vote up 1 vote down star

Is it ok to have id names for children of an element the same as the ids of children of another element provided the parent id is different? Any potential conflict?

flag

72% accept rate
... I'm confused, could you give an example? – marcgg Aug 14 at 21:48

5 Answers

vote up 9 vote down check

No, element ids should be unique throughout the entire document. document.getElementById() won't work right with duplicate ids (obviously, as it only returns one element). Now your page will probably work fine with the duplicate ids, it's not like the browser will crash or refuse to render the page or anything, but it's not correct HTML.

If you need non-unique identifiers use the class attribute. That's exactly what it's for, to tag multiple elements with the same name.

link|flag
vote up 3 vote down

Read the spec:

This attribute [id] assigns a name to an element. This name must be unique in a document.

link|flag
1  
rtfm ftw – marcgg Aug 14 at 21:57
vote up 1 vote down

If you've got different DOM elements with the same ID, it will lead to troubles at some point... don't do it even thought it might work.

link|flag
vote up 1 vote down

The ID should always be unique regardless in the context of HTML or Javascript. You are much better off with an unique identifier. For example, you have multiple elements with id named "foo"; in document.getElementById("foo") will only return the first instance by that id.

link|flag
vote up 2 vote down

It is very bad practice and likely to cause errors. A better solution would be to use classes to distinguish the child objects and then descend from the parent ID to locate the element you are looking for.

link|flag

Your Answer

Get an OpenID
or

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.