Fix typo in articles

This commit is contained in:
MANISH-GIRI
2017-02-07 15:09:23 -05:00
parent 41b2e3103d
commit 1a91bd48a2

View File

@ -183,7 +183,7 @@
"<code>Article</code> is another one of the new HTML5 elements that adds semantic meaning to your markup. <code>Article</code> is a sectioning element, and is used to wrap independent, self-contained content. The tag works well with blog entries, forum posts, or news articles.", "<code>Article</code> is another one of the new HTML5 elements that adds semantic meaning to your markup. <code>Article</code> is a sectioning element, and is used to wrap independent, self-contained content. The tag works well with blog entries, forum posts, or news articles.",
"Determining whether content can stand alone is usually a judgement call, but there are a couple simple tests you can use. Ask yourself if you removed all surrounding context, would that content still make sense? Similarly for text, would the content hold up if it were in an RSS feed?", "Determining whether content can stand alone is usually a judgement call, but there are a couple simple tests you can use. Ask yourself if you removed all surrounding context, would that content still make sense? Similarly for text, would the content hold up if it were in an RSS feed?",
"Remember that folks using assistive technologies rely on organized, semantically meaningful markup to better understand your work.", "Remember that folks using assistive technologies rely on organized, semantically meaningful markup to better understand your work.",
"<strong>Note about <code>section</code> and <code>div</code></strong><br>The <code>section</code> element is also new with HTML5, and has a slightly different semantic meaning than <code>article</code>. An <code>articles</code> is for standalone content, and a <code>section</code> is for grouping thematically related content. They can be used within each other, as needed. For example, if a book is the <code>article</code>, then each chapter is a <code>section</code>. When there's no relationship between groups of content, then use a <code>div</code>.", "<strong>Note about <code>section</code> and <code>div</code></strong><br>The <code>section</code> element is also new with HTML5, and has a slightly different semantic meaning than <code>article</code>. An <code>article</code> is for standalone content, and a <code>section</code> is for grouping thematically related content. They can be used within each other, as needed. For example, if a book is the <code>article</code>, then each chapter is a <code>section</code>. When there's no relationship between groups of content, then use a <code>div</code>.",
"<blockquote>&lt;div&gt; - blocks content<br>&lt;section&gt; - blocks related content<br>&lt;article&gt; - blocks independent, self-contained content<br></blockquote>", "<blockquote>&lt;div&gt; - blocks content<br>&lt;section&gt; - blocks related content<br>&lt;article&gt; - blocks independent, self-contained content<br></blockquote>",
"<hr>", "<hr>",
"Camper Cat used <code>article</code> tags to wrap the posts on his blog page, but he forgot to use them around the top one. Change the <code>div</code> tag to use an <code>article</code> tag instead." "Camper Cat used <code>article</code> tags to wrap the posts on his blog page, but he forgot to use them around the top one. Change the <code>div</code> tag to use an <code>article</code> tag instead."
@ -1145,4 +1145,4 @@
"translations": {} "translations": {}
} }
] ]
} }