IE <span class="emphasis">5</span> HTML <span class="emphasis">X1.0</span>&nbsp;&nbsp;</td>
				</tr>
				<tr>
					<td colspan="2" class="divider"><img src="dwres:18084" width="100%" height="1"></td>
				</tr>
				<tr>
					<td valign="top" nowrap class="usage"><p class="literal">xmlns="<span class="replaceable">namespaceSpec</span>"</p>
					</td><td valign="top" nowrap class="requirements">Optional&nbsp;&nbsp;</td>
				</tr>
				<tr>
					<td valign="top" colspan="2" class="description"><p>The W3C attribute and its fixed URI value should be in the
<span class="literal">html</span> element of every XHTML document. Microsoft
uses this attribute to allow IE 5 and later for Windows to reference
elements that belong to non-HTML sources, such as the Microsoft
implementation of behaviors (generic external script modules that can
be applied to any element).
</p>
					</td>
				</tr>
				<tr>
					<td valign="top" colspan="2" class="CLEARSEPARATION">&nbsp;</td>
				</tr>
				<tr>
					<td valign="top" colspan="2" class="value"><span class="title">Value</span></td>
				</tr>
				<tr>
					<td><p>For XHTML, a fixed URI string:
<span class="literal">http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml</span>. For IE 5 and later
namespace references, just a prefix name (<span class="literal">MSIE</span> for
built-in behaviors), or a prefix and URI that acts as an additional
identifier for the prefix. Note the colon delimiter.
</p>
					</td>
				</tr>
				<tr>
					<td valign="top" colspan="2" class="CLEARSEPARATION">&nbsp;</td>
				</tr>
				<tr>
					<td valign="top" nowrap colspan="2" class="default"><span class="title">Default</span></td>
				</tr>
				<tr>
					<td><p>None. </p>
					</td>
				</tr>
			</table>
		</div>
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