html input attribute values in uppercase - html

I have the below given
with lowercase name and id values
<input type="text" name="abc" id ="abc">
with uppercase name and id values
<input type="text" name="ABC" id ="ABC">
I have seen only lowercase name and id values. Can we use uppercase also? Is there a benefit using lowercase?

What values are acceptable for a given attribute depend on the specific attribute.
Name and Id attributes can both include upper and lower case characters, and both are case sensitive.

Case insensitivity in tag names and attribute names
Tag names for HTML elements may be written with any mix of lowercase
and uppercase letters that are a case-insensitive match for the names
of the elements given in the HTML elements section of this document;
that is, tag names are case-insensitive.
Attribute names for HTML elements may be written with any mix of
lowercase and uppercase letters that are a case-insensitive match for
the names of the attributes given in the HTML elements section of this
document; that is, attribute names are case-insensitive.
And for Values:
Some attribute values are case insensitive, while other attribute
values—most notably the attributes id and class—are case sensitive. As
these attributes are case sensitive in HTML, ID selectors and class
selectors must always match the case of the id and class attribute
values in the document. To find out which attribute values are case
sensitive and which aren’t, consult the HTML specification.

yes ... they can be uppercase or lowercase ...
for example consider the __VIEWSTATE that is usually used in hidden inputs ( ASP.Net Websites )
these are just names ... so there is no benefit if you use uppercase or lowercase...

Related

why inner div doesn't take css style? [duplicate]

When creating the id attributes for HTML elements, what rules are there for the value?
For HTML 4, the answer is technically:
ID and NAME tokens must begin with a letter ([A-Za-z]) and may be followed by any number of letters, digits ([0-9]), hyphens ("-"), underscores ("_"), colons (":"), and periods (".").
HTML 5 is even more permissive, saying only that an id must contain at least one character and may not contain any space characters.
The id attribute is case sensitive in XHTML.
As a purely practical matter, you may want to avoid certain characters. Periods, colons and '#' have special meaning in CSS selectors, so you will have to escape those characters using a backslash in CSS or a double backslash in a selector string passed to jQuery. Think about how often you will have to escape a character in your stylesheets or code before you go crazy with periods and colons in ids.
For example, the HTML declaration <div id="first.name"></div> is valid. You can select that element in CSS as #first\.name and in jQuery like so: $('#first\\.name'). But if you forget the backslash, $('#first.name'), you will have a perfectly valid selector looking for an element with id first and also having class name. This is a bug that is easy to overlook. You might be happier in the long run choosing the id first-name (a hyphen rather than a period), instead.
You can simplify your development tasks by strictly sticking to a naming convention. For example, if you limit yourself entirely to lower-case characters and always separate words with either hyphens or underscores (but not both, pick one and never use the other), then you have an easy-to-remember pattern. You will never wonder "was it firstName or FirstName?" because you will always know that you should type first_name. Prefer camel case? Then limit yourself to that, no hyphens or underscores, and always, consistently use either upper-case or lower-case for the first character, don't mix them.
A now very obscure problem was that at least one browser, Netscape 6, incorrectly treated id attribute values as case-sensitive. That meant that if you had typed id="firstName" in your HTML (lower-case 'f') and #FirstName { color: red } in your CSS (upper-case 'F'), that buggy browser would have failed to set the element's color to red. At the time of this edit, April 2015, I hope you aren't being asked to support Netscape 6. Consider this a historical footnote.
From the HTML 4 specification:
ID and NAME tokens must begin with a letter ([A-Za-z]) and may be followed by any number of letters, digits ([0-9]), hyphens ("-"), underscores ("_"), colons (":"), and periods (".").
A common mistake is to use an ID that starts with a digit.
You can technically use colons and periods in id/name attributes, but I would strongly suggest avoiding both.
In CSS (and several JavaScript libraries like jQuery), both the period and the colon have special meaning and you will run into problems if you're not careful. Periods are class selectors and colons are pseudo-selectors (eg., ":hover" for an element when the mouse is over it).
If you give an element the id "my.cool:thing", your CSS selector will look like this:
#my.cool:thing { ... /* some rules */ ... }
Which is really saying, "the element with an id of 'my', a class of 'cool' and the 'thing' pseudo-selector" in CSS-speak.
Stick to A-Z of any case, numbers, underscores and hyphens. And as said above, make sure your ids are unique.
That should be your first concern.
HTML5: Permitted Values for ID & Class Attributes
As of HTML5, the only restrictions on the value of an ID are:
must be unique in the document
must not contain any space characters
must contain at least one character
Similar rules apply to classes (except for the uniqueness, of course).
So the value can be all digits, just one digit, just punctuation characters, include special characters, whatever. Just no whitespace. This is very different from HTML4.
In HTML 4, ID values must begin with a letter, which can then be followed only by letters, digits, hyphens, underscores, colons and periods.
In HTML5 these are valid:
<div id="999"> ... </div>
<div id="#%LV-||"> ... </div>
<div id="____V"> ... </div>
<div id="⌘⌥"> ... </div>
<div id="♥"> ... </div>
<div id="{}"> ... </div>
<div id="©"> ... </div>
<div id="♤₩¤☆€~¥"> ... </div>
Just bear in mind that using numbers, punctuation or special characters in the value of an ID may cause trouble in other contexts (e.g., CSS, JavaScript, regex).
For example, the following ID is valid in HTML5:
<div id="9lions"> ... </div>
However, it is invalid in CSS:
From the CSS2.1 spec:
4.1.3 Characters and case
In CSS, identifiers (including element names, classes, and IDs in
selectors) can contain only the characters [a-zA-Z0-9] and ISO 10646
characters U+00A0 and higher, plus the hyphen (-) and the underscore
(_); they cannot start with a digit, two hyphens, or a hyphen
followed by a digit.
In most cases you may be able to escape characters in contexts where they have restrictions or special meaning.
W3C References
HTML5
3.2.5.1 The id
attribute
The id attribute specifies its element's unique identifier (ID).
The value must be unique amongst all the IDs in the element's home
subtree and must contain at least one character. The value must not
contain any space characters.
Note: There are no other restrictions on what form an ID can take; in
particular, IDs can consist of just digits, start with a digit, start
with an underscore, consist of just punctuation, etc.
3.2.5.7 The class
attribute
The attribute, if specified, must have a value that is a set of
space-separated tokens representing the various classes that the
element belongs to.
The classes that an HTML element has assigned to it consists of all
the classes returned when the value of the class attribute is split on
spaces. (Duplicates are ignored.)
There are no additional restrictions on the tokens authors can use in
the class attribute, but authors are encouraged to use values that
describe the nature of the content, rather than values that describe
the desired presentation of the content.
jQuery does handle any valid ID name. You just need to escape metacharacters (i.e., dots, semicolons, square brackets...). It's like saying that JavaScript has a problem with quotes only because you can't write
var name = 'O'Hara';
Selectors in jQuery API (see bottom note)
Strictly it should match
[A-Za-z][-A-Za-z0-9_:.]*
But jQuery seems to have problems with colons, so it might be better to avoid them.
HTML5:
It gets rid of the additional restrictions on the id attribute (see here). The only requirements left (apart from being unique in the document) are:
the value must contain at least one character (can’t be empty)
it can’t contain any space characters.
Pre-HTML5:
ID should match:
[A-Za-z][-A-Za-z0-9_:.]*
Must start with A-Z or a-z characters
May contain - (hyphen), _ (underscore), : (colon) and . (period)
But one should avoid : and . because:
For example, an ID could be labelled "a.b:c" and referenced in the style sheet as #a.b:c, but as well as being the id for the element, it could mean id "a", class "b", pseudo-selector "c". It is best to avoid the confusion and stay away from using . and : altogether.
In practice many sites use id attributes starting with numbers, even though this is technically not valid HTML.
The HTML 5 draft specification loosens up the rules for the id and name attributes: they are now just opaque strings which cannot contain spaces.
Hyphens, underscores, periods, colons, numbers and letters are all valid for use with CSS and jQuery. The following should work, but it must be unique throughout the page and also must start with a letter [A-Za-z].
Working with colons and periods needs a bit more work, but you can do it as the following example shows.
<html>
<head>
<title>Cake</title>
<style type="text/css">
#i\.Really\.Like\.Cake {
color: green;
}
#i\:Really\:Like\:Cake {
color: blue;
}
</style>
</head>
<body>
<div id="i.Really.Like.Cake">Cake</div>
<div id="testResultPeriod"></div>
<div id="i:Really:Like:Cake">Cake</div>
<div id="testResultColon"></div>
<script type="text/javascript" src="http://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/1.4.2/jquery.min.js"></script>
<script type="text/javascript">
$(function() {
var testPeriod = $("#i\\.Really\\.Like\\.Cake");
$("#testResultPeriod").html("found " + testPeriod.length + " result.");
var testColon = $("#i\\:Really\\:Like\\:Cake");
$("#testResultColon").html("found " + testColon.length + " result.");
});
</script>
</body>
</html>
HTML5
Keeping in mind that ID must be unique, i.e., there must not be multiple elements in a document that have the same id value.
The rules about ID content in HTML5 are (apart from being unique):
This attribute's value must not contain white spaces. [...]
Though this restriction has been lifted in HTML 5, an ID should start with a letter for compatibility.
This is the W3 spec about ID (from MDN):
Any string, with the following restrictions:
must be at least one character long
must not contain any space characters
Previous versions of HTML placed greater restrictions on the content of ID values (for example, they did not permit ID values to begin with a number).
More information:
W3 - global attributes (id)
MDN attribute (id)
To reference an id with a period in it, you need to use a backslash. I am not sure if it's the same for hyphens or underscores.
For example:
HTML
<div id="maintenance.instrumentNumber">############0218</div>
CSS
#maintenance\.instrumentNumber{word-wrap:break-word;}
From the HTML 4 specification...
The ID and NAME tokens must begin with a letter ([A-Za-z]) and may be followed by any number of letters, digits ([0-9]), hyphens ("-"), underscores ("_"), colons (":"), and periods (".").
Also, never forget that an ID is unique. Once used, the ID value may not appear again anywhere in the document.
You may have many ID's, but all must have a unique value.
On the other hand, there is the class-element. Just like ID, it can appear many times, but the value may be used over and over again.
A unique identifier for the element.
There must not be multiple elements in a document that have the same id value.
Any string, with the following restrictions:
must be at least one character long
must not contain any space characters:
U+0020 SPACE
U+0009 CHARACTER TABULATION (tab)
U+000A LINE FEED (LF)
U+000C FORM FEED (FF)
U+000D CARRIAGE RETURN (CR)
Using characters except ASCII letters and digits, '_', '-' and '.' may cause compatibility problems, as they weren't allowed in HTML 4. Though this restriction has been lifted in HTML 5, an ID should start with a letter for compatibility.
It appears that, although colons (:) and periods (.) are valid in the HTML specification, they are invalid as id selectors in CSS, so they are probably best avoided if you intend to use them for that purpose.
For HTML5:
The value must be unique amongst all the IDs in the element’s home
subtree and must contain at least one character. The value must not
contain any space characters.
At least one character, no spaces.
This opens the door for valid use cases such as using accented characters. It also gives us plenty of more ammo to shoot ourselves in the foot with, since you can now use id values that will cause problems with both CSS and JavaScript unless you’re really careful.
IDs are best suited for naming parts of your layout, so you should not give the same name for ID and class
ID allows alphanumeric and special characters
but avoid using the # : . * ! symbols
spaces are not allowed
not started with numbers or a hyphen followed by a digit
case sensitive
using ID selectors is faster than using class selectors
use hyphen "-" (underscore "_" can also be used, but it is not good for SEO) for long CSS class or Id rule names
If a rule has an ID selector as its key selector, don’t add the tag name to the rule. Since IDs are unique, adding a tag name would slow down the matching process needlessly.
In HTML5, the id attribute can be used on any HTML element and In HTML 4.01, the id attribute cannot be used with: <base>, <head>, <html>, <meta>, <param>, <script>, <style>, and <title>.
Any alpha-numeric value,"-", and "_" are valid. But, you should start the id name with any character between A-Z or a-z.
Since ES2015 we can as well use almost all Unicode characters for ID's, if the document character set is set to UTF-8.
Test out here: https://mothereff.in/js-variables
Read about it: Valid JavaScript variable names in ES2015
In ES2015, identifiers must start with $, _, or any symbol with the
Unicode derived core property ID_Start.
The rest of the identifier can contain $, _, U+200C zero width
non-joiner, U+200D zero width joiner, or any symbol with the Unicode
derived core property ID_Continue.
const target = document.querySelector("div").id
console.log("Div id:", target )
document.getElementById(target).style.background = "chartreuse"
div {
border: 5px blue solid;
width: 100%;
height: 200px
}
<div id="H̹̙̦̮͉̩̗̗ͧ̇̏̊̾Eͨ͆͒̆ͮ̃͏̷̮̣̫̤̣Cͯ̂͐͏̨̛͔̦̟͈̻O̜͎͍͙͚̬̝̣̽ͮ͐͗̀ͤ̍̀͢M̴̡̲̭͍͇̼̟̯̦̉̒͠Ḛ̛̙̞̪̗ͥͤͩ̾͑̔͐ͅṮ̴̷̷̗̼͍̿̿̓̽͐H̙̙̔̄͜"></div>
Should you use it? Probably not a good idea!
Read about it: JavaScript: "Syntax error missing } after function body"
No spaces, and it must begin with at least a character from a to z and 0 to 9.
In HTML
ID should start with {A-Z} or {a-z}. You can add digits, periods, hyphens, underscores, and colons.
For example:
<span id="testID2"></span>
<span id="test-ID2"></span>
<span id="test_ID2"></span>
<span id="test:ID2"></span>
<span id="test.ID2"></span>
But even though you can make ID with colons (:) or period (.). It is hard for CSS to use these IDs as a selector. Mainly when you want to use pseudo elements (:before and :after).
Also in JavaScript it is hard to select these ID's.
So you should use first four ID's as the preferred way by many developers around and if it's necessary then you can use the last two also.
Walues can be: [a-z], [A-Z], [0-9], [* _ : -]
It is used for HTML5...
We can add id with any tag.
Help, my Javascript is broken!
Everyone says IDs can't be duplicates.
Best tried in every browser but FireFox
<div id="ONE"></div>
<div id="ONE"></div>
<div id="ONE"></div>
<script>
document.body.append( document.querySelectorAll("#ONE").length , ' DIVs!')
document.body.append( ' in a ', typeof ONE )
console.log( ONE ); // a global var !!
</script>
Explanation
After the turn of the century Microsoft had 90% Browser Market share,
and implemented Browser behaviours that where never standardized:
1. create global variables for every ID
2. create an Array for duplicate IDs
All later Browser vendors copied this behaviour, otherwise their browser wouldn't support older sites.
Somewhere around 2015 Mozilla removed 2. from FireFox and 1. still works.
All other browsers still do 1. and 2.
I use it every day because typing ONE instead of document.querySelector("#ONE") helps me prototype faster; I do not use it in production.
Html ID
The id attribute specifies its element's unique identifier (ID).
There are no other restrictions on what form an ID can take; in particular, IDs can consist of just digits, start with a digit, start with an underscore, consist of just punctuation, etc.
An element's unique identifier can be used for a variety of purposes, most notably as a way to link to specific parts of a document using fragments, as a way to target an element when scripting, and as a way to style a specific element from CSS.
Uppercase and lowercase alphabets works
'_' and '-' works, too
Numbers works
Colons (,) and period (.) seems to work
Interestingly, emojis work
alphabets → caps & small
digits → 0-9
special characters → ':', '-', '_', '.'
The format should be either starting from '.' or an alphabet, followed by either of the special characters of more alphabets or numbers. The value of the id field must not end at an '_'.
Also, spaces are not allowed, if provided, they are treated as different values, which is not valid in case of the id attributes.

ID name and class name specification

In HTML we use id's and classes. we can choose any name for id.Can we choose any name for class also? Or is there any specification name for classes ?
From the HTML 5 specification:
ID:
The id attribute specifies its element's unique identifier (ID). The
value must be unique amongst all the IDs in the element's home subtree
and must contain at least one character. The value must not contain
any space characters.
There are no other restrictions on what form an ID can take; in
particular, IDs can consist of just digits, start with a digit, start
with an underscore, consist of just punctuation, etc.
Class:
The attribute, if specified, must have a value that is a set of
space-separated tokens representing the various classes that the
element belongs to.
The classes that an HTML element has assigned to it consists of all
the classes returned when the value of the class attribute is split on
spaces. (Duplicates are ignored.)
Also, there are style guides that define good and very used pattern for choose the values to use for id or classes, etc. I recommend you this one from W3Schools.

Are there any reserved keywords for attribute values in HTML?

I mean, are there any words that we shouldn't use as the <tag class='reserved' />, class, id or any other thing?
I was planning to style the links with class "link", is this a good idea?
There are no reserved keywords for the class attribute, with the caveat that using special characters other than letters, numbers, or the underscore in the name, or beginning the name with a number, makes using it as a CSS selector more difficult.
Check out the HTML spec:
The attribute, if specified, must have a value that is a set of space-separated tokens representing the various classes that the element belongs to.
...
There are no additional restrictions on the tokens authors can use in the class attribute, but authors are encouraged to use values that describe the nature of the content, rather than values that describe the desired presentation of the content.
... where a set of space-separated tokens is exactly what you'd think and has no other restrictions.
When the class is used as a CSS selector... ... the CSS grammar comes into play. A CSS name can contain:
alphanumeric characters [a-zA-Z0-9]
the underscore _
the hyphen -
select non-ASCII/extended ASCII characters (octal \240-\377 — includes common symbols, letters with diacritics, etc.)
or a character escaped by \. Escaped characters can be a Unicode code point (up to six bytes, terminated by whitespace, such as a regular space " ", if needed) or a non-alphanumeric character.
In addition, the name can't start with a (literal) number or hyphen, so those must be escaped. Because the escaped character must not be alphanumeric (specifically 0-9 or a-f, to differentiate from Unicode points, I assume), the Unicode value must be used if the selector name begins with a number.
Example (noting that \32 is the Unicode value for 2):
...
<style>
.\32 34 { color: red; }
.big-\$-G { color: green; } /* the color of money */
</style>
...
<div class="234">Some text here.</div>
<div class="big-$-G">This is in the "big-$-G" class.</div>
...
In my opinion, using "link" as a class name for links is fine, as long as it applies to all links you'll be defining. Otherwise, use something like "importantLinks", "mainLinks", etc.
I believe it is ok to use word link for class naming.
However, try to give it more explicit name so it not conflict with other code in the future.
Just go in source of such framework as bootstrap and see how they name their classes.
Use namespasing
In the case of JavaScript and ‍‍‍JSX (JavaScript XML), there are some HTML attributes which only reserved for JavaScript, not for JSX. Such as class and for.

What are valid id and name attribute values in HTML? [duplicate]

When creating the id attributes for HTML elements, what rules are there for the value?
For HTML 4, the answer is technically:
ID and NAME tokens must begin with a letter ([A-Za-z]) and may be followed by any number of letters, digits ([0-9]), hyphens ("-"), underscores ("_"), colons (":"), and periods (".").
HTML 5 is even more permissive, saying only that an id must contain at least one character and may not contain any space characters.
The id attribute is case sensitive in XHTML.
As a purely practical matter, you may want to avoid certain characters. Periods, colons and '#' have special meaning in CSS selectors, so you will have to escape those characters using a backslash in CSS or a double backslash in a selector string passed to jQuery. Think about how often you will have to escape a character in your stylesheets or code before you go crazy with periods and colons in ids.
For example, the HTML declaration <div id="first.name"></div> is valid. You can select that element in CSS as #first\.name and in jQuery like so: $('#first\\.name'). But if you forget the backslash, $('#first.name'), you will have a perfectly valid selector looking for an element with id first and also having class name. This is a bug that is easy to overlook. You might be happier in the long run choosing the id first-name (a hyphen rather than a period), instead.
You can simplify your development tasks by strictly sticking to a naming convention. For example, if you limit yourself entirely to lower-case characters and always separate words with either hyphens or underscores (but not both, pick one and never use the other), then you have an easy-to-remember pattern. You will never wonder "was it firstName or FirstName?" because you will always know that you should type first_name. Prefer camel case? Then limit yourself to that, no hyphens or underscores, and always, consistently use either upper-case or lower-case for the first character, don't mix them.
A now very obscure problem was that at least one browser, Netscape 6, incorrectly treated id attribute values as case-sensitive. That meant that if you had typed id="firstName" in your HTML (lower-case 'f') and #FirstName { color: red } in your CSS (upper-case 'F'), that buggy browser would have failed to set the element's color to red. At the time of this edit, April 2015, I hope you aren't being asked to support Netscape 6. Consider this a historical footnote.
From the HTML 4 specification:
ID and NAME tokens must begin with a letter ([A-Za-z]) and may be followed by any number of letters, digits ([0-9]), hyphens ("-"), underscores ("_"), colons (":"), and periods (".").
A common mistake is to use an ID that starts with a digit.
You can technically use colons and periods in id/name attributes, but I would strongly suggest avoiding both.
In CSS (and several JavaScript libraries like jQuery), both the period and the colon have special meaning and you will run into problems if you're not careful. Periods are class selectors and colons are pseudo-selectors (eg., ":hover" for an element when the mouse is over it).
If you give an element the id "my.cool:thing", your CSS selector will look like this:
#my.cool:thing { ... /* some rules */ ... }
Which is really saying, "the element with an id of 'my', a class of 'cool' and the 'thing' pseudo-selector" in CSS-speak.
Stick to A-Z of any case, numbers, underscores and hyphens. And as said above, make sure your ids are unique.
That should be your first concern.
HTML5: Permitted Values for ID & Class Attributes
As of HTML5, the only restrictions on the value of an ID are:
must be unique in the document
must not contain any space characters
must contain at least one character
Similar rules apply to classes (except for the uniqueness, of course).
So the value can be all digits, just one digit, just punctuation characters, include special characters, whatever. Just no whitespace. This is very different from HTML4.
In HTML 4, ID values must begin with a letter, which can then be followed only by letters, digits, hyphens, underscores, colons and periods.
In HTML5 these are valid:
<div id="999"> ... </div>
<div id="#%LV-||"> ... </div>
<div id="____V"> ... </div>
<div id="⌘⌥"> ... </div>
<div id="♥"> ... </div>
<div id="{}"> ... </div>
<div id="©"> ... </div>
<div id="♤₩¤☆€~¥"> ... </div>
Just bear in mind that using numbers, punctuation or special characters in the value of an ID may cause trouble in other contexts (e.g., CSS, JavaScript, regex).
For example, the following ID is valid in HTML5:
<div id="9lions"> ... </div>
However, it is invalid in CSS:
From the CSS2.1 spec:
4.1.3 Characters and case
In CSS, identifiers (including element names, classes, and IDs in
selectors) can contain only the characters [a-zA-Z0-9] and ISO 10646
characters U+00A0 and higher, plus the hyphen (-) and the underscore
(_); they cannot start with a digit, two hyphens, or a hyphen
followed by a digit.
In most cases you may be able to escape characters in contexts where they have restrictions or special meaning.
W3C References
HTML5
3.2.5.1 The id
attribute
The id attribute specifies its element's unique identifier (ID).
The value must be unique amongst all the IDs in the element's home
subtree and must contain at least one character. The value must not
contain any space characters.
Note: There are no other restrictions on what form an ID can take; in
particular, IDs can consist of just digits, start with a digit, start
with an underscore, consist of just punctuation, etc.
3.2.5.7 The class
attribute
The attribute, if specified, must have a value that is a set of
space-separated tokens representing the various classes that the
element belongs to.
The classes that an HTML element has assigned to it consists of all
the classes returned when the value of the class attribute is split on
spaces. (Duplicates are ignored.)
There are no additional restrictions on the tokens authors can use in
the class attribute, but authors are encouraged to use values that
describe the nature of the content, rather than values that describe
the desired presentation of the content.
jQuery does handle any valid ID name. You just need to escape metacharacters (i.e., dots, semicolons, square brackets...). It's like saying that JavaScript has a problem with quotes only because you can't write
var name = 'O'Hara';
Selectors in jQuery API (see bottom note)
Strictly it should match
[A-Za-z][-A-Za-z0-9_:.]*
But jQuery seems to have problems with colons, so it might be better to avoid them.
HTML5:
It gets rid of the additional restrictions on the id attribute (see here). The only requirements left (apart from being unique in the document) are:
the value must contain at least one character (can’t be empty)
it can’t contain any space characters.
Pre-HTML5:
ID should match:
[A-Za-z][-A-Za-z0-9_:.]*
Must start with A-Z or a-z characters
May contain - (hyphen), _ (underscore), : (colon) and . (period)
But one should avoid : and . because:
For example, an ID could be labelled "a.b:c" and referenced in the style sheet as #a.b:c, but as well as being the id for the element, it could mean id "a", class "b", pseudo-selector "c". It is best to avoid the confusion and stay away from using . and : altogether.
In practice many sites use id attributes starting with numbers, even though this is technically not valid HTML.
The HTML 5 draft specification loosens up the rules for the id and name attributes: they are now just opaque strings which cannot contain spaces.
Hyphens, underscores, periods, colons, numbers and letters are all valid for use with CSS and jQuery. The following should work, but it must be unique throughout the page and also must start with a letter [A-Za-z].
Working with colons and periods needs a bit more work, but you can do it as the following example shows.
<html>
<head>
<title>Cake</title>
<style type="text/css">
#i\.Really\.Like\.Cake {
color: green;
}
#i\:Really\:Like\:Cake {
color: blue;
}
</style>
</head>
<body>
<div id="i.Really.Like.Cake">Cake</div>
<div id="testResultPeriod"></div>
<div id="i:Really:Like:Cake">Cake</div>
<div id="testResultColon"></div>
<script type="text/javascript" src="http://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/1.4.2/jquery.min.js"></script>
<script type="text/javascript">
$(function() {
var testPeriod = $("#i\\.Really\\.Like\\.Cake");
$("#testResultPeriod").html("found " + testPeriod.length + " result.");
var testColon = $("#i\\:Really\\:Like\\:Cake");
$("#testResultColon").html("found " + testColon.length + " result.");
});
</script>
</body>
</html>
HTML5
Keeping in mind that ID must be unique, i.e., there must not be multiple elements in a document that have the same id value.
The rules about ID content in HTML5 are (apart from being unique):
This attribute's value must not contain white spaces. [...]
Though this restriction has been lifted in HTML 5, an ID should start with a letter for compatibility.
This is the W3 spec about ID (from MDN):
Any string, with the following restrictions:
must be at least one character long
must not contain any space characters
Previous versions of HTML placed greater restrictions on the content of ID values (for example, they did not permit ID values to begin with a number).
More information:
W3 - global attributes (id)
MDN attribute (id)
To reference an id with a period in it, you need to use a backslash. I am not sure if it's the same for hyphens or underscores.
For example:
HTML
<div id="maintenance.instrumentNumber">############0218</div>
CSS
#maintenance\.instrumentNumber{word-wrap:break-word;}
From the HTML 4 specification...
The ID and NAME tokens must begin with a letter ([A-Za-z]) and may be followed by any number of letters, digits ([0-9]), hyphens ("-"), underscores ("_"), colons (":"), and periods (".").
Also, never forget that an ID is unique. Once used, the ID value may not appear again anywhere in the document.
You may have many ID's, but all must have a unique value.
On the other hand, there is the class-element. Just like ID, it can appear many times, but the value may be used over and over again.
A unique identifier for the element.
There must not be multiple elements in a document that have the same id value.
Any string, with the following restrictions:
must be at least one character long
must not contain any space characters:
U+0020 SPACE
U+0009 CHARACTER TABULATION (tab)
U+000A LINE FEED (LF)
U+000C FORM FEED (FF)
U+000D CARRIAGE RETURN (CR)
Using characters except ASCII letters and digits, '_', '-' and '.' may cause compatibility problems, as they weren't allowed in HTML 4. Though this restriction has been lifted in HTML 5, an ID should start with a letter for compatibility.
It appears that, although colons (:) and periods (.) are valid in the HTML specification, they are invalid as id selectors in CSS, so they are probably best avoided if you intend to use them for that purpose.
For HTML5:
The value must be unique amongst all the IDs in the element’s home
subtree and must contain at least one character. The value must not
contain any space characters.
At least one character, no spaces.
This opens the door for valid use cases such as using accented characters. It also gives us plenty of more ammo to shoot ourselves in the foot with, since you can now use id values that will cause problems with both CSS and JavaScript unless you’re really careful.
IDs are best suited for naming parts of your layout, so you should not give the same name for ID and class
ID allows alphanumeric and special characters
but avoid using the # : . * ! symbols
spaces are not allowed
not started with numbers or a hyphen followed by a digit
case sensitive
using ID selectors is faster than using class selectors
use hyphen "-" (underscore "_" can also be used, but it is not good for SEO) for long CSS class or Id rule names
If a rule has an ID selector as its key selector, don’t add the tag name to the rule. Since IDs are unique, adding a tag name would slow down the matching process needlessly.
In HTML5, the id attribute can be used on any HTML element and In HTML 4.01, the id attribute cannot be used with: <base>, <head>, <html>, <meta>, <param>, <script>, <style>, and <title>.
Any alpha-numeric value,"-", and "_" are valid. But, you should start the id name with any character between A-Z or a-z.
Since ES2015 we can as well use almost all Unicode characters for ID's, if the document character set is set to UTF-8.
Test out here: https://mothereff.in/js-variables
Read about it: Valid JavaScript variable names in ES2015
In ES2015, identifiers must start with $, _, or any symbol with the
Unicode derived core property ID_Start.
The rest of the identifier can contain $, _, U+200C zero width
non-joiner, U+200D zero width joiner, or any symbol with the Unicode
derived core property ID_Continue.
const target = document.querySelector("div").id
console.log("Div id:", target )
document.getElementById(target).style.background = "chartreuse"
div {
border: 5px blue solid;
width: 100%;
height: 200px
}
<div id="H̹̙̦̮͉̩̗̗ͧ̇̏̊̾Eͨ͆͒̆ͮ̃͏̷̮̣̫̤̣Cͯ̂͐͏̨̛͔̦̟͈̻O̜͎͍͙͚̬̝̣̽ͮ͐͗̀ͤ̍̀͢M̴̡̲̭͍͇̼̟̯̦̉̒͠Ḛ̛̙̞̪̗ͥͤͩ̾͑̔͐ͅṮ̴̷̷̗̼͍̿̿̓̽͐H̙̙̔̄͜"></div>
Should you use it? Probably not a good idea!
Read about it: JavaScript: "Syntax error missing } after function body"
No spaces, and it must begin with at least a character from a to z and 0 to 9.
In HTML
ID should start with {A-Z} or {a-z}. You can add digits, periods, hyphens, underscores, and colons.
For example:
<span id="testID2"></span>
<span id="test-ID2"></span>
<span id="test_ID2"></span>
<span id="test:ID2"></span>
<span id="test.ID2"></span>
But even though you can make ID with colons (:) or period (.). It is hard for CSS to use these IDs as a selector. Mainly when you want to use pseudo elements (:before and :after).
Also in JavaScript it is hard to select these ID's.
So you should use first four ID's as the preferred way by many developers around and if it's necessary then you can use the last two also.
Walues can be: [a-z], [A-Z], [0-9], [* _ : -]
It is used for HTML5...
We can add id with any tag.
Help, my Javascript is broken!
Everyone says IDs can't be duplicates.
Best tried in every browser but FireFox
<div id="ONE"></div>
<div id="ONE"></div>
<div id="ONE"></div>
<script>
document.body.append( document.querySelectorAll("#ONE").length , ' DIVs!')
document.body.append( ' in a ', typeof ONE )
console.log( ONE ); // a global var !!
</script>
Explanation
After the turn of the century Microsoft had 90% Browser Market share,
and implemented Browser behaviours that where never standardized:
1. create global variables for every ID
2. create an Array for duplicate IDs
All later Browser vendors copied this behaviour, otherwise their browser wouldn't support older sites.
Somewhere around 2015 Mozilla removed 2. from FireFox and 1. still works.
All other browsers still do 1. and 2.
I use it every day because typing ONE instead of document.querySelector("#ONE") helps me prototype faster; I do not use it in production.
Html ID
The id attribute specifies its element's unique identifier (ID).
There are no other restrictions on what form an ID can take; in particular, IDs can consist of just digits, start with a digit, start with an underscore, consist of just punctuation, etc.
An element's unique identifier can be used for a variety of purposes, most notably as a way to link to specific parts of a document using fragments, as a way to target an element when scripting, and as a way to style a specific element from CSS.
Uppercase and lowercase alphabets works
'_' and '-' works, too
Numbers works
Colons (,) and period (.) seems to work
Interestingly, emojis work
alphabets → caps & small
digits → 0-9
special characters → ':', '-', '_', '.'
The format should be either starting from '.' or an alphabet, followed by either of the special characters of more alphabets or numbers. The value of the id field must not end at an '_'.
Also, spaces are not allowed, if provided, they are treated as different values, which is not valid in case of the id attributes.

What are valid values for the id attribute in HTML?

When creating the id attributes for HTML elements, what rules are there for the value?
For HTML 4, the answer is technically:
ID and NAME tokens must begin with a letter ([A-Za-z]) and may be followed by any number of letters, digits ([0-9]), hyphens ("-"), underscores ("_"), colons (":"), and periods (".").
HTML 5 is even more permissive, saying only that an id must contain at least one character and may not contain any space characters.
The id attribute is case sensitive in XHTML.
As a purely practical matter, you may want to avoid certain characters. Periods, colons and '#' have special meaning in CSS selectors, so you will have to escape those characters using a backslash in CSS or a double backslash in a selector string passed to jQuery. Think about how often you will have to escape a character in your stylesheets or code before you go crazy with periods and colons in ids.
For example, the HTML declaration <div id="first.name"></div> is valid. You can select that element in CSS as #first\.name and in jQuery like so: $('#first\\.name'). But if you forget the backslash, $('#first.name'), you will have a perfectly valid selector looking for an element with id first and also having class name. This is a bug that is easy to overlook. You might be happier in the long run choosing the id first-name (a hyphen rather than a period), instead.
You can simplify your development tasks by strictly sticking to a naming convention. For example, if you limit yourself entirely to lower-case characters and always separate words with either hyphens or underscores (but not both, pick one and never use the other), then you have an easy-to-remember pattern. You will never wonder "was it firstName or FirstName?" because you will always know that you should type first_name. Prefer camel case? Then limit yourself to that, no hyphens or underscores, and always, consistently use either upper-case or lower-case for the first character, don't mix them.
A now very obscure problem was that at least one browser, Netscape 6, incorrectly treated id attribute values as case-sensitive. That meant that if you had typed id="firstName" in your HTML (lower-case 'f') and #FirstName { color: red } in your CSS (upper-case 'F'), that buggy browser would have failed to set the element's color to red. At the time of this edit, April 2015, I hope you aren't being asked to support Netscape 6. Consider this a historical footnote.
From the HTML 4 specification:
ID and NAME tokens must begin with a letter ([A-Za-z]) and may be followed by any number of letters, digits ([0-9]), hyphens ("-"), underscores ("_"), colons (":"), and periods (".").
A common mistake is to use an ID that starts with a digit.
You can technically use colons and periods in id/name attributes, but I would strongly suggest avoiding both.
In CSS (and several JavaScript libraries like jQuery), both the period and the colon have special meaning and you will run into problems if you're not careful. Periods are class selectors and colons are pseudo-selectors (eg., ":hover" for an element when the mouse is over it).
If you give an element the id "my.cool:thing", your CSS selector will look like this:
#my.cool:thing { ... /* some rules */ ... }
Which is really saying, "the element with an id of 'my', a class of 'cool' and the 'thing' pseudo-selector" in CSS-speak.
Stick to A-Z of any case, numbers, underscores and hyphens. And as said above, make sure your ids are unique.
That should be your first concern.
HTML5: Permitted Values for ID & Class Attributes
As of HTML5, the only restrictions on the value of an ID are:
must be unique in the document
must not contain any space characters
must contain at least one character
Similar rules apply to classes (except for the uniqueness, of course).
So the value can be all digits, just one digit, just punctuation characters, include special characters, whatever. Just no whitespace. This is very different from HTML4.
In HTML 4, ID values must begin with a letter, which can then be followed only by letters, digits, hyphens, underscores, colons and periods.
In HTML5 these are valid:
<div id="999"> ... </div>
<div id="#%LV-||"> ... </div>
<div id="____V"> ... </div>
<div id="⌘⌥"> ... </div>
<div id="♥"> ... </div>
<div id="{}"> ... </div>
<div id="©"> ... </div>
<div id="♤₩¤☆€~¥"> ... </div>
Just bear in mind that using numbers, punctuation or special characters in the value of an ID may cause trouble in other contexts (e.g., CSS, JavaScript, regex).
For example, the following ID is valid in HTML5:
<div id="9lions"> ... </div>
However, it is invalid in CSS:
From the CSS2.1 spec:
4.1.3 Characters and case
In CSS, identifiers (including element names, classes, and IDs in
selectors) can contain only the characters [a-zA-Z0-9] and ISO 10646
characters U+00A0 and higher, plus the hyphen (-) and the underscore
(_); they cannot start with a digit, two hyphens, or a hyphen
followed by a digit.
In most cases you may be able to escape characters in contexts where they have restrictions or special meaning.
W3C References
HTML5
3.2.5.1 The id
attribute
The id attribute specifies its element's unique identifier (ID).
The value must be unique amongst all the IDs in the element's home
subtree and must contain at least one character. The value must not
contain any space characters.
Note: There are no other restrictions on what form an ID can take; in
particular, IDs can consist of just digits, start with a digit, start
with an underscore, consist of just punctuation, etc.
3.2.5.7 The class
attribute
The attribute, if specified, must have a value that is a set of
space-separated tokens representing the various classes that the
element belongs to.
The classes that an HTML element has assigned to it consists of all
the classes returned when the value of the class attribute is split on
spaces. (Duplicates are ignored.)
There are no additional restrictions on the tokens authors can use in
the class attribute, but authors are encouraged to use values that
describe the nature of the content, rather than values that describe
the desired presentation of the content.
jQuery does handle any valid ID name. You just need to escape metacharacters (i.e., dots, semicolons, square brackets...). It's like saying that JavaScript has a problem with quotes only because you can't write
var name = 'O'Hara';
Selectors in jQuery API (see bottom note)
Strictly it should match
[A-Za-z][-A-Za-z0-9_:.]*
But jQuery seems to have problems with colons, so it might be better to avoid them.
HTML5:
It gets rid of the additional restrictions on the id attribute (see here). The only requirements left (apart from being unique in the document) are:
the value must contain at least one character (can’t be empty)
it can’t contain any space characters.
Pre-HTML5:
ID should match:
[A-Za-z][-A-Za-z0-9_:.]*
Must start with A-Z or a-z characters
May contain - (hyphen), _ (underscore), : (colon) and . (period)
But one should avoid : and . because:
For example, an ID could be labelled "a.b:c" and referenced in the style sheet as #a.b:c, but as well as being the id for the element, it could mean id "a", class "b", pseudo-selector "c". It is best to avoid the confusion and stay away from using . and : altogether.
In practice many sites use id attributes starting with numbers, even though this is technically not valid HTML.
The HTML 5 draft specification loosens up the rules for the id and name attributes: they are now just opaque strings which cannot contain spaces.
Hyphens, underscores, periods, colons, numbers and letters are all valid for use with CSS and jQuery. The following should work, but it must be unique throughout the page and also must start with a letter [A-Za-z].
Working with colons and periods needs a bit more work, but you can do it as the following example shows.
<html>
<head>
<title>Cake</title>
<style type="text/css">
#i\.Really\.Like\.Cake {
color: green;
}
#i\:Really\:Like\:Cake {
color: blue;
}
</style>
</head>
<body>
<div id="i.Really.Like.Cake">Cake</div>
<div id="testResultPeriod"></div>
<div id="i:Really:Like:Cake">Cake</div>
<div id="testResultColon"></div>
<script type="text/javascript" src="http://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/1.4.2/jquery.min.js"></script>
<script type="text/javascript">
$(function() {
var testPeriod = $("#i\\.Really\\.Like\\.Cake");
$("#testResultPeriod").html("found " + testPeriod.length + " result.");
var testColon = $("#i\\:Really\\:Like\\:Cake");
$("#testResultColon").html("found " + testColon.length + " result.");
});
</script>
</body>
</html>
HTML5
Keeping in mind that ID must be unique, i.e., there must not be multiple elements in a document that have the same id value.
The rules about ID content in HTML5 are (apart from being unique):
This attribute's value must not contain white spaces. [...]
Though this restriction has been lifted in HTML 5, an ID should start with a letter for compatibility.
This is the W3 spec about ID (from MDN):
Any string, with the following restrictions:
must be at least one character long
must not contain any space characters
Previous versions of HTML placed greater restrictions on the content of ID values (for example, they did not permit ID values to begin with a number).
More information:
W3 - global attributes (id)
MDN attribute (id)
To reference an id with a period in it, you need to use a backslash. I am not sure if it's the same for hyphens or underscores.
For example:
HTML
<div id="maintenance.instrumentNumber">############0218</div>
CSS
#maintenance\.instrumentNumber{word-wrap:break-word;}
From the HTML 4 specification...
The ID and NAME tokens must begin with a letter ([A-Za-z]) and may be followed by any number of letters, digits ([0-9]), hyphens ("-"), underscores ("_"), colons (":"), and periods (".").
Also, never forget that an ID is unique. Once used, the ID value may not appear again anywhere in the document.
You may have many ID's, but all must have a unique value.
On the other hand, there is the class-element. Just like ID, it can appear many times, but the value may be used over and over again.
A unique identifier for the element.
There must not be multiple elements in a document that have the same id value.
Any string, with the following restrictions:
must be at least one character long
must not contain any space characters:
U+0020 SPACE
U+0009 CHARACTER TABULATION (tab)
U+000A LINE FEED (LF)
U+000C FORM FEED (FF)
U+000D CARRIAGE RETURN (CR)
Using characters except ASCII letters and digits, '_', '-' and '.' may cause compatibility problems, as they weren't allowed in HTML 4. Though this restriction has been lifted in HTML 5, an ID should start with a letter for compatibility.
It appears that, although colons (:) and periods (.) are valid in the HTML specification, they are invalid as id selectors in CSS, so they are probably best avoided if you intend to use them for that purpose.
For HTML5:
The value must be unique amongst all the IDs in the element’s home
subtree and must contain at least one character. The value must not
contain any space characters.
At least one character, no spaces.
This opens the door for valid use cases such as using accented characters. It also gives us plenty of more ammo to shoot ourselves in the foot with, since you can now use id values that will cause problems with both CSS and JavaScript unless you’re really careful.
IDs are best suited for naming parts of your layout, so you should not give the same name for ID and class
ID allows alphanumeric and special characters
but avoid using the # : . * ! symbols
spaces are not allowed
not started with numbers or a hyphen followed by a digit
case sensitive
using ID selectors is faster than using class selectors
use hyphen "-" (underscore "_" can also be used, but it is not good for SEO) for long CSS class or Id rule names
If a rule has an ID selector as its key selector, don’t add the tag name to the rule. Since IDs are unique, adding a tag name would slow down the matching process needlessly.
In HTML5, the id attribute can be used on any HTML element and In HTML 4.01, the id attribute cannot be used with: <base>, <head>, <html>, <meta>, <param>, <script>, <style>, and <title>.
Any alpha-numeric value,"-", and "_" are valid. But, you should start the id name with any character between A-Z or a-z.
Since ES2015 we can as well use almost all Unicode characters for ID's, if the document character set is set to UTF-8.
Test out here: https://mothereff.in/js-variables
Read about it: Valid JavaScript variable names in ES2015
In ES2015, identifiers must start with $, _, or any symbol with the
Unicode derived core property ID_Start.
The rest of the identifier can contain $, _, U+200C zero width
non-joiner, U+200D zero width joiner, or any symbol with the Unicode
derived core property ID_Continue.
const target = document.querySelector("div").id
console.log("Div id:", target )
document.getElementById(target).style.background = "chartreuse"
div {
border: 5px blue solid;
width: 100%;
height: 200px
}
<div id="H̹̙̦̮͉̩̗̗ͧ̇̏̊̾Eͨ͆͒̆ͮ̃͏̷̮̣̫̤̣Cͯ̂͐͏̨̛͔̦̟͈̻O̜͎͍͙͚̬̝̣̽ͮ͐͗̀ͤ̍̀͢M̴̡̲̭͍͇̼̟̯̦̉̒͠Ḛ̛̙̞̪̗ͥͤͩ̾͑̔͐ͅṮ̴̷̷̗̼͍̿̿̓̽͐H̙̙̔̄͜"></div>
Should you use it? Probably not a good idea!
Read about it: JavaScript: "Syntax error missing } after function body"
No spaces, and it must begin with at least a character from a to z and 0 to 9.
In HTML
ID should start with {A-Z} or {a-z}. You can add digits, periods, hyphens, underscores, and colons.
For example:
<span id="testID2"></span>
<span id="test-ID2"></span>
<span id="test_ID2"></span>
<span id="test:ID2"></span>
<span id="test.ID2"></span>
But even though you can make ID with colons (:) or period (.). It is hard for CSS to use these IDs as a selector. Mainly when you want to use pseudo elements (:before and :after).
Also in JavaScript it is hard to select these ID's.
So you should use first four ID's as the preferred way by many developers around and if it's necessary then you can use the last two also.
Walues can be: [a-z], [A-Z], [0-9], [* _ : -]
It is used for HTML5...
We can add id with any tag.
Help, my Javascript is broken!
Everyone says IDs can't be duplicates.
Best tried in every browser but FireFox
<div id="ONE"></div>
<div id="ONE"></div>
<div id="ONE"></div>
<script>
document.body.append( document.querySelectorAll("#ONE").length , ' DIVs!')
document.body.append( ' in a ', typeof ONE )
console.log( ONE ); // a global var !!
</script>
Explanation
After the turn of the century Microsoft had 90% Browser Market share,
and implemented Browser behaviours that where never standardized:
1. create global variables for every ID
2. create an Array for duplicate IDs
All later Browser vendors copied this behaviour, otherwise their browser wouldn't support older sites.
Somewhere around 2015 Mozilla removed 2. from FireFox and 1. still works.
All other browsers still do 1. and 2.
I use it every day because typing ONE instead of document.querySelector("#ONE") helps me prototype faster; I do not use it in production.
Html ID
The id attribute specifies its element's unique identifier (ID).
There are no other restrictions on what form an ID can take; in particular, IDs can consist of just digits, start with a digit, start with an underscore, consist of just punctuation, etc.
An element's unique identifier can be used for a variety of purposes, most notably as a way to link to specific parts of a document using fragments, as a way to target an element when scripting, and as a way to style a specific element from CSS.
Uppercase and lowercase alphabets works
'_' and '-' works, too
Numbers works
Colons (,) and period (.) seems to work
Interestingly, emojis work
alphabets → caps & small
digits → 0-9
special characters → ':', '-', '_', '.'
The format should be either starting from '.' or an alphabet, followed by either of the special characters of more alphabets or numbers. The value of the id field must not end at an '_'.
Also, spaces are not allowed, if provided, they are treated as different values, which is not valid in case of the id attributes.