2

So suppose I have this tag

<a href=""></a>

and then I make up some non-standard attribute

<a lol="haha" href=""></a>

If you ask why, well so that I can conveniently use that made up attribute in my javascript...

My question is...is there any possible negative repercussion of doing this....is there any good reason why I shouldn't be doing this?

1
  • like others have said, add the "data-" prefix to your custom attributes. Like data-lol instead of just lol. According to the HTML5 spec, any custom attribute with that prefix is valid, others are not.
    – user967451
    Dec 5, 2011 at 6:47

4 Answers 4

7

Browsers will almost universally handle custom attributes. And when I say universally, I mean even IE6.

Of course the standard way to do that is with:

<a data-lol="haha" href=""></a>

Which, since you've tagged with jQuery, I'll mention can be read (even in IE6) with

$("a").data("lol");
2
  • IE6 definitely handles it. IE5.5 handled it too. I can't remember further back than that. (Actually although I suspect it would've been fine I'm not sure if IE5.5 handled hyphenated attributes, but it definitely handled one-word custom attributes like in the question.)
    – nnnnnn
    Dec 5, 2011 at 5:42
  • I was forced to use IE6 (and code for it) as recently as eighteen months ago, and really the main issues were more about non-standard handling (or lack of support) for certain CSS features. (The event-related stuff was easy enough to work around in most cases.)
    – nnnnnn
    Dec 5, 2011 at 5:49
1

I'd recommend using the HTML data- attribute HTML 5 data- Attributes

1

You can do this with HTML5:

<a data-lol="haha" href=""></a>

As for the downsides, I will say this: standards are made for a reason. Just because it looks like it works won't mean that it will work in the future.

1
  • Note that even (at least some) pre-HTML5 browsers support this, so this is a pretty safe option.
    – nnnnnn
    Dec 5, 2011 at 5:55
1

There is an attribute family that was made exactly for that: data-*. You should use

<a data-lol="haha" href="#"></a>

That will be valid and save you from any headaches. A custom attribute might conflict with a predefined one (or one that doesn't exist yet), or cause problems in non-compliant parsers.

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