I dont understand the question below

Your page should have an image element.

Your image should have a src attribute that points to the kitten image.

Your image element’s alt attribute should not be empty

<img src="https://www.CatPhotoApp.com/y
<main>


<p>Kitty ipsum dolor sit amet, shed everywhere shed everywhere stretching attack your ankles chase the red dot, hairball run catnip eat the grass sniff.</p>
<p>Purr jump eat the grass rip the couch scratched sunbathe, shed everywhere rip the couch sleep in the sink fluffy fur catnip scratched.</p>
</main>
  **Your browser information:**

User Agent is: Mozilla/5.0 (Windows NT 10.0; Win64; x64) AppleWebKit/537.36 (KHTML, like Gecko) Chrome/94.0.4606.81 Safari/537.36

Challenge: Add Images to Your Website

Link to the challenge:

Tell us what’s happening:
Describe your issue in detail here.
Your page should have an image element.

Your image should have a src attribute that points to the kitten image.

Your image element’s alt attribute should not be empty

  **Your code so far**

<h2>CatPhotoApp</h2>
<main>

<p>Kitty ipsum dolor sit amet, shed everywhere shed everywhere stretching attack your ankles chase the red dot, hairball run catnip eat the grass sniff.</p>
<p>Purr jump eat the grass rip the couch scratched sunbathe, shed everywhere rip the couch sleep in the sink fluffy fur catnip scratched.</p>
</main>
  **Your browser information:**

User Agent is: Mozilla/5.0 (Windows NT 10.0; Win64; x64) AppleWebKit/537.36 (KHTML, like Gecko) Chrome/94.0.4606.81 Safari/537.36

Challenge: Add Images to Your Website

Link to the challenge:

Hi @ezet9370 !

Edit: I have merged your two duplicate posts together.

An image tag will have a src attribute that contains a url for the image.
The image tag will also have an alt attribute which is a description for the image.

Here is the basic structure.

<img src="URL GOES HERE" alt="DESCRIPTION GOES HERE">

I’ve edited your post for readability. When you enter a code block into a forum post, please precede it with a separate line of three backticks and follow it with a separate line of three backticks to make it easier to read.

You can also use the “preformatted text” tool in the editor (</>) to add backticks around text.

See this post to find the backtick on your keyboard.
Note: Backticks (`) are not single quotes (’).

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