Inline elements
In this article, we'll examine HTML inline-level elements and how they differ from block-level elements.
HTML (HyperText Markup Language) elements historically were categorized as either "block-level" elements or "inline-level" elements. Since this is a presentational characteristic it is nowadays specified by CSS in the Flow Layout.
Inline elements are those which only occupy the space bounded by the tags defining the element, instead of breaking the flow of the content.
Note: An inline element does not start on a new line and only takes up as much width as necessary.
Inline vs. block-level elements: a demonstration
This is most easily demonstrated with a simple example. First, some simple CSS that we'll be using:
.highlight {
background-color: #ee3;
}
Inline
Let's look at the following example which demonstrates an inline element:
<div>
The following span is an <span class="highlight">inline element</span>; its
background has been colored to display both the beginning and end of the
inline element's influence.
</div>
In this example, the <div>
block-level element contains some text. Within that text is a <span>
element, which is an inline element. Because the <span>
element is inline, the paragraph correctly renders as a single, unbroken text flow, like this:
Block-level
Now let's change that <span>
into a block-level element, such as <p>
:
<div>
The following paragraph is a
<p class="highlight">block-level element;</p>
its background has been colored to display both the beginning and end of the
block-level element's influence.
</div>
Rendered using the same CSS as before, we get:
See the difference? The <p>
element totally changes the layout of the text, splitting it into three segments: the text before the <p>
, then the <p>
's text, and finally the text following the <p>
.
Changing element levels
You can change the visual presentation of an element using the CSS display
property. For example, by changing the value of display
from "inline"
to "block"
, you can tell the browser to render the inline element in a block box rather than an inline box, and vice versa. However, doing this will not change the category and the content model of the element. For example, even if the display
of the span
element is changed to "block"
, it still would not allow to nest a div
element inside it.
Conceptual differences
In brief, here are the basic conceptual differences between inline and block-level elements:
- Content model
-
Generally, inline elements may contain only data and other inline elements. An exception is the inline a
element which may contain block level elements such as div
.
Note: Links that wrap multiple lines of block-level content make for a poor-to-unusable experience for some assistive technologies and should be avoided.
- Formatting
-
By default, inline elements do not force a new line to begin in the document flow. Block elements, on the other hand, typically cause a line break to occur (although, as usual, this can be changed using CSS).
List of "inline" elements
The following elements are inline by default (although block and inline elements are no longer defined in HTML 5, use content categories instead):
See also