HTMLMetaElement
Baseline
Widely available
This feature is well established and works across many devices and browser versions. It’s been available across browsers since July 2015.
The HTMLMetaElement interface contains descriptive metadata about a document provided in HTML as <meta> elements.
This interface inherits all of the properties and methods described in the HTMLElement interface.
Instance properties
Inherits properties from its parent, HTMLElement.
<meta#charset>-
The character encoding for a HTML document.
HTMLMetaElement.content-
The 'value' part of the name-value pairs of the document metadata.
HTMLMetaElement.httpEquiv-
The name of the pragma directive, the HTTP response header, for a document.
HTMLMetaElement.media-
The media context for a
theme-colormetadata property. HTMLMetaElement.name-
The 'name' part of the name-value pairs defining the named metadata of a document.
HTMLMetaElement.schemeDeprecated-
Defines the scheme of the value in the
HTMLMetaElement.contentattribute. This is deprecated and should not be used on new web pages.
Instance methods
No specific method; inherits methods from its parent, HTMLElement.
Examples
The following two examples show a general approach to using the HTMLMetaElement interface.
For specific examples, see the pages for the individual properties as described in the Instance properties section above.
Setting the page description metadata
The following example creates a new <meta> element with a name attribute set to description.
The content attribute sets a description of the document and is appended to the document <head>:
const meta = document.createElement("meta");
meta.name = "description";
meta.content =
"The <meta> element can be used to provide document metadata in terms of name-value pairs, with the name attribute giving the metadata name, and the content attribute giving the value.";
document.head.appendChild(meta);
Setting the viewport metadata
The following example shows how to create a new <meta> element with a name attribute set to viewport.
The content attribute sets the viewport size and is appended to the document <head>:
const meta = document.createElement("meta");
meta.name = "viewport";
meta.content = "width=device-width, initial-scale=1";
document.head.appendChild(meta);
For more information on setting the viewport, see <meta name="viewport">.
Specifications
| Specification |
|---|
| HTML> # htmlmetaelement> |
Browser compatibility
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See also
- The HTML element implementing this interface:
<meta>