A paragraph always starts on a new line, and is usually a block of text.
The HTML <p>
element defines a
paragraph.
A paragraph always starts on a new line, and browsers automatically add some white space (a margin) before and after a paragraph.
<p>This is a paragraph.</p>
<p>This is another paragraph.</p>
You cannot be sure how HTML will be displayed.
Large or small screens, and resized windows will create different results.
With HTML, you cannot change the display by adding extra spaces or extra lines in your HTML code.
The browser will automatically remove any extra spaces and lines when the page is displayed:
<p>
This paragraph
contains a lot of lines
in the source
code,
but the browser
ignores it.
</p>
<p>
This paragraph
contains
a lot of spaces
in the
source code,
but
the browser
ignores
it.
</p>
The <hr>
tag defines a thematic
break in an HTML page, and is most often displayed as a horizontal rule.
The <hr>
element is used to
separate content (or define a change) in an HTML page:
<h1>This is heading 1</h1>
<p>This is some text.</p>
<hr>
<h2>This is heading 2</h2>
<p>This is some other text.</p>
<hr>
This is heading 1
This is some text.
This is heading 2
This is some other text.
The <hr>
tag is an empty tag, which
means that it has no end tag.
The HTML <br>
element defines a
line break.
Use <br>
if you want a line break
(a new line) without starting a new paragraph:
<p>This is<br>a paragraph<br>with line breaks.</p>
This is
a paragraph
with line breaks.
The <br>
tag is an empty tag, which
means that it has no end tag.
This poem will display on a single line:
<p>
My Bonnie lies over the ocean.
My Bonnie
lies over the sea.
My Bonnie lies over the ocean.
Oh, bring back my Bonnie to me.
</p>
My Bonnie lies over the ocean. My Bonnie lies over the sea. My Bonnie
lies over the ocean. Oh, bring back my Bonnie to me.
The HTML <pre>
element defines
preformatted text.
The text inside a
<pre>
element is displayed in a
fixed-width font (usually Courier), and it preserves both spaces and line
breaks:
<pre>
My Bonnie lies over the ocean.
My Bonnie lies over the sea.
My Bonnie
lies over the ocean.
Oh, bring back my Bonnie to
me.
</pre>
My Bonnie lies over the ocean.
My Bonnie lies over the sea.
My Bonnie lies over the ocean.
Oh, bring back my Bonnie to me.
W3Schools' tag reference contains additional information about HTML elements and their attributes.
Tag | Description |
---|---|
<p> | Defines a paragraph |
<hr> | Defines a thematic change in the content |
<br> | Inserts a single line break |
<pre> | Defines pre-formatted text |
For a complete list of all available HTML tags, visit our HTML Tag Reference.