This is a text paragraph that contains some
inline links. Generally, inline links (as opposite to e.g. links
lists) are problematic
from the
usability perspective,
but they may have use as
“incidental”, less relevant links. See the document
Links Want To Be Links.
Tables
The following table has a caption. The first row and the first column
contain table header cells (th
elements) only; other cells
are data cells (td
elements), with align="right"
attributes:
Sample table: Areas of the Nordic countries, in sq km
Country |
Total area |
Land area |
Denmark |
43,070 |
42,370 |
Finland |
337,030 |
305,470 |
Iceland |
103,000 |
100,250 |
Norway |
324,220 |
307,860 |
Sweden |
449,964 |
410,928 |
Character test
The following table has some sample characters with
annotations. If the browser’s default font does not
contain all of them, they may get displayed using backup fonts.
This may cause stylistic differences, but it should not
prevent the characters from being displayed at all.
Char. |
Explanation |
Notes
|
ê |
e with circumflex |
Latin 1 character, should be ok
|
— |
em dash |
Windows Latin 1 character, should be ok, too
|
Ā |
A with macron (line above) |
Latin Extended-A character, not present in all fonts
|
Ω |
capital omega |
A Greek letter
|
− |
minus sign |
Unicode minus
|
⌀ |
diameter sign |
relatively rare in fonts
|
Hyphenation
In the following, a width setting should cause some hyphenation,
depending on support to various methods of hyphenation.
CSS-based hyphenation
Until recently the great majority of naturalists believed that species were immutable productions, and had been separately created. This view has been ably maintained by many authors.
JavaScript-driven hyphenation
Until recently the great majority of naturalists believed that species were immutable productions, and had been separately created. This view has been ably maintained by many authors.
Explicit hyphenation hints (soft hyphens)
Until recently the great
majority of naturalists
believed that species were
immutable
productions,
and had been separately created.
This view has been ably maintained by many authors.