7.9. Element head
Specifies the content of the html:head
element of an output HTML
page.
By default, this html:head
element is simply a copy
of the html:head
element found in the content “pulled” using
the href
attribute of a book division. But when a
head
child element of a book division is specified,
- Its
title
child element is used to specify thehtml:title
of the output HTML page. - All its other child elements and also all its XHTML5 global attributes are copied to the
html:head
of the output HTML page.
Content model
(title? , (html:base | html:link | html:meta | html:script | html:style | html:template)*)
Attributes
Name | Data type | Default value |
---|---|---|
override |
boolean |
Specified by attribute
headoverridedefault of element
book . |
xml:base |
anyURI |
|
xml:id |
ID |
|
xml:lang |
language or "" (the empty string) |
. |
Other attributes: XHTML5 global attributes, including any attribute having
a name starting with "data-
".
override
- When set to
true
, the child elements and XHTML5 global attributes found in thehead
element completely replace the child elements and XHTML5 global attributes found in thehtml:head
element of an input HTML page.When set to
false
, the child elements and XHTML5 global attributes found in thehead
element are merged with the child elements and XHTML5 global attributes found in thehtml:head
element of an input HTML page.
Parents
The following elements contain head
:
appendices
, appendix
, book
, chapter
, part
, section
.
Children
The
following elements occur in head
: html:base
, html:link
, html:meta
, html:script
, html:style
, html:template
, title
.
Example
Element
head
is most often used to give a “rich” title to a book
division.
1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 | <appendix href="ssh_key.html"> <head> <title>Generating Your <html:b>SSH</html:b> Public Key</title> <html:style> .error { font-weight: bold; font-style: italic; color: #800000; } </html:style> </head> </appendix> |