<article>: The Article Contents element
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 <article> HTML element represents a self-contained composition in a document, page, application, or site, which is intended to be independently distributable or reusable (e.g., in syndication). Examples include: a forum post, a magazine or newspaper article, or a blog entry, a product card, a user-submitted comment, an interactive widget or gadget, or any other independent item of content.
Try it
<article class="forecast">
  <h1>Weather forecast for Seattle</h1>
  <article class="day-forecast">
    <h2>03 March 2018</h2>
    <p>Rain.</p>
  </article>
  <article class="day-forecast">
    <h2>04 March 2018</h2>
    <p>Periods of rain.</p>
  </article>
  <article class="day-forecast">
    <h2>05 March 2018</h2>
    <p>Heavy rain.</p>
  </article>
</article>
.forecast {
  margin: 0;
  padding: 0.3rem;
  background-color: #eee;
}
.forecast > h1,
.day-forecast {
  margin: 0.5rem;
  padding: 0.3rem;
  font-size: 1.2rem;
}
.day-forecast {
  background: right/contain content-box border-box no-repeat
    url("/shared-assets/images/examples/rain.svg") white;
}
.day-forecast > h2,
.day-forecast > p {
  margin: 0.2rem;
  font-size: 1rem;
}
A given document can have multiple articles in it; for example, on a blog that shows the text of each article one after another as the reader scrolls, each post would be contained in an <article> element, possibly with one or more <section>s within.
Attributes
This element only includes the global attributes.
Usage notes
- Each <article>should be identified, typically by including a heading (<h1>-<h6>element) as a child of the<article>element.
- When an <article>element is nested, the inner element represents an article related to the outer element. For example, the comments of a blog post can be<article>elements nested in the<article>representing the blog post.
- Author information of an <article>element can be provided through the<address>element, but it doesn't apply to nested<article>elements.
- The publication date and time of an <article>element can be described using thedatetimeattribute of a<time>element.
Examples
<article class="film_review">
  <h2>Jurassic Park</h2>
  <section class="main_review">
    <h3>Review</h3>
    <p>Dinos were great!</p>
  </section>
  <section class="user_reviews">
    <h3>User reviews</h3>
    <article class="user_review">
      <h4>Too scary!</h4>
      <p>Way too scary for me.</p>
      <footer>
        <p>
          Posted on
          <time datetime="2015-05-16 19:00">May 16</time>
          by Lisa.
        </p>
      </footer>
    </article>
    <article class="user_review">
      <h4>Love the dinos!</h4>
      <p>I agree, dinos are my favorite.</p>
      <footer>
        <p>
          Posted on
          <time datetime="2015-05-17 19:00">May 17</time>
          by Tom.
        </p>
      </footer>
    </article>
  </section>
  <footer>
    <p>
      Posted on
      <time datetime="2015-05-15 19:00">May 15</time>
      by Staff.
    </p>
  </footer>
</article>
Result
Technical summary
| Content categories | Flow content, sectioning content, palpable content | 
|---|---|
| Permitted content | Flow content. | 
| Tag omission | None, both the starting and ending tag are mandatory. | 
| Permitted parents | Any element that accepts
        flow content. Note that an <article>element must not be a
        descendant of an<address>element. | 
| Implicit ARIA role | article | 
| Permitted ARIA roles | application,document,feed,main,none,presentation,region | 
| DOM interface | HTMLElement | 
Specifications
| Specification | 
|---|
| HTML # the-article-element | 

 
                       
                
                       
			     
			