I just noticed that, in soundcloud, the "action" buttons on a track (like, repost, etc...) are all html button tags. Moreover, they are neither inside a form nor they bind to a form a la html5 nor submit a form (they apparently are being handled through javascript). Is this valid HTML? Can a button exist without a form? Or does that just make these buttons plain clickable divs? And how valid/unvalid would that be for screenreaders?
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A When not associated with a form, a Outside a form, a To address clarifying questions in the comment below: A For either element, if using them causes a server action (typically, via an Ajax call), then we can indeed ask how the page works with JavaScript disabled. But this question might be irrelevant (perhaps the page is an application that is supposed to run with JavaScript anyway), and in any case there is nothing formally wrong with the idea. Why do they exist? For author convenience and for legacy reasons, I would say. Similarly, one might ask why HTML has event attributes at all, when they cannot possibly work without client-side scripting and you can assign event handlers to elements in JavaScript. But in the early days, that was not possible, and even at present, it might be more convenient to use the |
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Yes. Since a very long time. From whatwg.org :
In the era of ajax, most inputs aren't just send by submitting a form. And most buttons are just used to execute an action on click while using a recognizable widget. |
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