![]() ![]() Alternatively, if you’re using Drupal, Joomla, Blogspot, or my favorite, WordPress, they provide a simple plugin to use. After you choose your customization options, you can download the HTML code to stick into your site if you need plain code. It can also be helpful for posted sermons to make them more readable and less convoluted. It works especially well on statement of faith pages, since those often have many references on just one page. Using a plugin like Reftagger helps to keep visitors on your site, rather than sending them off to another site to look up the passages you’re citing. Popups also can provide social share links to the usual social network sites, and you can choose which networks to include share links to and which to exclude. You can choose font style, color, and size for both the body text and the heading, choose between Faithlife or Biblia for link landing site, choose to make links open in a new window, and even set CSS classes to exclude. Visually, Reftagger has pretty good customization options. Some of RefTagger’s customization options Each Reftagger popup provides a link to their online Bible at or to Faithlife. Reftagger is created and maintained by Logos Bible Software, makers of the Faithlife study Bible and the excellent Logos translation and study library software, my goto tool for translating Biblical texts from the original languages. No translation’s perfect, but if you’re using someone else’s translation, at least be consistent. One of my pet peeves is people cherry-picking from different Bible translations to twist the Word to say what they want it to say. Although that might seem like a limitation, I actually kind of like it. With Reftagger, you do need to pick one translation to use throughout your entire site. Still, there’s a good selection to choose from. Sadly, due to its more restrictive licensing, the New Revised Standard Version (NRSV) is not included. When you set up Reftagger, you can pick from 17 different Bible translations, including King James (KJV), New International Version (NIV), English Standard (ESV), and The Message paraphrase. I’m using it on this site, so when I type in a reference, there will automatically be a hover tooltip attached to it. It’s called Reftagger, and it automatically provides a tooltip style popup with the text of any Bible reference on your site. If so, I have a great free tool for you to check out. ( If not, you might want to change that!) Here we discuss the Introduction to href tag in HTML and its Examples along with code implementation and Output.If you have a church website, odds are that you’re occasionally mentioning Bible references somewhere on the site. There tags that allows the href attribute, those are, , and. Hrefin HTML is used to access the web URLs. This href is used for website URLs like etc. This is the attribute which is available inside the anchor () tag. HTML href is abbreviated as hypertext reference. We simply required website within this double quotes (href="website") of href attribute. Have you ever think about how would we access this website URLs? Because of href tag we can access any website URLs. Real time Example: Day to day life we have accessed so many websites. ![]() Syntax: Examples to Implement href tag in HTMLīelow are the different examples: Example #1 – tag with href Attribute : This tag is used for specifying external file location like styles.css, javascript.js etc. : This tag is used for specifying the base URL of all relative page URLs where the link has to go within the href attribute.Ĥ. : This tag is used for specifying the URL of the page where the link has to go within the href attribute.ģ. : This tag is used for specifying the URL of the page where the link has to go within the href attribute.Ģ. ![]()
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