Both <span> and <div> tags allow you to set the style of your text - fonts, colours, weights, and so on. So what is the difference?
A
<span>span tag allows you to alter the presentation style within the current hierarchical block, whereas the
<div> tag starts a new block for you. And what does this mean? It means that you can specify options such as text alignment within a <div> but not within a <span>.
I understand people like to see these things in action:
Basic Text
A span - brown and should be rightA div - purple and will be right
More basic text
and here's the HTML:
<div style="font-family: Arial, Helvetica, sans-serif; font-size: 14px; border-style: solid; border-color: green; padding: 3px;">
Basic Text<br />
<span style="text-align: right;color: brown;">A span - brown and <i>should</i> be right</span><br />
<div style="text-align: right;color: purple;">A div - purple and <i>will</i> be right</div>
More basic text</div>
Why did I use padding and not margin? Because padding goes into the element and margins go onto the element. That's "inside" v "outside"
Why did I put a <br /> after the brown but not after the purple? Because the <div> tag starts and ends its own block, so there's one there anyway unless you've set it to be
inline, whereas there's no such block with the <span>.
(written 2007-01-02 07:46:36)
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