Name

<MENU> — NN all IE all HTML all

Synopsis

<MENU>...</MENU>

End Tag: Required

The original idea of the MENU element was to allow browsers to generate single-column lists of items. Virtually every browser, however, treats the MENU element the same as a UL element to present an unordered single column list of items (usually preceded by bullets). The MENU element is deprecated in HTML 4.0. You should be using the UL element for it in any case, because you are assured backward compatibility and forward compatibility should this element ever disappear from the browser landscape. Everything said here also applies to the deprecated DIR element.

Example

Common DB Connector Types:
<MENU>
    <LI>DB-9
    <LI>DB-12
    <LI>DB-25
</MENU>

Object Model Reference

IE

[window.]document.all.elementID

Attributes

CLASS

DIR

LANG

STYLE

TITLE

COMPACT

ID

LANGUAGE

  

Event Handler Attributes

Handler

NN

IE

HTML

onClick

n/a

4

4

onDblClick

n/a

4

4

onDragStart

n/a

4

n/a

onHelp

n/a

4

n/a

onKeyDown

n/a

4

4

onKeyPress

n/a

4

4

onKeyUp

n/a

4

4

onMouseDown

n/a

4

4

onMouseMove

n/a

4

4

onMouseOut

n/a

4

4

onMouseOver

n/a

4

4

onMouseUp

n/a

4

4

onSelectStart

n/a

4

n/a

Get Dynamic HTML: The Definitive Reference now with the O’Reilly learning platform.

O’Reilly members experience books, live events, courses curated by job role, and more from O’Reilly and nearly 200 top publishers.