<meta>: The metadata element
        
        
          
                Baseline
                
                  Widely available
                
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      This feature is well established and works across many devices and browser versions. It’s been available across browsers since July 2015.
* Some parts of this feature may have varying levels of support.
The <meta> HTML element represents metadata that cannot be represented by other meta-related elements, such as <base>, <link>, <script>, <style>, or <title>.
The type of metadata provided by the <meta> element can be one of the following:
- If the 
nameattribute is set, the<meta>element provides document-level metadata that applies to the whole page. - If the 
http-equivattribute is set, the<meta>element acts as a pragma directive to simulate directives that could otherwise be given by an HTTP header. - If the 
charsetattribute is set, the<meta>element is a charset declaration, giving the character encoding in which the document is encoded. - If the 
itempropattribute is set, the<meta>element provides user-defined metadata. 
Attributes
This element includes the global attributes.
Note:
The name attribute has a specific meaning for the <meta> element.
The itemprop attribute must not be set on a <meta> element that includes a name, http-equiv, or charset attribute.
charset- 
This attribute declares the document's character encoding. If the attribute is present, its value must be an ASCII case-insensitive match for the string
"utf-8", because UTF-8 is the only valid encoding for HTML5 documents.<meta>elements which declare a character encoding must be located entirely within the first 1024 bytes of the document. content- 
This attribute contains the value for the
http-equivornameattribute, depending on which is used. http-equiv- 
Defines a pragma directive, which are instructions for the browser for processing the document. The attribute's name is short for
http-equivalentbecause the allowed values are names of equivalent HTTP headers. media- 
The
mediaattribute defines which media the theme color defined in thecontentattribute should be applied to. Its value is a media query, which defaults toallif the attribute is missing. This attribute is only relevant when the element'snameattribute is set totheme-color. Otherwise, it has no effect, and should not be included. name- 
The
nameandcontentattributes can be used together to provide document metadata in terms of name-value pairs, with thenameattribute giving the metadata name, and thecontentattribute giving the value. 
Examples
>Setting a meta description
The following <meta> tag provides a description as metadata for the web page:
<meta
  name="description"
  content="The HTML reference describes all elements and attributes of HTML, including global attributes that apply to all elements." />
Setting a page redirect
The following example uses http-equiv="refresh" to direct the browser to perform a redirect.
The content="3;url=https://www.mozilla.org" attribute will redirect page to https://www.mozilla.org after 3 seconds:
<meta http-equiv="refresh" content="3;url=https://www.mozilla.org" />
Technical summary
| Content categories | 
        Metadata content. If the itemprop attribute is present:
        flow content,
        phrasing content.
       | 
    
|---|---|
| Permitted content | None; it is a void element. | 
| Tag omission | Must have a start tag and must not have an end tag. | 
| Permitted parents | 
        
  | 
    
| Implicit ARIA role | No corresponding role | 
| Permitted ARIA roles | No role permitted | 
    
| DOM interface | HTMLMetaElement | 
    
Specifications
| Specification | 
|---|
| HTML> # the-meta-element>  | 
            
Browser compatibility
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