vote up 0 vote down star

Recently I've been seeing a lot of this:

<a href='http://widget-site-example.com/example.html'>
    <img src='http://widget-site-example.com/ross.jpg' alt='Ross\'s Widget' />
</a>

Is it even valid to use single quotes in HTML? As I've highlighted above it's also problematic because you have to escape apostrophes.

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The alt attribute should have &apos; in it, not \' – Greg Oct 28 '08 at 10:33
This is a site for programmers. HTML isn't programming. Zing! I kid. – Robert S. Jan 13 at 21:08
@Greg: "The single-quote character ('), when used to quote an attribute value, must also be escaped as &#x27; or &#39; (should NOT be escaped as &apos; except in XHTML documents) when it appears within the attribute value itself." – Wahnfrieden Aug 20 at 15:38

8 Answers

vote up 8 vote down check

It's certainly valid to use single quotes (HTML 4.01, section 3.2.2). I haven't noticed such a trend, but perhaps there's some framework that powers web sites you've visited that happens to quote using single quotes.

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Funnily enough it's mainly sites that give external code out - for example a stats image for Ohloh or as in pushuptheweb.com – Ross Oct 28 '08 at 10:25
1  
HTML, not XHTML though – d03boy Jan 14 at 19:05
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Single quotes are perfectly legal in (X)HTML. Using a backslash to escape them, on the other hand, isn't. <img src='http://widget-site-example.com/ross.jpg' alt='Ross\'s Widget' /> is an image with the alt text "Ross\", and empty s and Widget/Widget' attributes. The correct way of escaping an apostrophe in HTML is &#39;.

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1  
Single quotes are not perfectly legal in XHTML. – d03boy Jan 14 at 19:11
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Someone may use it in PHP to avoid escaping " if they're using double quoted string to parse variables within it, or to avoid using string concatenation operator.

Example:

echo "<input type='text' value='$data'/>";

instead of

echo "<input type=\"text\" value=\"$data\" />";

or

echo '<input type="text" value="' . $data . '" />';

Nowadays I always stick to using double quotes for HTML and single quotes for Javascript.

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vote up 1 vote down

In ASP.NET, it's easier to use single quotes if you're using data-binding expressions in attributes:

<asp:TextBox runat="server" Text='<%# Bind("Name") %>' />
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vote up 2 vote down

It's easier when you want to embed double quotes.

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Same applies if you completely reverse the scenario... so not a good reason IMO – d03boy Jan 14 at 18:59
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What's against single quotes?

You can have single/double quotes all over your html code without any problem, as long as you keep the same quoting style inside a current tags ( many browser won't complain even about this, and validation just want that if you start with a quote, end with the same, inside the same propriety )

Free support to random quoting styles!!! (yay ;D )

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vote up 3 vote down

When using PHP to generate HTML it can be easier to do something like:

$html = "<img src='$url' />";

than concatinating a string with a variable with a string, as PHP parses variables in double-quoted strings.

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It's also easier than staring at $html = "<img src=\"{$url}\" />"; As escaped quotes are all to easy to forget – Sekhat Oct 28 '08 at 11:08
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I find using single quotes is handy when dynamically generating HTML using a programming language that uses double quote string literals.

e.g.

String.Format("<a href='{0}'>{1}</a>", Url, Desc)

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What? You dont like String.Format("<a href=" & ControlChars.Quote & "{0}" & ControlChars.Quote & ">{1}</a>", Url, Desc) ??? =P – StingyJack Nov 7 '08 at 20:56
String.Format(@"<a href=""{0}"">{1}</a>", Url, Desc) this is what you might consider :) – Cshift3iLike Jan 3 at 12:50
or String.Format("<a href=\"{0}\">{1}</a>", Url, Desc) – rizzle Jan 14 at 18:55

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