In computing, HyperText Markup Language (HTML) is a markup language designed for the creation of web pages with hypertext and other information to be displayed in a web browser. HTML is used to structure information — denoting certain text as headings, paragraphs, lists and so on — and can be used to describe, to some degree, the appearance and semantics of a document. HTML's grammar structure is the HTML DTD that was created using SGML syntax.
Originally defined by Tim Berners-Lee and further developed by the IETF, HTML is now an international standard (ISO/IEC 15445:2000). Later HTML specifications are maintained by the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C).
Early versions of HTML were defined with looser syntactic rules which helped its adoption by those unfamiliar with web publishing. Web browsers commonly made assumptions about intent and proceeded with rendering of the page. Over time, the trend in the official standards has been to create an increasingly strict language syntax; however, browsers still continue to render pages that are far from valid HTML.
More on [ HTML ]

CGI::FormBuilder - Form generation and processing module. Documentation, tutorial, examples, and mailing list.
HTML::Defaultify - Enables population of HTML forms with default values.
HTML::FormWizard - A Perl module to create HTML Forms from Perl structures, verify the data, and return Perl structured data.
HTML::Mason - A Perl-based website development and delivery engine. With mason, Perl is directly embedded inline with HTML templates.
HTML::TableExtract - Module based on HTML::Parser that serves to extract information contained in tables from HTML documents.
HTML::Template - Collection of modules including HTML::Pager, IPC::SharedCache, and CGI::Application::MailPage. With documentation and mailing list.
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