Links are found in nearly all web pages. Links allow users to click their way from page to page.
HTML Links - Hyperlinks
HTML links are hyperlinks.
You can click on a link and jump to another document.
When you move the mouse over a link, the mouse arrow will turn into a little hand.
Note: A link does not have to be text. A link can be an image or any other HTML element!
HTML Links - Syntax
The HTML
link text
The most important attribute of the Visit W3Schools.com!
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By default, links will appear as follows in all browsers:
- An unvisited link is underlined and blue
- A visited link is underlined and purple
- An active link is underlined and red
Tip: Links can of course be styled with CSS, to get another look!
HTML Links - The target Attribute
By default, the linked page will be displayed in the current browser window. To change this, you must specify another target for the link.
The target
attribute specifies where to open the linked document.
The target
attribute can have one of the following values:
_self
- Default. Opens the document in the same window/tab as it was clicked_blank
- Opens the document in a new window or tab_parent
- Opens the document in the parent frame_top
- Opens the document in the full body of the window
Example
Use target="_blank" to open the linked document in a new browser window or tab:
Visit W3Schools!
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Absolute URLs vs. Relative URLs
Both examples above are using an absolute URL [a full web address] in the href
attribute.
A local link [a link to a page within the same website] is specified with a relative URL [without the "//www" part]:
Example
Absolute URLs
W3C
Relative URLs
HTML Images
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HTML Links - Use an Image as a Link
To use an image as a link, just put the
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Link to an Email Address
Use
mailto:
inside the
href
attribute to create a link that opens the user's email program [to let them send a new email]:
Button as a Link
To use an HTML button as a link, you have to add some JavaScript code.
JavaScript allows you to specify what happens at certain events, such as a click of a button:
Example
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Link Titles
The title
attribute
specifies extra information about an element. The information is most often shown as a tooltip text when the mouse moves over the element.
Example
Visit our HTML Tutorial
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More on Absolute URLs and Relative URLs
Example
Use a full URL to link to a web page:
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Example
Link to a page located in the html folder on the current web site:
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Example
Link to a page located in the same folder as the current page:
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You can read more about file paths in the chapter HTML File Paths.
Chapter Summary
- Use the
element to define a link
- Use the
href
attribute to define the link address - Use the
target
attribute to define where to open the linked document - Use the
element [inside
] to use an image as a link
- Use the
mailto:
scheme inside thehref
attribute to create a link that opens the user's email program
HTML Link Tags
Defines a hyperlink |
For a complete list of all available HTML tags, visit our HTML Tag Reference.