Summarize the following:
This tag opens the body of your HTML document. Everything that goes in the HTML body displays on the web page. This is the tag to add a heading to your HTML document. A Heading is large bold text that typically goes at the top of your HTML document. This can be the title of your page or a greeting. This tag closes your heading.  Add additional headings as you go. There are six different headings that you can create by using the <h1></h1> through <h6></h6> tags. These create headings of different sizes. For example, to create three different-sized headings in succession, you might write the following:  <h1>Welcome to My Page!</h1> <h2>My name is Bob.</h2> <h3>I hope you like it here.</h3>     The headings shows the priority or importance of the text. But its not necessary to use a higher heading if you want to use any lower heading. One can directly use H3, even if there is no H1 in your post. This is the tag to open a paragraph. Paragraph text is used to display normal sized text. This can be a description for your web page or any other information you wish to share. This the tag to close your paragraph text. The following is an example of paragraph text in HTML:  <p>This is my paragraph.</p>    You can add multiple paragraph lines in a row in order to create a series of paragraphs under one heading. You can change the color of any text by framing the text with the <font color="color"> and </font> tags. Make sure to type your preferred color into the "color" section (you'll keep the quotes). You can turn any text (e.g., headers) into a different color with this set of tags. For example, to turn a paragraph's text blue, you would write the following code: <p><font color="blue">Whales are majestic creatures.</font></p>  You can add bolds, italics and other text formats using HTML.   The following are examples of how you can format text using HTML tags: <b>Bold text</b> <i>Italic text</i> <u>Underlined text</u> <sub>Subscript text</sub> <sup>Superscript text</sup>    If you use bold and italic text for emphasis, not just for styling, use the <strong> and <em> elements instead of <b> and <i>. This makes your web page easier to understand when using technologies like a screen reader or the reader mode provided in some browsers.
Type in <body> below the closed "Head" tag. Type in <h1>. Type a heading for your page. Type </h1> after your heading text and press ↵ Enter. Type <p>. Type some text. Type </p> after your text and press ↵ Enter.