Save this file to your own machine, open it with your favorite editor, and replace any text with things you want to say to complete the assignment. In your editor, you'll see some things inside less-than and greater-than marks, but you should leave those alone (or delete them entirely, in matching pairs if appropriate).

In the discussion on this page, when I mention "tags" I am talking about things you will be able to see if you View Document Source or Save the file and open it in your own editor. You will NOT be able to see them directly in the browser window, so don't let that throw you at first.

For your information, the pair of P-tags that you will see in your editor (but NOT in the browser) right above and below this sentence, for example, are used to indicate a paragraph.

Even though I'm adding spaces in and between the sentences here, the browser will display them all as one paragraph because they are all within the pair of matching P-tags. (Note that both of the P-tags, and all other tags, appear within apair of brackets formed by a pair of less-than and greater-than signs, and that the end-paragraph tag contains a slash-mark.)

Remember, you can replace any of this text with your own words. Use as many paragraphs as you want, just set each one off with a pair of P-tags. Notice that the tags can either be on the same lines as your text, or different lines. It doesn't matter.

This paragraph contains a link to the other sample page so you'll see what a link looks like.

The single HR-tag below is used to generate a Horizontal Rule (i.e., line).


Use this link to go back to the course lesson.

The single BR-tag used below indicates a break (new-line) other than a paragraph. The BR-tag in this paragraph is followed by a second kind of link that, instead of going to another web-page, is used for sending email. Each page you write for this course should contain an email link back to yourself, so that any of us reading it can readily get back to you:
Insert Your Name Here