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.The ALIGN attribute, in HTML 4.0, specifies the alignment of the object.The values top, middle, and bottom specify the object's position with respect to surrounding content on its left and right.ALIGN=middle aligns the center of the object with the current baseline.To center the object horizontally on the page, place the object in a centered block, e.g.,<P ALIGN=center><OBJECT DATA="foo.mov" TYPE="video/quicktime"></OBJECT></P>The other ALIGN values, left and right, specify a floating object; the object is placed at the left or right margin and content flows around it.To place content below the object, use <BR CLEAR=left|right|all> as appropriate.The and properties of provide more flexible methods of aligning objects.The BORDER attribute, in HTML 4.0, specifies the width of the object's border.Specifying BORDER=0 will eliminate the border around a linked object in most browsers, though some allow the user to override this.Authors should only use BORDER=0 if the object would be clearly recognizable as a link, or as a method of de-emphasizing a link.For example:<A HREF="reference/"><OBJECT DATA="icon/reference.gif" WIDTH=90 HEIGHT=90 BORDER=0></OBJECT>Web Authoring Reference</A>The provide more flexibility in specifying the space around objects.The OBJECT element is most useful as a element and can be contained within either or elements.The contents of OBJECT should be elements that can be contained within OBJECT's parent element.For example, an element containing an OBJECT should not have any block-level elements as the contents of the OBJECT.More Informationllllllllll<> ~ ~1998 Liam Quinn.All rights reserved
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