diff --git a/curriculum/challenges/english/14-responsive-web-design-22/learn-css-colors-by-building-a-set-of-colored-markers/616965351e74d4689eb6de30.md b/curriculum/challenges/english/14-responsive-web-design-22/learn-css-colors-by-building-a-set-of-colored-markers/616965351e74d4689eb6de30.md index e5621bca867..454daa05494 100644 --- a/curriculum/challenges/english/14-responsive-web-design-22/learn-css-colors-by-building-a-set-of-colored-markers/616965351e74d4689eb6de30.md +++ b/curriculum/challenges/english/14-responsive-web-design-22/learn-css-colors-by-building-a-set-of-colored-markers/616965351e74d4689eb6de30.md @@ -7,7 +7,7 @@ dashedName: step-5 # --description-- -You can have multiple self-closing `meta` elements on a web page. What distinguishes one `meta` element from the other is the attribute. You should add a new meta element for each attribute you want to specify. +You can have multiple self-closing `meta` elements on a web page. Each `meta` element adds information about the page that cannot be expressed by other HTML elements. Add another self-closing `meta` element within the `head`. Give it a `name` attribute set to `viewport` and a `content` attribute set to `width=device-width, initial-scale=1.0` so your page looks the same on all devices.