From http://www.w3schools.com (Copyright Refsnes Data)
The <i> tag renders text in italics.
The <i> tag defines parts of text as different from the rest, and renders it as italic text. Use the <i> tag when no other element can be used, such as <b>, <cite>, <dfn>, <em>, <q>, <small>, <strong>
None, but in HTML 4.01, there was an understanding that you should use CSS to make italic text. This is still the case, but in HTML 5 you should use the <i> tag to define some part of a text as a certain type, not only how it renders in the layout.
Source | Output |
---|---|
There is not <i>really</i> any difference | There is not really any difference |
class, contenteditable, contextmenu, dir, draggable, id, irrelevant, lang, ref, registrationmark, tabindex, template, title |
For a full description, go to Standard Attributes in HTML 5.
onabort, onbeforeunload, onblur, onchange, onclick, oncontextmenu, ondblclick, ondrag, ondragend, ondragenter, ondragleave, ondragover, ondragstart, ondrop, onerror, onfocus, onkeydown, onkeypress, onkeyup, onload, onmessage, onmousedown, onmousemove, onmouseover, onmouseout, onmouseup, onmousewheel, onresize, onscroll, onselect, onsubmit, onunload |
For a full description, go to Event Attributes in HTML 5.
From http://www.w3schools.com (Copyright Refsnes Data)