title
The <strong>HTML <code><title></code> element</strong> defines the title of the document, shown in a browser's title bar or on the page's tab. It can only contain text, and any contained tags are ignored. a, abbr, address, area, article, aside, audio, b, base, bdi, bdo, big, blockquote, body, br, button, canvas, caption, cite, code, col, colgroup, data, datalist, dd, del, details, dfn, dialog, div, dl, dt, em, embed, fieldset, figcaption, figure, footer, form, h1, h2, h3, h4, h5, h6, head, header, hr, html, i, iframe, img, input, ins, kbd, keygen, label, legend, li, link, main, map, mark, menu, menuitem, meta, meter, nav, noscript, object, ol, optgroup, option, output, p, param, picture, pre, progress, q, rp, rt, ruby, s, samp, script, section, select, small, source, span, strong, style, sub, summary, sup, table, tbody, td, textarea, tfoot, th, thead, time, title, tr, track, u, ul, var, video, wbr - Contains a text representing advisory information related to the element it belongs to. Such information can typically, but not necessarily, be presented to the user as a tooltip. style - Specifies alternative style sheet sets. link - The <code>title</code> attribute has special semantics on the <code><link></code> element. When used on a <code><link rel="stylesheet"></code> it defines a <a href="/en-US/docs/Web/CSS/Alternative_style_sheets">preferred or an alternate stylesheet</a>. Incorrectly using it may <a href="/en-US/docs/Correctly_Using_Titles_With_External_Stylesheets">cause the stylesheet to be ignored</a>.