u / ins
Render the text inside <u> ... </u> or <ins> ... </ins> tags as underlined text.
The <ins> tag is meant to represent inserted text, which renders as underlined text.
Once used for emphasis on paper, it can be easily confused with a hyperlink when rendered as Web text.
Usage:
<u> ... </u>
<ins> ... </ins>
Best Practice Example:
Dear Sir/Madam:<br /><br />
Your appointment for 10:30 July 14th will be at <u>12414 NE 124th Street</u> in Kirkland.
Do not confuse this with <u>12414 124th Street NE</u>, which is nearby. If you
find yourself at this place, simply return to the corner of <u>NE 124th Street</u> and
<u>124th Street NE</u> and go to the other place. I trust you will be prompt.<br /><br />
Thank you.<br /><br />
Sincerely,<br />
<b>Gaston J. Feeblebunny</b><br />
<i>Administrative Administrator</i><br />
Department of Redundancy Department<br />
Kirkland, Washington<br />
Dear Sir/Madam:
Your appointment for 10:30 July 14th will be at 12414 NE 124th Street in Kirkland.
Do not confuse this with 12414 124th Street NE, which is nearby. If you
find yourself at this place, simply return to the corner of NE 124th Street and
124th Street NE and go to the other place. I trust you will be prompt.
Thank you.
Sincerely,
Gaston J. Feeblebunny
Administrative Administrator
Department of Redundancy Department
Kirkland, Washington
NOTES:
These tags will work in all known e-mail clients, even though they are deprecated.
The inline style equivalent to this is: style="text-decoration: underline;". This form is supported on all known e-mail clients.
This reference was created for Innovyx by Steve Cartoon Q3 2007. All rights reversed.