w3schools
Search W3Schools :  
  
HOME HTML CSS XML JAVASCRIPT ASP PHP SQL MORE...   References Examples Forum About

Free Website Templates
Free Website Templates

XHTML Tutorial

XHTML HOME
XHTML Introduction
XHTML Why
XHTML vs HTML
XHTML Syntax
XHTML DTD
XHTML HowTo
XHTML Validation
XHTML Modules
XHTML Summary

XHTML Quiz

XHTML Quiz
XHTML Exam

XHTML References

XHTML Tag List
XHTML Attributes
XHTML Events
XHTML Colornames
XHTML Character Sets
XHTML ASCII
XHTML ISO-8859-1
XHTML Symbols
XHTML URL Encode
XHTML Lang Codes
HTTP Messages

 

Differences Between XHTML And HTML

Previous Next

Get Ready For XHTML

XHTML is not very different from the HTML 4.01 standard.

So, bringing your code up to the 4.01 standard is a good start.

Our complete HTML 4.01 reference can help you with that.

In addition, you should start NOW to write your HTML code in lowercase letters, and NEVER skip closing tags (like </p>).


The Most Important Differences:

  • XHTML elements must be properly nested
  • XHTML elements must always be closed
  • XHTML elements must be in lowercase
  • XHTML documents must have one root element

XHTML Elements Must Be Properly Nested

In HTML, some elements can be improperly nested within each other, like this:

<b><i>This text is bold and italic</b></i>

In XHTML, all elements must be properly nested within each other, like this:

<b><i>This text is bold and italic</i></b>

Note: A common mistake with nested lists, is to forget that the inside list must be within <li> and </li> tags.

This is wrong:

<ul>
  <li>Coffee</li>
  <li>Tea
    <ul>
      <li>Black tea</li>
      <li>Green tea</li>
    </ul>
  <li>Milk</li>
</ul>

This is correct:

<ul>
  <li>Coffee</li>
  <li>Tea
    <ul>
      <li>Black tea</li>
      <li>Green tea</li>
    </ul>
  </li>
  <li>Milk</li>
</ul>

Notice that we have inserted a </li> tag after the </ul> tag in the "correct" code example.


XHTML Elements Must Always Be Closed

Non-empty elements must have a closing tag.

This is wrong:

<p>This is a paragraph
<p>This is another paragraph

This is correct:

<p>This is a paragraph</p>
<p>This is another paragraph</p>


Empty Elements Must Also Be Closed

Empty elements must also be closed.

This is wrong:

A break: <br>
A horizontal rule: <hr>
An image: <img src="happy.gif" alt="Happy face">

This is correct:

A break: <br />
A horizontal rule: <hr />
An image: <img src="happy.gif" alt="Happy face" />


XHTML Elements Must Be In Lower Case

Tag names and attributes must be in lower case.

This is wrong:

<BODY>
<P>This is a paragraph</P>
</BODY>

This is correct:

<body>
<p>This is a paragraph</p>
</body>


XHTML Documents Must Have One Root Element

All XHTML elements must be nested within the <html> root element. Child elements must be in pairs and correctly nested within their parent element.

The basic document structure is:

<html>
<head> ... </head>
<body> ... </body>
</html>


Previous Next


Altova® XMLSpy® - The industry-leading XML editor!

Altova XMLSpy

Whether you're new to XML or already an advanced user, the user-friendly views and powerful entry helpers, wizards, and debuggers in XMLSpy are designed to meet your XML and Web development needs from start to finish.

  • XML editor
  • Graphical XML Schema / DTD editors
  • XSLT 1.0/2.0 editor, debugger, profiler
  • XQuery editor, debugger, profiler
  • XBRL validator & taxonomy editor
  • Support for Office Open XML (OOXML)
  • Graphical WSDL editor & SOAP debugger
  • Java, C#, C++ code generation
  • And much more!

Download a free trial today!

  Altova XMLSpy

 
WEB HOSTING
Best Web Hosting
PHP MySQL Hosting
Top 10 Web Hosting
UK Reseller Hosting
Web Hosting
FREE Web Hosting
WEB BUILDING
Website Templates
Flash Templates
Website Builder
Internet Business Opportunity
Get a Freelancer
Download XML editor
FREE Flash Website
FREE Web Templates
FLIGHT TICKETS
Find the cheapest flight
to any destination now!
EDUCATION
US Web Design Schools
HTML Certification
JavaScript Certification
XML Certification
PHP Certification
ASP Certification
STATISTICS
Browser Statistics
Browser OS
Browser Display
W3Schools.com HOME | TOP | PRINT | FORUM | ABOUT
W3Schools is for training only. We do not warrant the correctness of its content. The risk from using it lies entirely with the user.
While using this site, you agree to have read and accepted our terms of use and privacy policy.
Copyright 1999-2009 by Refsnes Data. All Rights Reserved.