<abbr>
and <acronym>
<abbr>
marks abbreviations in general (especially the sort that end in a period).
<acronym>
marks acronyms (abbreviations spoken like words) in particular.
Why two elements? Speech synthesizers benefit from the distinction. They may read aloud acronyms (like “RAM”, “NASA”, or “UNMOVIC”) marked up with <acronym>
, and spell out abbreviations (ex. “WWW”, “cm”, “Sat.”, and “i.e.”) marked up with <abbr>
.
XHTML 2.0: The W3C is considering removing <acronym>
in XHTML 2.0, leaving only <abbr>
.
Related Internet Explorer bug reports: Channel9 Wiki: Internet Explorer Standards Support.
The title
attribute can provide the meaning of an abbreviation. Many Web browsers pop up title
text as a “tool tip” when the mouse hovers over an abbreviation. Speech synthesizers might speak the value of the title
attribute for an abbrevation.
title
attribute in some manner:Related Internet Explorer bug reports: Channel9 Wiki: Internet Explorer Standards Support.
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