The Biggest Lie In HTML
HTML-код
- Опубликовано: 15 апр 2024
- I have been angry about self-closing tags for awhile. I now better understand WHY they are so bad, but I still hate it.
SOURCE
github.com/sveltejs/svelte/is...
jakearchibald.com/2023/agains...
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S/O Ph4se0n3 for the awesome edit 🙏 - Наука
The web is built on a mountain of tech debt.
Quote of the year
That's not technical debt, it's technical neglect
This is one of the first things I always say to the FE teams I manage when we form the team and start talking about the project, well not actually this, but actually "the web is held together with gum, duct tape and prayers". They don't understand it at this point, but pretty soon enough they do get it. Shenanigans ensue.
Most of software. Not just the web
"...held together with gum, duct tape and prayers". They don't understand it at this point, but pretty soon enough they do get it. Shenanigans ensue."
^ Speedrun your team's "getting it" by making Theo's rant here Required Reading during their first week.
13:17 "How many people are actually writing an html file?"
**Looks at my personal website which uses plain html with no frameworks**
Uhhhhh probably some people
Right? I don't use frameworks unless I have to.
based and react pilled
No frameworks?! No frameworks to manage your frameworks? Do you even webdev?
@@acf2802 that might depend on how one defines "webdev". Some of us have been writing HTML by hand since the mid 1990's, and, while we may use frameworks of various sorts for some things, we're quite content to hand-code HTML for other things. 🤷🏻♀
For a very very long time my personal website was just a few PHP files with includes that were filled with good ol' hand written HTML. It's now just pre-rendered NEXT.js to get around pesky full page refreshes. Nothing like having to compile your god damn site just because you changed a few words.
Hello
Will always look like an error for me.
ikr, its only something who didn't bother learning HTML first jumped straight into these JS Frameworks would do. The current implementation is really good for me, I just close everything. For self-closing tags it doesn't bother them, just one extra / to deal with. e.g.: and for "closing" closing tags, welp, I simply close them after their job is done. e.g.: meh
@@TheCodeDropand any self-closing element that is not closed just to throw an alert to the console and done, to not break old code using amd . Everything sorted
@@Slashx92 yes why not, just show a warning, it can at least be a great starting point.
looks kind of like pug which I find awesome
Yeah... and it is an error if you put it in the W3C HTML validator. I don't see how it would make sense in any language to expect "Hello" to be inside the div... if the language does support self closing tags then any content after the closing slash should be outside the element... isn't that the point of a closing slash? The fact that browsers ignore the self closing slash and fix your invalid markup should never have been interpreted as some valid syntax.
Something about an issue being "Library does the thing it's meant to do completely wrong" is really amusing to me
I handwrite HTML for work.
Also, my personal website doesn't use any framework, just handwritten HTML, CSS, and a tiny bit of JS.
Same here. I find that frameworks convolute code with boiler plate and makes the project more complicated.
As someone building it’s 100% the fault of the framework creator. If you’re building a language wrapper it’s YOUR job to fully understand the details, especially the fine ones, of the language that you’re wrapping. It’ll be like building a C++ framework with a pointer object that is actually a reference under the hood.
exactly my thinking
its on the Framework people to do and understand the thing they are wrapping to the extreme detail - pretier et al be damned follow the spec's and implications
@@techobservations8238 counterpoint. If MOZILLA, the actual developers of one of the oldest and most respected browsers, do this wrong, then the language is wrong and needs to be fixed. That would either be a temporary annoyance now, or we're going to permanently keep having this annoyance in the future. People 200 years from now will look back and ask themselves, why didn't they just fix this.
Enters HTML, the programming language
That's not all! Introducing HTML... with Styles™! Cascading your way from context free, to more powerful models of computation!
HTML+CSS, the dataflow programming language of choice!*
(*among masochists)
If only we had a tool to show the browser what language version we’re using so it could parse accordingly… you know, like doctype and head meta tags 🙃
http content-type header
I would do my part and never use it!
"If a comment could change what the code does"... May I remind you of Internet Explorer's conditional comments?
What the ... ?
Also SHTML (server side includes) where you could easily embed other HTML files (as well as doing other things) without even needing a PHP backend! Just slap in and you're sorted. It even supports arbitrary execution of shell commands and echoing environment variables!
XSS and user submitted content wasn't exactly a concern when SSI was introduced...
html email building still has to use conditional comments for some stylings on outlook clients lol
JDSL (tom is a genius)
@@arthurcarchi4045 I mean, it kinda makes sense, assuming not all browsers are the same, and the other browsers don't have browser-specific syntax. You put the code specific to your browser in a special comment so that other browsers ignore it.
A similar technique was used to allow JavaScript to work in old HTML, before all browsers had JS support. You would put your JavaScript inside of a special HTML comment.
Similarly, XML doesn't like raw text strings, so SVG would put them inside of CDATA tags. Notice how it starts with
I went to MDN to see the list of self-closing (which they call Void Elements) and they indicate that the /> is invalid HTML. I clicked on embed, one of these elements and the example had the invalid />. 😂
Hey, when I started writing HTML we used , so that doesn't look so bad now, does it?
@5:20 - a-TRI'-bute is a verb; A'-tri-bute is a noun.
I try not to care, but the number of times he said it in this video was killing me 😭
@@charliecarrot went and looked for these comments when i just couldnt anymore (5 minutes in)
a-tri-butÉ is French
I hear people use the verb pronunciation for the noun so much, it always bumps me.
Oh GOD YES!!!!!! This was KILLING ME!
We should not be requiring tooling. The power of the web is that you can get started without anything other than an editor.
Retrocompatibility is the best worst thing that happen in software development, that's why we have new tools each week.
HTML is already compatible. Self closing elements would require new tools. Why do we need this??
@@nickfarley2268 because we treat HTML as human-readable language, so it must be easily readable for humans as well. If that was only machine readable language (like e.g. bytecode) then you would be right.
@@proosee are you saying html is not human readable because you have to write instead of ? Why do we need to redefine HTML syntax so we can save 5 characters of text?
@@nickfarley2268 no, I didn't say that, I said that if you consider language a human-readable one then opinions of people on how confusing it is actually matter, if spec for is for most people confusing then you need to take it into account and you just disregarded it by "meh, machine can read it so it doesn't matter".
@nickfarley2268 it's less human readable if you re-watch rhe examples with the div tag. Or this is inside
Brs are not the problem
I still handwrite html manually, what's wrong with that?
How dare write HTML instead of... let me check... JSX
Yeah, my documentation is just HTML and JSX hand written in Composition notebooks. My code reviewers just use red pen.
Theo's "Just never write html" argument misses the point.
You keep saying "attribute" with the verb pronunciation (emphasis on the second syllable) when you mean the noun (pronunciation should have emphasis on the first syllable). Just a heads up because it trips me up every time. Sorry to be "that guy" but I'd want someone to let me know, just like if I had something in my teeth and didn't know. Great videos!
I was just about to be that guy - thanks Reverend!
I was one of the XHTML proponents. But it had one huge problem on every browser that even supported it (at least it did back in the day): a single syntax error made the browser shit itself and refuse to render anything. But in my opinion they threw the baby out with the bathwater. They could have made HTML5 xml-like and xml compatible while also making it fault tolerant like it is today.
Just to clear up a bit of confusion with the terminology used in the article referenced in this video. There is no such thing as a "self-closing" tag in HTML (i.e SGML). They don't exist: they only exist in XML. What's being referred to in the case of e.g in HTML is not a "self closing" tag but a "standalone" tag - something completely different to a self closing tag in XML (and doesn't exist in XML).
That's partly the reason for the confusion, and it's why is just as much a syntax error (in HTML, if you didn't know) as .
SGML has had self closing tags since at least the last millennium. See Annex K.3.5.1.
i feel like we should not call a self closing tag but a short closing tag
because is a self closing tag, the tag _closes itself_ without you needing to do anything, meanwhile divs need end tags, which you can _shorten_ in some tools to
idk this is just a random brain spew but i feel like if we make a clear distinction it could make future discussions easier
Yeah, for theo /> means self-closing tag even if it doesn't close right away.
In HTML5 br and input are self-closing, div isn't regardless whether there's a slash.
In html, these (, , ) are not called self-closing. Technically they are called void tags.
To be even more pedantic, they are called void elements, not void tags. Shame on me for not double checking before commenting 😞
you know the right way to write hr and br tags are and right? as somone says they are void elements.. will it blow your mind that tag does not need to be closed ?
"If the guy who made the HTML ++ framework thought that this is how it worked, that's a fault of the language, not a fault of the individual." Ummm, no? It's really incumbent on the individual to know how the language works.
it comes from the old XHTML standard that was based on XML, we've mostly abandoned it, but it is valid XHTML to do and expect it to render properly
HTML5 has an XML serialization mode (XHTML5) when you add an tag at the start. That is in part for compatibility with XHTML, but also with XML pipelines (e.g. transforming JATS to HTML with XSLT). It's also used in various places like EPUB 2 files.
Except not really because 99% of people who used XHTLM did not serve it with the "application/xhtml+xml" mime type which means it was always being parsed as HTML and relying on HTML's lackadaisical handling of syntax errors to "just work."
the video goes into this. But, yeah, I'm finding myself wanting to start explicitly using xhtml instead of html5 from now on, and keeping (with or without the space, ideally) as being what I expect it to be.
"Almost no languages support using Emojis" What is he talking about? Javascript is very much able to use them for variable names. Just not JSX...
At the very least in TypeScript, I get an error when trying to use emojis. At one point I was trying to write code using some custom Unicode characters and I had to make a custom parser just to reformat it (it would change the unicode characters into variable names that had bytes written out like identifier_u1234_u2345 etc, which was awful to debug of course)
@@electra_ Number one reason I'll never move on to typescript, can't use emojis. It's incredibly important to my workflow. .js files or bust.
Another proof that React devs don't know js, html, css and in general how browser works :D
To bake an apple pie from scratch, first invent the universe
Its more like… to bake an apple pie from scratch you need to now how to use an oven.
There's really handful of people who really do though
I don't like self-closing tags because it is less clear than explicitly closing.
in what way is that less clear? (Inherently -- ignoring what things do with it for the sake of this question.)
To me, is _more_ clear than , if only because I don't have to mentally make sure that the tag names are the same, I can just read one of them and see that it's self-closing. No?
Wait? You can self-close? I've always explicitly closed all enclosable tags. It's consistant with the XML. I work so often With XML that it's easier for me to just write code exactly as they should do. Not relying on an asumption that the computer not f*** up your purpose.
did you really want two of these??
Personally, I lean towards all or nothing. If not all tags can be self closing due to security concerns, then none of them should be. Be consistent.
@@davidroddini1512 amen to that. HTML is not the world! we can't be inconsistant in our expressions, and if it's a problem in one place it's 100%, a problem everywhere the self-enclosed tags are used.
As for YAML, it only became a superset of JSON with version 1.2, YAML 1.1 has some minor incompatibilities. What doesn't help is that there are tons of libraries that still only support 1.1, and the fact that many YAML libraries do not adhere 100% to the spec anyway. As for mistaken self-closed tags, I'd expect most mistakes involve textarea, as it's often empty.
This video just makes me feel old since I knew this 😂
I feel like you missed the obvious interpretation of br... br isn't an element it's an in-stream text formatting tool, it should be a character like a perhaps.... &lnbk; (instead xml spec of )
The argument for img, is an img in an inline block element, the sorta obvious behavior would be that if an img is a block level element, then it should be able to have children, and the image would act like a inline-block element with fixed size and a background image
I was a big fan of XHTML at the time. I wanted HTML parsing to be predictable and for browsers to print warnings in the console for invalid XHTML. Obviously I was on the losing side. Pragmatic concerns kept the technical debt of all this stupid HTML parsing.
browsers still support xhtml so no losing
@@RandomGeometryDashStuff That's not the point. If we would have switched to XHTML or XML we would have saved ourselves a lot of pain and suffering (it would also cause a lot of pain and suffering to transition but that would only be a period and now we're stuck with HTML).
I'm glad someone else posted this too. XHTML should have been the path forward. HTML5 should be referred to as Hyper Trashcan Markup Language.
4:30 showing zero appreciation of what was done with pre-ANSI C++ in a semi-green field environment. The web needed a decent front-end so users could actually see the value of the internet and use it. Netscape was also in competition with Microsoft, so they had to make choices and execute. Mistakes were made, but the biggest mistake was probably the rewrite. Context matters.
In HTML 6 you'd be able to write to force self close without breaking compatibility
Self closing tags was a thing in XHTML, which many of us jumped to from atrocious HTML3 syntax that different browsers interpreted differently. Then HTML4 comes out, XHTML gets phased out, and we still close tags like out of habit. I'm surprised people forgot this
XHTML is based on HTML4. Nobody seemed to be interested in it and then it faded away after HTML5 came out.
18:43 Fun fact: emojis are valid characters in selector names and variable names in CSS. 👀
also as keys of objects or symbols
With every video I realise Theo knows React, but not frontend. Backend devs raised on JSX are just now learning the basics.
I do not like writing /> in HTML. HTML and XML are and always were 2 different languages. HTML was built on top of SGML, not XML. And XHTML is practically dead (and probably a bad idea to start with).
HTML is a language to write hypertext, and tags are called tags not as a coincidence, but because they are things you add in a text to structure it, it was not designed to structure data. If you see like them, it make perfectly sense that some elements are self-closing and some other are not, like in LaTeX (for example), the principle is very similar (you have tags that produce an immediate effect, and others that affect what is next, and these you can wrap in brackets to have them apply to more stuff).
Closing tags are confusing to the user, why the user shall write something like ? It makes no sense. It also creates confusion, because the user then discovers that is not a valid syntax. Better avoid confusion, and treat XML and HTML as two separate languages, with they own rules.
Beside that, it's just faster to avoid typing one useless character, and you transmit 1 byte less on the network (that multiplied for all the in your page, for all the requests made to load a document, can add up to several traffic saved.
XML is an ISO-compliant subset of SGML
html should just be fixed.
used to throw me for a loop. All I wanted to do was include an external js file. And simply does not work. It drove me nuts.
I may be missing something, but as I started waaaay back when html started, I know the , , etc is a single tag and not an open/close set of tags
* I learned that some tags were single, some had open/close
* when came out I never assumed any thing other than a single tag that represented itself as a single tag for human reference (xml aside)
* Seeing does not make me thing it means , it makes me thing its a single tag and not an open/close tag
I used to serve XHTML with application/xhtml+xml, except when the user agent was IE7 or lower, cause it would just render the XML as text file.
What, one can't use emoji in JS ? Even with all those transpiling layers
Yes you can. Just not in JSX. He would have shut himself up real quick if he tried it in a .js document lol
that's because when the parser checks the content the img, video, , etc are pointers to resources and not the resource itself. while div, p, etc are not pointers but wrappers for the content. When you write the text in a you will have the resource shipped with the bundle... if was self-closing means that the text was coming from a text file located elsewhere and not with the .html
Btw. Swift supports emoji characters in variable, function, and class names
I think Julia do that as well
I honestly don't see the point. I don't need my variable names to be cute with emojis everywhere. If anything, I think having them in variable names will make it harder to actually use that variable in the first place. I'm glad other languages don't support that.
@@CatFace8885 Julia is designed to solve math problems, and for this is very nice for a language to support math related symbols. And Julia does it very nicely. Not emojis per say
@@CatFace8885 different languages, different purposes
PHP supports it too, funnily enough.
HTML5 specs are like 20 years old now and since day one of it's "official" release I never used etc. syntax again. Never understood why anyone would still do that. Funny that many people got confused about self closing tags just because some folks couldn't stop that habit :-)
If it worked in X/HTML, but doesn't in HTML5, then maybe it shouldn't have been called HTML5 but SGML5 instead so people wouldn't assume it's compatible.
When writing html, sometimes I omit my close tags for and just to annoy jsx-enthusiasts.
I still do it out of habit because of those XHTML days.. Self-closing the the and and it's dang hard to undo that bit of muscle memory 😭
I preferred xhtml. It allowed for simpler parsing rules, which allowed pages to be easily parsed on low power devices like cell phones, brail readers, printers and so on.
Fault-tolerance is a foundational design principle of the web - everything from network protocols to CSS and HTML parsing and parts of JavaScript. BSOD on an HTML syntax error is what the web would have got with Microsoft-style thinking. Thank you to every early web pioneer who pushed hard for an open and fault-tolerant platform!
Good video, I would add that self closing tags can be dangerous doors for threat actors. I like closing my tags cause I like a sense of symmetry to it for security and aesthetics.
I think code indentation is a good analogy for self-closing tags. In some languages, indentation matters. In others, it's completely cosmetic. In languages where it's cosmetic, it's possible to indent incorrectly and confuse yourself. But that doesn't mean it's not useful to have.
Also, I don't want emojis in my code, because the emoji picker in Windows doesn't work right when I'm in an RDP session.
There are no self-closing tags in HTML, so I never used them. Good for you, the svelte guy and all the people finding out about this.
An ideal opportunity to dump JS too. So rendering outside the or for fun?
Personally, I think we should be embracing xHTML more. Browsers didn't abandon it. It's still works. It's web developers that abandoned it, because they didn't want to risk displaying parsing errors when their buggy templating systems rendered the page wrong.
Self-closing only applies to inline tags without an explicit closing tag (like img and br). For blocks, everything after the tag is included inside it until it runs into the next opening block-style tag.
The amount of lavaflows in the web is definitely annoying as fsck.
I would prefer to adopt some kind of XML standard which uses the old XHTML "strict"/"transitional" or "relaxed" DTDs to deal with webpages that would otherwise generate parsing errors.
This is just another reason why I hate coding crap for the web. All the hidden "gotcha" side effects that even the "experts" / "creators" don't know about themselves. Ugh.
I really like that, "lavaflows". Instantly makes sense, like "footguns".
@@DarrenJohn10X It's a commonly-used software development term -- unfortunately. :)
It usually refers to code or design that was done in a haphazard or expedient way (the "flow" part), and has since hardened into an unchangeable standard.
Also can refer to multiple layers of the same thing, since you can't change the "hardened" mess below, you just pave over it with more lava. :P
To be fair, when I was a teen a long time ago, having the browser be so forgiving actually helped me learn HTML. Hey guess what, that move led me into my career.
So there is a point for it to be more forgiving in the past. Also, I guess it's easier to parse when tags themselves defined if they were self closing or not. Could very well be an "at that time, it was a fair idea" thing.
the first few seconds hurt me physically
Theo is really brand new
I feel like your video is trying to convince me to just get rid of all the self-closing tags, I've been doing for years. :-)
I'm sorry, what lie? You mean misconception?
So I just need to wrap everything in for it to work as expected?
I've made web documentation with xml for content with appropriate ddt for it, xslt with formatting and design and css, so self-closing tags is a given...
I did not know people didn't know divs can't be self closing.
I actually specifically test that in frameworks I am using (at the time of when I could use it) just to know how it is handled
True. Divs are used for structure and allows nesting, so shouldn't it be obvious that it has a closing tag?
@@marioprawirosudiro7301 I digress with your statement, self closing divs can be useful i.e. when you fill them later with js so it does make sense for them to sometimes be self-closing
@@xelspeth By that, did you mean putting script inside of a div, or did you mean dynamically populate the div later on?
I still think they shouldn't be self-closing either way. Not even for readability - nothing says "empty div" that seeing the closing div tag _right after_ the opening tag with nothing in between.
@@marioprawirosudiro7301 I meant dynamically populating the div later on.
Apart from that I don't think is more explicit than a self closing would be. For me it's the same as function() {} vs () => {}*. Just shorter and simpler for the same*
*obv "this" is different in anonymous and arrow function but that's besides the point here
@@xelspeth Well, in that case it becomes a matter of personal taste. For me, just looks like a malformed div at first glance.
Regarding its faster, that depends on implementation.
I could see an alternative approach:
Sees BR - Identifies it as a BR tag.
Sees /> - closes tag. Moves on.
Vs Sees BR - Identifies it as a BR tag.
See / - Ignores it.
See > - Closes tag.
Checks if it is in the list of elements that can't have children and because of that self-closes.
The article seems to just ignore this possibility and think the only way it could do it is if it ignores the slash and then checks anyway, but that is not the only case.
The only reason why I’d use this, would be in some kind of:
And self closing would mean for me that it is the beginning and the end of this object. It has no innerHTML.
I stumbled upon this github discussion myself a few days ago. It wasn't Rich who reported this btw, but a good that it's being discussed...
I don't care what Svelte is, but means , because the point is I'm NOT writing HTML. I'm writing a non-HTML something that only looks like HTML will eventually _become_ HTML and I expect the framework to handle it correctly to generate the HTML I expect, NOT the incorrect HTML it thinks is compliant with my non-HTML thing. If I wanted Hello. I would NOT write Hello. Because that's just stupid. I would read that and understand it to be Hello. Who wouldn't? The fact that it would be interpreted _IN_ HTML as Hello is **IRRELEVANT**. Because I'm NOT writing HTML. I'm writing a non-HTML something that will eventually become HTML. And I expect my non-HTML to do what I think it does, not what someone else think it does. Why is this even a debate? It's stupidly obvious.
Self-closing tags are a construct coming from XML / XHTML. In HTML 5, many tags either don't need a closing tag depending on their placement, or simply don't *HAVE* a closing tag (and adding one would be an error), like , ...
EDIT: posted that at the start of the video, glad the video got it right too.
"self-closing tags" are not a HTML syntax, but it's a fine syntax to have for superset language which parse your markup and support it, such as jsx / angular / w/e.
EDIT 2: The point about "faster to parse" is valid, and the counter-argument itself is invalid. An XML parser simply have no notion of "some elements are self-closing". The XML parser know that an element is closed specifically due to either the "/" at the end of the tag, or when reaching a closing tag. Not having a notion of "self-closing elements", it never try to find if the element name is inside a list of self-closing elements; it doesn't have to care at all about the name of the element, no matter what it is, for parsing purposes (although it obviously need to do so when validating against the schema, but you don't have to necessarily validate against the schema when you parse the document)
In 12:39 in my opinion the prettier formatter should follow the html parser when formatting html, self closing tags in list turn from opening tags and closing tags to self closing, and other tags turn into auto closed, with the exception of foreign elements hierarchies like embedded svg and MathMl.
I feel like linters should also include this as a standard warning/error, at least when using and alike
I once copied some JSX to HTML, only to have the strangest error. I spent sooo long debugging nested div issues because of this.
It just is so mind boggling that we had a bunch of browsers and no html parser spec for years
Is there a language that bundles and minifies to HTML? Like how typescript get built as javascript min?
I think I encountered something like this where I was using and it didn't work. After hours of trying to debug it, someone said you need to explicitely close it. I never understood why, but it worked. I probably had the same misunderstanding as the one in this video.
I like to do `` because the first div is passing the baton to the closing tag, and look you can see the closing tag got it
Edit: I read the issue posted by Rich and his main concern is about copy and pasting Svelte into HTML and not HTML into Svelte, people consistently miunderstood him. While Svelte adds language features, if you delete the Svelte parts you should be able to paste it into HTML and be the same. In that case it makes sense. They seem to be leaning towards warning people against self closing tags for tags that don't self close, and then later making it error.
I think it seems reasonable, and that the disagreement comes from people misunderstanding the direction of code. Nobody is actually writing `` in HTML to cause a problem in Svelte, but people are using `` in Svelte to cause a problem in HTML. While I don't see it being a realistic error, and that it would be better for browsers to fix it, it's fair enough to be consistent with the older format.
Why would anyone copy-paste Svelte into HTML?
you can define variables and stuff as emojis in python and swift (maybe others but idk)
In HTML 4 and 4.01 (which were strictly based on SGML), it was actually valid to write '
when i was still in college the first programming language i learned was c, then c++, then c#
i think of semicolon as the period in a phrase or a sentence which indicates the end of a line which is logical.
every start should have and end that's for me.
even with javascript even if it's a javascript one-liner i still put semicolon at the end of each line of code.
it's a preference but my rule of thumb is to treat each line of code like a phrase or a sentence which should have a period at the end.
Btw, with Vue templates, starting from:
I'm rendered outside after rendering
I'm rendered outside input
We get:
I'm rendered outside after rendering
I'm rendered outside input
Thumbs up for rendered as
IMHO thumbs up for forbidding non-self-closing , ...
Sorry, no. When I write Hello, I don't want it to suddenly become Hello. If Prettier is going to do something, it should make it Hello, because that's my expectation. And if it is not, then I can correct that by actually moving Hello inside.
Biggest pain in the ass is conditionally self-closing tags like
You didn't get the memo about XHTML going out of fashion?
Awesome! So happy you acknowledge that HTML exists! 🎉
emojis aren't a single character code, is usually multiplebyte character codes which when joined add up and make the emoji.
Bro, are u using Batik? your shirt (what it called in your place?)
I have never self-closed a div because I always thought it was invalid.
The issue really lies in why would you write hello. I assume your intention in that scenario would be using the div purely for css styling and no content. In which case I'd argue that you'd want a different tag that can style a section with no content, rather than how tags that expect content being used purely to style with no content.
I don't know how anyone who knows html wouldn't know this. I'm not usually the guy to say that, but...
So what you're saying is that there's no end to ?
But then i had a very good idea. I closed my tags myself. See, closing my tags myself gave me a whole new perspective in coding and i was able to see skills that i couldve not see before.
nooooooooooo...
Is this a Kanadian/Seawattgaming reference?
I wasn't expecting to find that meme here, of all places.
@@lts0703 I saw that too, really good one lol
@@lts0703 Yes.
1:00 The issue’s status at that time is “Open” but why is it red? I was confused for a while 😅
He’s using a color blind theme
Thank goodness I came across this video before I discovered self closing tags
WOW! I didn't know that a simple is such a naughty little bugger!
It does different things, depending if it is inside of (it works in "foreign content" mode) -> produces empty div.
Not inside of -> it produces div with the children, that are right next to the !
Oddly enough, I have learnt about the peculiarities of closing tag of div from school and how it works and have seen it in production before. But after years of React, somehow that knowledge has been forgotten
18:52 - you might like ruby, then. ;)
Here's an actual session log from an irb ("interactive ruby" -- ruby's way of getting a REPL) session I just did, just for fun:
irb(main):001:0> « = 3
=> 3
irb(main):002:0> » = 5
=> 5
irb(main):003:0> «+»
=> 8
Perhaps it would have been better to use emoji than those symbols, but, I know how to type those, and somehow thought it created an amusing final expression.
I would argue that what should be the case is that self closing tags are self closing, regardless of the tag, and that all tags should be closed.
However, if an element that can't have children does not self close, then it is a parse error which is handled by the parsing engine to be closed, and any closing tags for such elements are ignored.
Fascinating. Back when i was learning how to code, i NEVER once was informed that div could be self-closing, so when you put it up on the screen, i immediately said, "well that's wrong". I had no idea ppl were doing this.
React bug brains are a hell of a drug 😉
In 2000 till 2010 i read a lot of w3c, see the rise and fall of xhtml, people that like xhtml was strict, but also other people that like html5 wasnt strict.
For me it was a period where i learn s lot about the markup languages.
I build a lot from scratch and without frameworks, and all my site are valid markup.
I think a lot of frontend developers have hard times to build without a framework, just with html and css.
I like to build without frameworks.
As someone who has been using pug for the last 5 years, I can't relate to anything here mattering
If you think of that slash as a simple command passed while parsing, it doesn’t make sense that it gets ignored if it isn’t suddenly in a new tag.
I also don’t understand why it’s imperative to repeat the name of the tag when you close it. should be acceptable. It has to be a tree anyway.
I've been crying myself to sleep every night since I transitioned into web development...
I agree with whatever formatter i happen to have installed on VS code this week.
Angular 16 supports self-closing tags for component elements in the template :)
laughed so hard when you say its been so old since html5 ... i feel the same ... haha
I would vote to continue to parse HTML incorrectly