command elementtypelabelicondisabledcheckedradiogroupcommandtitle attribute has special semantics on this element.interface HTMLCommandElement : HTMLElement {
           attribute DOMString type;
           attribute DOMString label;
           attribute DOMString icon;
           attribute boolean disabled;
           attribute boolean checked;
           attribute DOMString radiogroup;
  readonly attribute HTMLElement? command;
};
   The command element represents a command that the user
  can invoke.
A command can be explicitly part of a context menu or toolbar,
  using the menu element. It can also be put anywhere
  else on a page, either just to define a keyboard shortcut, or to
  define a command that is then referenced from other
  command elements.
A command element that uses the
  type,
  label,
  icon,
  disabled,
  checked,
  radiogroup,
   and
  title attributes defines a new
  command. A command element that uses the command attribute
  defines a command by reference to another one. This allows authors
  to define a command once, and set its state (e.g. whether it is
  active or disabled) in one place, and have all references to that
  command in the user interface change at the same time.
The type
  attribute indicates the kind of command: either a normal command
  with an associated action, or a state or option that can be toggled,
  or a selection of one item from a list of items.
The attribute is an enumerated attribute with three
  keywords and states. The "command"
  keyword maps to the Command state, the
  "checkbox"
  keyword maps to the Checkbox state, and
  the "radio"
  keyword maps to the Radio state. The
  missing value default is the Command state.
The element represents a normal command with an associated action.
The element represents a state or option that can be toggled.
The element represents a selection of one item from a list of items.
The label
  attribute gives the name of the command, as shown to the user. The
  label attribute must be
  specified and must have a value that is not the empty string.
The title
  attribute gives a hint describing the command, which might be shown
  to the user to help him.
The icon
  attribute gives a picture that represents the command. If the
  attribute is specified, the attribute's value must contain a
  valid non-empty URL potentially surrounded by
  spaces. To obtain the absolute
  URL of the icon when the attribute's value is not the empty
  string, the attribute's value must be resolved relative to the element. When the attribute is
  absent, or its value is the empty string, or resolving its value fails, there is no icon.
The disabled attribute
  is a boolean attribute that, if present, indicates that
  the command is not available in the current state.
The distinction between disabled and hidden is subtle. A command would be
  disabled if, in the same context, it could be enabled if only
  certain aspects of the situation were changed. A command would be
  marked as hidden if, in that situation, the command will never be
  enabled. For example, in the context menu for a water faucet, the
  command "open" might be disabled if the faucet is already open, but
  the command "eat" would be marked hidden since the faucet could
  never be eaten.
The checked
  attribute is a boolean attribute that, if present,
  indicates that the command is selected. The attribute must be
  omitted unless the type
  attribute is in either the Checkbox state or
  the Radio
  state.
The radiogroup
  attribute gives the name of the group of commands that will be
  toggled when the command itself is toggled, for commands whose type attribute has the value "radio". The scope of the name is the child list of
  the parent element. The attribute must be omitted unless the type attribute is in the Radio state.
If a command element slave has a
  command
  attribute, and slave is in a
  Document, and there is an element in that
  Document whose ID has a
  value equal to the value of slave's command attribute, and the first
  such element in tree order, hereafter master, itself defines
  a command and either is not a command element or
  does not itself have a command attribute, then the
  master command of slave is master.
An element with a
  command
  attribute must have a master command and must not have any
  type,
  label,
  icon,
  disabled,
  checked, or
  radiogroup
  attributes.
The type IDL
  attribute must reflect the content attribute of the
  same name, limited to only known values.
The label, icon, disabled, checked, and radiogroup
  IDL attributes must reflect the respective content
  attributes of the same name.
The command
  IDL attribute must return the master command, if any,
  or null otherwise.
If the element's Disabled State is false
  (enabled) then the element's activation behavior
  depends on the element's type
  and command attributes, as
  follows:
command attributeThe user agent must run synthetic click activation steps on the element's master command.
type attribute is
   in the Checkbox stateIf the element has a checked attribute, the UA must
   remove that attribute. Otherwise, the UA must add a checked attribute, with the
   literal value checked.
type attribute is
   in the Radio stateIf the element has a parent, then the UA must walk the list
   of child nodes of that parent element, and for each node that is a
   command element, if that element has a radiogroup attribute whose
   value exactly matches the current element's (treating missing radiogroup attributes as if
   they were the empty string), and has a checked attribute, must remove
   that attribute.
Then, the element's checked attribute attribute
   must be set to the literal value checked.
The element's activation behavior is to do nothing.
Firing a synthetic click event at the element does not cause
  any of the actions described above to happen.
If the element's Disabled State is true (disabled) then the element has no activation behavior.
command elements are not rendered
  unless they form part of a menu.
Here is an example of a toolbar with three buttons that let the user toggle between left, center, and right alignment. One could imagine such a toolbar as part of a text editor. The toolbar also has a separator followed by another button labeled "Publish", though that button is disabled.
<menu type="toolbar">
 <command type="radio" radiogroup="alignment" checked="checked"
          label="Left" icon="icons/alL.png" onclick="setAlign('left')">
 <command type="radio" radiogroup="alignment"
          label="Center" icon="icons/alC.png" onclick="setAlign('center')">
 <command type="radio" radiogroup="alignment"
          label="Right" icon="icons/alR.png" onclick="setAlign('right')">
 <hr>
 <command type="command" disabled
          label="Publish" icon="icons/pub.png" onclick="publish()">
</menu>