vote up 3 vote down star

Everything else in my site seems to be compatible with all browsers except for my links. They appear on the page, but they do not work. My code for the links are as follows-

<td bgcolor="#ffffff" height="370" valign="top" width="165">
<p><a href="sc3.html"><button style="width:120;height:25">Super Chem #3</button></a> <a href="91hollywood.html"><button style="width:120;height:25">91 Hollywood</button></a> <a href="sbubba.html"><button style="width:120;height:25">Super Bubba</button></a> <a href="afgoohash.html"><button style="width:120;height:25">Afgoo Hash</button></a> <a href="superjack.html"><button style="width:120;height:25">Super Jack</button></a> <a href="sog.html"><button style="width:120;height:25">Sugar OG</button></a> <a href="91pk91.html"><button style="width:120;height:25">91 x PK</button></a> <a href="jedi1.html"><button style="width:120;height:25">Jedi</button></a></p>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<a href="http://indynile99.blogspot.com"><button style="width:120;height:25">Blog</button></a>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
</td>

THANKS for the help!

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3 Answers

vote up 7 vote down

As Daniel states above, you can't have a <button> inside an <a> element.

To get the effect you're looking for, you can ditch the <a> tags and add a simple event handler to each button which navigates the browser to the desired location, e.g.

<input type="button" value="stackoverflow.com" onClick="javascript:location.href = 'http://stackoverflow.com';" />

Please consider not doing this, however; there's a reason regular links work as they do:

  • Users can instantly recognise links, and understand that they navigate to other pages
  • Search engines can identify them as links and follow them
  • Screen readers can identify them as links and advise their users appropriately

You also add a completely unnecessary requirement to have JavaScript enabled just to perform basic navigation; this is such a fundamental aspect of the web that I would consider such a dependency as unacceptable.

You can style your links, if desired, using a background image or background colour, border and other techniques, so that they look like buttons, but under the covers, they should be ordinary links.

link|flag
Wow, I caught most of that, a little bit over my head...so, if I understand correctly, either I use images for the buttons, or just turn them into ordinary links, right? – Jason Apr 29 at 15:35
@Jason Yes, usually you'd use an image for a link, or style the regular text link using CSS. – Will Eddins Apr 29 at 16:25
vote up 1 vote down

As previously answered you can not put a button inside a tag, but you could put an image that appears to be a button.

link|flag
Thank you! All y'all are spectacular! – Jason Apr 29 at 15:35
vote up 10 vote down

You cannot have a button inside an a tag. You can do some javascript to make it work however.

link|flag
Whats funny, I tried this like 12 years ago when I was learning HTML. Heh. – Daniel A. White Apr 29 at 15:28
I know, man...late bloomer here, but lovin' it! – Jason Apr 29 at 15:33

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