Living Standard — Last Updated 9 May 2025
← 4.8.12 The map element — Table of Contents — 4.9 Tabular data → 4.8.15 MathMLHTML/HTML5/HTML5_Parser#Inline_SVG_and_MathML_support
Support in all current engines.
Firefox4+Safari5.1+Chrome7+
Opera11.6+Edge79+ Edge (Legacy)12+Internet Explorer9+ Firefox Android5+Safari iOS5+Chrome Android18+WebView Android3+Samsung Internet1.0+Opera Android12+The MathML math
element falls into the embedded content, phrasing content, flow content, and palpable content categories for the purposes of the content models in this specification.
When the MathML annotation-xml
element contains elements from the HTML namespace, such elements must all be flow content.
When the MathML token elements (mi
, mo
, mn
, ms
, and mtext
) are descendants of HTML elements, they may contain phrasing content elements from the HTML namespace.
User agents must handle text other than inter-element whitespace found in MathML elements whose content models do not allow straight text by pretending for the purposes of MathML content models, layout, and rendering that the text is actually wrapped in a MathML mtext
element. (Such text is not, however, conforming.)
User agents must act as if any MathML element whose contents does not match the element's content model was replaced, for the purposes of MathML layout and rendering, by a MathML merror
element containing some appropriate error message.
The semantics of MathML elements are defined by MathML and other applicable specifications. [MATHML]
Here is an example of the use of MathML in an HTML document:
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html lang="en">
<head>
<title>The quadratic formula</title>
</head>
<body>
<h1>The quadratic formula</h1>
<p>
<math>
<mi>x</mi>
<mo>=</mo>
<mfrac>
<mrow>
<mo form="prefix">−</mo> <mi>b</mi>
<mo>±</mo>
<msqrt>
<msup> <mi>b</mi> <mn>2</mn> </msup>
<mo>−</mo>
<mn>4</mn> <mo></mo> <mi>a</mi> <mo></mo> <mi>c</mi>
</msqrt>
</mrow>
<mrow>
<mn>2</mn> <mo></mo> <mi>a</mi>
</mrow>
</mfrac>
</math>
</p>
</body>
</html>
4.8.16 SVG
HTML/HTML5/HTML5_Parser#Inline_SVG_and_MathML_support
Support in all current engines.
Firefox37+Safari11.1+Chrome7+
Opera15+Edge79+ Edge (Legacy)12+Internet Explorer10+ Firefox Android37+Safari iOS11.3+Chrome Android18+WebView Android4.4+Samsung Internet4+Opera Android15+The SVG svg
element falls into the embedded content, phrasing content, flow content, and palpable content categories for the purposes of the content models in this specification.
When the SVG foreignObject
element contains elements from the HTML namespace, such elements must all be flow content.
The content model for the SVG title
element inside HTML documents is phrasing content. (This further constrains the requirements given in SVG 2.)
The semantics of SVG elements are defined by SVG 2 and other applicable specifications. [SVG]
doc = iframe.getSVGDocument()
doc = embed.getSVGDocument()
doc = object.getSVGDocument()
Returns the Document
object, in the case of iframe
, embed
, or object
elements being used to embed SVG.
The getSVGDocument()
method steps are:
Let document be this's content document.
If document is non-null and was created by the page load processing model for XML files section because the computed type of the resource in the navigate algorithm was image/svg+xml
, then return document.
Return null.
Author requirements: The width
and height
attributes on img
, iframe
, embed
, object
, video
, source
when the parent is a picture
element and, when their type
attribute is in the Image Button state, input
elements may be specified to give the dimensions of the visual content of the element (the width and height respectively, relative to the nominal direction of the output medium), in CSS pixels. The attributes, if specified, must have values that are valid non-negative integers.
The specified dimensions given may differ from the dimensions specified in the resource itself, since the resource may have a resolution that differs from the CSS pixel resolution. (On screens, CSS pixels have a resolution of 96ppi, but in general the CSS pixel resolution depends on the reading distance.) If both attributes are specified, then one of the following statements must be true:
The target ratio is the ratio of the natural width to the natural height in the resource. The specified width and specified height are the values of the width
and height
attributes respectively.
The two attributes must be omitted if the resource in question does not have both a natural width and a natural height.
If the two attributes are both 0, it indicates that the element is not intended for the user (e.g. it might be a part of a service to count page views).
The dimension attributes are not intended to be used to stretch the image.
User agent requirements: User agents are expected to use these attributes as hints for the rendering.
Support in all current engines.
Firefox1+Safari3+Chrome1+
Opera12.1+Edge79+ Edge (Legacy)12+Internet Explorer5.5+ Firefox Android?Safari iOS1+Chrome Android?WebView Android?Samsung Internet?Opera Android12.1+Support in all current engines.
Firefox1+Safari3+Chrome1+
Opera12.1+Edge79+ Edge (Legacy)12+Internet Explorer5.5+ Firefox Android?Safari iOS1+Chrome Android?WebView Android?Samsung Internet?Opera Android12.1+The width
and height
IDL attributes on the iframe
, embed
, object
, source
, and video
elements must reflect the respective content attributes of the same name.
For iframe
, embed
and object
the IDL attributes are DOMString
; for video
and source
the IDL attributes are unsigned long
.
The corresponding IDL attributes for img
and input
elements are defined in those respective elements' sections, as they are slightly more specific to those elements' other behaviors.
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