Possible Duplicate:
Is type=“text/css” necessary in a <link> tag?
Do we need type="text/css"
for <link>
tag in HTML5?
Possible Duplicate:
Is type=“text/css” necessary in a <link> tag?
Do we need type="text/css"
for <link>
tag in HTML5?
The HTML5 spec says that the type
attribute is purely advisory and explains in detail how browsers should act if it's omitted (too much to quote here). It doesn't explicitly say that an omitted type attribute is either valid or invalid, but you can safely omit it knowing that browsers will still react as you expect.
Don’t need to specify a type
value of “text/css”
Every time you link to a CSS file:
<link rel="stylesheet" type="text/css" href="file.css">
You can simply write:
<link rel="stylesheet" href="file.css">
rel
attribute indicates that the relationship of this link is a style sheet.
For LINK elements the content-type is determined in the HTTP-response so the type
attribute is superfluous. This is OK for all browsers.
type="text/css"
then will browser detect the css or not. I'm asking is this attribute turned on or off the capability of browser to allow to render CSS?
Oct 10, 2011 at 16:49
file://
links that don't get a Content-type?
Aug 26, 2013 at 6:42
file:
link in the <link>
element? Use a local server for your development.
Aug 30, 2013 at 20:41
You don't really need it today, because the current standard makes it optional -- and every useful browser currently assumes that a style sheet is CSS, even in versions of HTML that considered the attribute "required".
With HTML being a "living standard" now, though -- and thus subject to change -- you can only guarantee so much. And there's no new DTD that you can point to and say the page was written for that version of HTML, and no reliable way even to say "HTML as of such-and-such a date". For forward-compatibility reasons, in my opinion, you should specify the type.
type="text/css"
and a space) so that i don't have to rely on that being the case for all time.