Allowed HTML tags: <a> <em> <strong> <cite> <code> <i> <b> <ul> <ol> <li> <dl> <dt> <dd> <p> <br>
This site allows HTML content. While learning all of HTML may feel intimidating, learning how to use a very small number of the most basic HTML "tags" is very easy. This table provides examples for each tag that is enabled on this site.
For more information see W3C's HTML Specifications or use your favorite search engine to find other sites that explain HTML.
| Tag Description | You Type | You Get |
|---|---|---|
| Anchors are used to make links to other pages. | <a href="http://www.iranian.com/main">Iranian.com</a> | Iranian.com |
| Emphasized | <em>Emphasized</em> | Emphasized |
| Strong | <strong>Strong</strong> | Strong |
| Cited | <cite>Cited</cite> | Cited |
| Coded text used to show programming source code | <code>Coded</code> | Coded |
| Italicized | <i>Italicized</i> | Italicized |
| Bolded | <b>Bolded</b> | Bolded |
| Unordered list - use the <li> to begin each list item | <ul> <li>First item</li> <li>Second item</li> </ul> |
|
| Ordered list - use the <li> to begin each list item | <ol> <li>First item</li> <li>Second item</li> </ol> |
|
| Definition lists are similar to other HTML lists. <dl> begins the definition list, <dt> begins the definition term and <dd> begins the definition description. | <dl> <dt>First term</dt> <dd>First definition</dd> <dt>Second term</dt> <dd>Second definition</dd> </dl> |
|
| By default paragraph tags are automatically added, so use this tag to add additional ones. | <p>Paragraph one.</p> <p>Paragraph two.</p> | Paragraph one. Paragraph two. |
| By default line break tags are automatically added, so use this tag to add additional ones. Use of this tag is different because it is not used with an open/close pair like all the others. Use the extra " /" inside the tag to maintain XHTML 1.0 compatibility | Text with <br />line break | Text with line break |
Most unusual characters can be directly entered without any problems.
If you do encounter problems, try using HTML character entities. A common example looks like & for an ampersand & character. For a full list of entities see HTML's entities page. Some of the available characters include:
| Character Description | You Type | You Get |
|---|---|---|
| Ampersand | & | & |
| Greater than | > | > |
| Less than | < | < |
| Quotation mark | " | " |
| Sightseeing | 14-May |
| Pigs are us | 14-May |
| Lebanon's media diversity | 14-May |
| My Very First Bus Ride | 14-May |
| What next? | 14-May |
| Title | Date | Comments |
|---|---|---|
| Bomb Iran Now | May 08 | 121 |
| Let there be light | May 13 | 55 |
| Shari Rafia | May 06 | 49 |
| To keep it the Persian Gulf | May 07 | 47 |
| Iran's Nuclear Mistake | May 05 | 45 |
| Person | About | Day |
|---|---|---|
| Trita Parsi | Council on Foreign Relations book award | May 14 |
| Mahdiyeh Javid | Graduation, American University, Washington DC | May 12 |
| Mahrokh Milani | Happy Mother's Day | May 09 |
| Sheema Kalbasi | Indie Excellence Award | May 09 |
| Marvin Kharrazi | Iranian-American Jewish comedian | May 09 |
| UK Iranian marriage | Nellia Nafissi and Davood Fallahdar | May 08 |
| Shari Rafia | Son serving in Iraq | May 06 |
| Tissa Hami | Iranian-American comedian on "The View" | May 06 |
| Vanecha Roudbaraki (2) | PART 2: Focus on artist at Florence Biennale 2007 | May 02 |
| Vanecha Roudbaraki | PART 1: Focus on artist at Florence Biennale 2007 | May 02 |