Link Codes:
The link URL/href will be the link that is shown in the browser's address field when you are on the page you want to link to. See:
How to Copy and Paste a URL (Web Address): http://www.stuffpit.com/stuff/copy-paste
How to Copy & Paste the URL in a New Browser Window: http://www.ehow.com/how_6309076_copy-url-new-browser-window.html
Image Link:

If site does not host images, then you MUST host your image online at any good image hosting site. The "src" image URL MUST be the DIRECT link to the image alone and not to the page the image is on. Put the DIRECT URL to ONLY the image in the src="" attribute. If used as a link, put the correct URL to the site in the href="" attribute.
Text Link:
Link Text Description
You can change the "p" tags to div tags and style as needed.
Link Styles:
You may not know it, but a link has four different states that it can be in. CSS allows you to customize each state. Please refer to the following keywords that each correspond to one specific state:
link - this is a link that has not been used, nor is a mouse pointer hovering over it
visited - this is a link that has been used before, but has no mouse on it
hover - this is a link currently has a mouse pointer hovering over it/on it
active - this is a link that is in the process of being clicked
Using CSS you can make a different look for each one of these states:
a:link {
color:#006;
text-decoration:none;
cursor:pointer;
}
a:visited {
color:#369;
}
a:hover {
color:#f60;
text-decoration:underline;
}
a:focus {
outline: none; /* remove the dotted outline added by Firefox */
}
a:active {
color:#fc9;
cursor:wait;
}
a:link {color: #090;}
a:visited {color: #999;}
a:hover {color: #333;}
a:focus {color: #333;}
a:active {color: #090;}
Order matters. If "a:active" precedes "a:hover", the effects in "a:hover" will take precedence. So, in this example, you would not see the color change when the user clicks down on a link.
Pseudo Classes
You can set links contained in different parts of your web page to be different colors by using the pseudo class. For example, lets say you want your links in the content area to have a different color then the links in the left or right column of your webpage.
You can do this in the following fashion:
#pseudo_content a:link {color: #090;}
#pseudo_content a:visited {color: #999;}
#pseudo_content a:hover {color: #333;}
#pseudo_content a:focus {color: #333;}
#pseudo_content a:active {color: #090;}
Now assuming that you have your main content in a division named "content" all links within that division will now be styled by this new style selector. Should your selector have a different name, just change the #pseudo_content selector to match your division name.
Then for the links in a column you could use the following:
#pseudo_column a:link {color: #090;}
#pseudo_column a:visited {color: #999;}
#pseudo_column a:hover {color: #333;}
#pseudo_column a:focus {color: #333;}
#pseudo_column a:active {color: #090;}
Once again, this assumes the name of the column division, just change the name to match yours.
This same method can be accomplished by declaring a class instead of an id.
a.pseudo_column:link {color: #090;}
a.pseudo_column:visited {color: #999;}
a.pseudo_column:hover {color: #333;}
a.pseudo_column:focus {color: #333;}
a.pseudo_column:active {color: #090;}
Though in this case you will need to add a class to each link
some link text
But, there is still yet an easier way
.pseudo_column a:link {color: #090;}
.pseudo_column a:visited {color: #999;}
.pseudo_column a:hover {color: #333;}
.pseudo_column a:focus {color: #333;}
.pseudo_column a:active {color: #090;}
Then in the (X)HTML file
Ron