How do you link (with <a>) so that the browser goes to certain subheading on the target page as opposed to the top?

7 Answers

If there is any tag with an id (e.g., <div>), then you can simply append #foo to the URL. Otherwise, you can't arbitrarily link to portions of a page.

Here's a complete example: <a href="">Jump to #foo on page.html</a>

Linking content on the same page example: <a href="#foo">Jump to #foo on same page</a>

It is called a URI fragment.

7

You use an anchor and a hash. For example:

Target of the Link:

 <a name="name_of_target">Content</a> 

Link to the Target:

 <a href="#name_of_target">Link Text</a> 

Or, if linking from a different page:

 <a href="">Link Text</a> 
3

Just append a hash with an ID of an element to the URL. E.g.

<div></div> 

and

 

So the link would look like:

<a href="">About</a> 

or just

<a href="#about">About</a> 

On 12 March 2020, a draft has been added by WICG for Text Fragments, and now you can link to text on a page as if you were searching for it by adding the following to the hash

#:~:text=<Text To Link to>

Working example on Chrome Version 81.0.4044.138:

Click on this link Should reload the page and highlight the link's text

Here is how:

<a href="#go_middle">Go Middle</a> <div>Hello There</div> 
0

You have two options:

You can either put an anchor in your document as follows:

<a name="ref"></a> 

Or else you give an id to a any HTML element:

<h1>Heading</h1> 

Then simply append the hash #ref to the URL of your link to jump to the desired reference. Example:

<a href="document.html#ref">Jump to ref in document.html</a> 

Provided that any element has the id attribute on a webpage. One could simply link/jump to the element that is referenced by the tag.

Within the same page:

<div> ..... </div> ...... <a href="#markOne">Jump to markOne</a> 

Other page:

<div> Jumps to the markOne element in the mypage of the linked website </div> 

The targets don't necessarily have an anchor element.

You can go check this fiddle out.