The <menu> HTML element is described in the HTML specification as a semantic alternative to <ul>, but treated by browsers (and exposed through the accessibility tree) as no different than <ul>. It represents an unordered list of items (which are represented by <li> elements).
This element only includes the global attributes.
The <menu> and <ul> elements both represent an unordered list of items. The key difference is that <ul> primarily contains items for display, while <menu> was intended for interactive items. The related <menuitem> element has been deprecated.
Note: In early versions of the HTML specification, the <menu> element had an additional use case as a context menu. This functionality is considered obsolete and is not in the specification.
In this example, a <menu> is used to create a toolbar for an editing application.
HTML
<menu>
<li><button onclick="copy()">Copy</button></li>
<li><button onclick="cut()">Cut</button></li>
<li><button onclick="paste()">Paste</button></li>
</menu>
Note that this is functionally no different from:
<ul>
<li><button onclick="copy()">Copy</button></li>
<li><button onclick="cut()">Cut</button></li>
<li><button onclick="paste()">Paste</button></li>
</ul>
CSS
menu,
ul {
display: flex;
list-style: none;
padding: 0;
width: 400px;
}
li {
flex-grow: 1;
}
button {
width: 100%;
}
Result