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I'm in halfway trough an html parser and found html5 defined explicitly the rules of thumb for parsing ill formed html. (And I used to infer them from DTDs, sigh)

I love that fact, but I know well that html5 isn't finalized yet (also I wonder if it ever will) and that it isn't developed by the W3C, but by the WHATWG.

Searching for the spec I need I'm presented with:

or

If it wasn't for the section numbers I would induce those are simply the same. But the different numbering makes me wonder. Which version is, supposedly, the most authoritative?

WHATWG seems to have more sections, and to have been added to since W3C uploaded its candidate recommendation.

Will W3C update to the WHATWG version?
Or will they stick to their current candidate until it gets to the official recommendation status?

Which html5 spec are we poor devils supposed to follow, when in doubt?

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7 Answers 7

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Always choose WHATWG over W3C, no exceptions.

Anne van Kesteren, (a WHATWG member who was a major contributor to the the HTML specification prior to the WHATWG and W3C versions diverging, and who remains a major contributor to the WHATWG specification) describes the current situation between WHATWG and W3C as follows on his blog:

The W3C has forked the [WHATWG] HTML Standard for the nth time. As always, it is pretty disastrous:

  • Erased all Git history of the document.
  • Did not document how they transformed the document. Issues of mismatches have already been reported and it will likely be a long time, if ever, before all bugs due to this process are uncovered, since it was not open.
  • Did not discuss plans with the wider community.
  • Did not discuss plans with the folks they were forking from.
  • Did not even discuss plans with the members of the W3C Web Platform Working Group.
  • Erased the acknowledgments section.
  • Erased the copyright and licensing information and replaced it with their own.

2019: The war is finally over

On May 28th, 2019, W3C and the WHATWG have signed a agreement to collaborate on a single, authoritative version of the HTML and DOM specifications.

According to W3C's statement, the two parties have come to the following terms:

  • W3C and WHATWG work together on HTML and DOM, in the WHATWG repositories, to produce a Living Standard and Recommendation/Review Draft-snapshots
  • WHATWG maintains the HTML and DOM Living Standards
  • W3C facilitates community work directly in the WHATWG repositories (bridging communities, developing use cases, filing issues, writing tests, mediating issue resolution)
  • W3C stops independent publishing of a designated list of specifications related to HTML and DOM and instead will work to take WHATWG Review Drafts to W3C Recommendations
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  • 1
    W3C reeks of incompetence. is Tim Berners-Lee still at the helm?
    – hanshenrik
    Nov 21, 2023 at 14:18
34

Biased answer from an editor of WHATWG HTML here. Hopefully the facts can speak for themselves though.

The WHATWG Living Standard should be considered authoritative. It is constantly worked on by a large community of contributors, including all browser vendors. No browser vendors implement according to W3C HTML; for some such as Firefox and Chrome this is a matter of publicly stated policy.

The WHATWG Living Standard is constantly receiving bug fixes and new features. For more information on this model of spec development, which more closely matches modern software development practices, see What does "Living Standard" mean?.

Unfortunately, the W3C sometimes copies and pastes our work onto their own website, and puts their own logo on it, and changes the names of the editors, and such. They do this for a variety of reasons, one of the largest of which is face-saving for the sake of their paying member companies (example of them stating this). What's worse, they like to release "versions" (like HTML "5.0", "5.1", etc.) which are just outdated versions missing modern bug fixes and features that clog up search result pages, causing confusion like this very question. We are currently tracking the confusion caused by these forks, of which HTML is only one.

You can track their progress on the copy-and-paste job in their issue tracker or in commits such as this one. It's a fun game to spot the bugs they introduce while doing this copy-and-paste job, as they generally do not read or understand the content they are copying, leading to widespread errors and inconsistencies.

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    Aren't you guys too concerned about what people think of you, over than, uhm... concerned with dishing out usable standards in a format that someone, noy payed 24/7 for that, can follow?
    – ZJR
    May 21, 2017 at 20:18
  • 3
    I think it's unreasonable to expect (data) consumers to constantly play catch up with a moving target. There's a reason why definite, specific, milestoned standards exist, and it's not because people weren't smart enough to do it differently. Oct 17, 2017 at 23:29
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    @Domenic, And if truly every browser is for whatwg and none is for w3c, then exactly who are these people behind the w3c html standard? Who are supporting them?
    – Pacerier
    Oct 22, 2017 at 16:53
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    Largely it is W3C management, who are concerned about not getting paid membership dues if they admit the reality that nobody pays attention to their fork.
    – Domenic
    Jun 1, 2018 at 18:07
  • "closely matches modern software development practices", okay, but software still has releases with versions. I don't see why the HTML standard cannot. You could still "release early, release often", but with version numbers, optimally semantic ones.
    – A. Donda
    Mar 7, 2021 at 18:26
26

It depends on who you ask. Really. The politics of this are ugly. And to make matters worse, the specifications aren't fully stable yet. I would have thought that the two specifications would be largely the same in their parsing sections since section 1.1.1 which lists the differences does not mention parsing. But then I did a web diff and I saw that there are subtle differences in the text. I would say that if you are actually implementing the specification to talk to the players involved about any differences you see between the specs, using the public mailing lists. Anyway, I am sorry I can't give you a clear cut answer.

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    "The politics of this are ugly" is such a pain, we're finally getting some traction and html5 is being seen as the platform for the future but we're still being confused and held back by political bickering. Getting there though :)
    – DannyT
    Apr 12, 2012 at 15:52
  • 4
    I would not call it bickering - The two groups have different opinions, and we're waiting for the dust to settle - for them to agree and swallow compromises and arrive at a joint spec. This kind of process is natural. I never understood why people are so opposed to political processes - yes, sometimes they are counterproductive, but more often than not, just natural. It's been going on for millennia, and software industry is not going to be the one standing out for lack of political "bickering" ;-) Oct 15, 2015 at 10:38
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    -1 this answer is really outdated in 2018 - whatwg is de-facto the only standards body that has been taken seriously in the last few years and it's the one all the browser vendors participate in. Apr 13, 2018 at 11:53
  • To be truthful, this question and answer would be closed today as 'primarily opinion based'. Anyhoo, my personal opinion today is that the dust has more or less settled in favor of the WHATWG, at least for HTML.
    – Gaurav
    Apr 14, 2018 at 15:16
7

OK , I eventually came to my own conclusion and I'm gonna share it.

I will follow the W3C version: blindly.

Politically speaking it's not a simple decision. Let me explain.

I was extremely sceptic about w3c, and I possibly even hated their guts during the whole XHTML debate/debacle. I saw the rise of WHATWG as the arrival of our pragmatical saviours: people that openly admitted that HTML can't be made into a stiff, rigorous XML-derived language, while the whole internet bothers nigh about it.

So given this point of view I should go with the WHATWG spec, shouldn't I?

No. Why?
WHATWG doesn't establish official versions. I kind of wish they did, but they don't.

They feel versions are too rigid for their...let's say hip attitude.
They instead have only a live standard. (and track implementation status of any single feature by major browsers)

But I'm not a major browser, I'm a small implementer, I cannot refer to a live standard.
Well, not unless I go crazy over it and release constantly, like there's no tomorrow.
(that's sort of what is happening with firefox and chrome)

So over neverending frenetic madness, I have to choose sanity. And W3C offers polished and numbered versions of the spec. And I can claim to conform to one of those version.

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    Claiming to conform to "one of those versions" is rather useless, as only whatever is latest matters for real world interoperability. And as explained in a different answer, it's impossible to trust what the W3C is publishing since they're just badly copy-and-pasting (indeed, with all the mistakes that come with that) someone else their efforts.
    – Anne
    Nov 18, 2016 at 9:35
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    I agree with Anne, but the "Living standard" is so vendors-driven that following changes for a simple web developer is a really complex task. If they would just provide a simple way to track changes, I'd totally agree...
    – Diego
    Jan 3, 2017 at 20:01
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    @Anne, “only whatever is latest matters for real world interoperability”: the opposite, interoperability requires stability, that's why we often refer to standards. Interoperability cannot be achieve when things change all the time. Think about UNIX before its standardisation …
    – Hibou57
    Sep 4, 2017 at 1:37
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    Things do not change all the time, but minor changes are required to reach convergence between implementations. And often old snapshots do not contain those minor changes and are therefore a bad reference as they don't reflect reality. Standards need maintenance just as much as software does.
    – Anne
    Sep 4, 2017 at 7:31
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    WHATWG seems to be on the agile train, whereas W3C is on the waterfall train. The agile train is faster.... for a little while. The waterfall train is much slower... but it won't bust a side rod around a tight turn. The waterfall train also has the benefit of knowing where it is going in advance. The W3C principles built the Web. I fail to see any reason besides upstart ego to change that practice. The only reason people carp about XHTML is because they like to write crappy markup. Oct 17, 2017 at 23:27
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https://www.w3.org/html/ gives a clear answer to this old but still actual question:

https://html.spec.whatwg.org/multipage/ is the current HTML standard. It obsoletes all other previously-published HTML specifications.

As announced at https://www.w3.org/blog/2019/05/w3c-and-whatwg-to-work-together-to-advance-the-open-web-platform/, the W3C and the WHATWG signed an agreement to collaborate on the development of a single version of the HTML and DOM specifications:

https://html.spec.whatwg.org/multipage/ is the single version of HTML being actively developed https://dom.spec.whatwg.org/ is the single version of the DOM specification being actively developed. For further details about the W3C-WHATWG agreement, see the Memorandum of Understanding Between W3C and WHATWG.

The part "obsoletes all other previously-published HTML specifications" means that https://www.w3.org/TR/html52/ is considered obsolete.

P.S. The URL from the question, http://www.w3.org/TR/html5/syntax.html#parsing, redirects to https://html.spec.whatwg.org/multipage/parsing.html#parsing.

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When in doubt, try to match the behavior of actual browsers. That's all that actually matters.

In general, WHATWG is probably more current than W3C, though it may include more things that browsers don't support (yet).

You can think of W3C as taking snapshots of WHATWG at given points in time, stabilizing them, and then hardening them, never to be changed.

  • W3C HTML5 was finalized 28 October 2014.
  • W3C HTML5.1 was finalized 1 November 2016.
  • W3C HTML5.2 is currently in its "Working Draft" and probably won't be finalized until 2019.
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    this defeats the very purpose of having standards
    – ZJR
    May 21, 2017 at 20:16
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    It isn't stabilizing them. It is blindly copying pasting them often with bugs.
    – Suraj Jain
    May 31, 2018 at 9:00
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[Feb, 2023]

This issue seems to be closed definitively as WHATWG abandonment of W3C has forced them (W3C) to concede as per this Wikipedia entry:

In 2009, the W3C conceded and abandoned XHTML[24] and in 2019, ceded control of the HTML specification to the WHATWG.[25]

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