Polyglot markup
In computing, a polyglot markup is a document or script written in a valid form of multiple markup languages, which performs the same output, independent of the markup's parser, layout engine, or interpreter. In general, the polyglot markup is a common subset of two or more languages, that can be used as a robust or simplified profile.
Polyglot HTML is HTML that has been written to conform to both the HTML and XHTML specifications.[1] A polyglot document can therefore be parsed as either HTML (which is SGML-compatible) or XML, and will produce the same DOM structure either way. For example, in order for an HTML5 document to meet these criteria, the two requirements are that it must have an HTML5 doctype, and be written in well-formed XHTML.[2] The same document can then be served as either HTML or XHTML, depending on browser support and MIME type.
Polyglot HTML requirements
As expressed by the html-polyglot recommendation,[1] to write a polyglot HTML5 document, the following key points should be observed:
- Processing instructions and the XML declaration are both forbidden in polyglot markup
- Specifying a document’s character encoding
- The DOCTYPE
- Namespaces
- Element syntax
- Element content
- Text
- Attributes
- Named entity references
- Comments
- Scripting and styling polyglot markup
The most basic possible polyglot markup document would therefore look like this:[1]
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" lang="" xml:lang="">
<head>
<title>The title element must not be empty.</title>
</head>
<body>
</body>
</html>
In a polyglot markup document non-void elements (such as script
, p
, div
) cannot be self-closing even if they are empty, as this is not valid HTML.[3] For example, to add an empty textarea to a page, one cannot use <textarea/>
, but has to use <textarea></textarea>
instead.
See also
References
- ^ a b c Polyglot Markup: A robust profile of the HTML5 vocabulary, W3C Working Group Note 29 September 2015
- ^ The WhatWG Blog - XHTML5 in a nutshell, 25 July 2010
- ^ Polyglot Markup: HTML-Compatible XHTML Documents: 6.4 Void Elements. W3C Editor's Draft 9 July 2012.