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I am using jQuery and I am just wondering, does ID have to be always unique in the whole page? Class, I know, can be repeated as many times as you like, what about ID?

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  • 2
    an id attribute is generally used only once because an ID is unique
    – Ryan
    Feb 26, 2012 at 16:10
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    You can't override the definition of an ID if you feel you could do so. Feb 26, 2012 at 16:21
  • ID has to be unique, but if you need to apply a shared property to diffrent elements, use class instead. Mar 13 at 22:59

15 Answers 15

74

Yes, it must be unique.

HTML4:

https://www.w3.org/TR/html4/struct/global.html#h-7.5.2

Section 7.5.2:

id = name [CS] This attribute assigns a name to an element. This name must be unique in a document.

HTML5:

https://www.w3.org/TR/html5/dom.html#element-attrdef-global-id

The id attribute specifies its element's unique identifier (ID). The value must be unique amongst all the IDs in the element's home subtree and must contain at least one character. The value must not contain any space characters.

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    amongst all the IDs in the element’s home subtree.” Subtree. Yes, sub-, tree. Jan 26, 2021 at 18:26
37

Does an ID have to be unique in the whole page?

No.

Because the HTML Living Standard of March 15, 2022, clearly states:

The class, id, and slot attributes may be specified on all HTML elements. ……. When specified on HTML elements, the id attribute value must be unique amongst all the IDs in the element’s tree and must contain at least one character. The value must not contain any ASCII whitespace.

and a page may have several DOM trees. It does, for example, when you’ve attached (Element.attachShadow()) a shadow DOM tree to an element.

A document tree and its underlying shadow trees


TL; DR

Does an ID have to be unique in the whole page?

No.

Does an ID have to be unique in a DOM tree?

Yes.

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    PS. Don’t get me wrong. If you’re not fiddling with shadow DOMs, your <html> forms a single DOM tree — Keep your ids unique within your <html>. Feb 3 at 8:24
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from mdn enter image description here https://developer.mozilla.org/en/DOM/element.id

so i guess it better be...

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Technically, by HTML5 standards ID must be unique on the page - https://developer.mozilla.org/en/DOM/element.id

But I've worked on extremely modular websites, where this is completely ignored and it works. And it makes sense - the most surprising part.

We call it "componentization"

For example, you might have a component on your page, which is some kind of widget. It has stuff inside with their own unique IDs eg "ok-button"

Once there are many of these widgets on the page, you technically have invalid HTML. But it makes perfect sense to componentize your widgets so that they each, internally, reference their own ok button eg if using jquery to search from it's own root it might be: $widgetRoot.find("#ok-button")

This works for us, though technically IDs shouldn't be used at all, once they're not unique.

As cited above, even YouTube does it, so it's not so renegade.

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    I strongly disagree. It does not make sense, as IDs are meant to be unique ON THE PAGE, which strongly contradicts your idea "componentization". Those recurring elements should be classes. You can target them as need be from outside their specific, unique container. E.g. #ticker-widget .ok-button. May 28, 2021 at 10:54
  • I understand IDs are meant to be unique on the page, I think I made that quite clear already. But "meant to" doesn't equal "always must" or shouldn't. Your suggestion doesn't properly comprehend the problem and my example was misleading: in some cases, using classes won't have enough specificity and also returns an array which then requires more code to parse, all that when in some cases using multiple IDs "just works" - and HTML purity would cause more work for no gain.
    – PandaWood
    Feb 15, 2022 at 23:23
  • IDs have different functions than other attributes, If they are not unique you won't be able use hashtag in the url to automatically scroll to second element with the same ID, or you won't be able use getElementById() function which is twice as fast as any other element selectors.
    – vanowm
    Apr 18, 2022 at 0:57
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Browsers used to be lenient on this (many years ago when css was young) and allow the ID to be used more than once. They have become more strict.

However, yes ID's are to be unique and only used once.

If you need to use css formatting more than once use CLASS.

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That's basically the whole point of an ID. :) IDs are specific, can only be used once per page. Classes can be used as pleased.

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Jan 2018, here is Youtube HTML , you can see id="button" id="info" are duplicated.

enter image description here

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    You should hardly consider the output of large, dynamic websites as a-priori examples of "valid code". May 28, 2021 at 10:52
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    Downvoting. Just because YouTube jumps off a bridge doesn't mean we should.
    – Will Lanni
    Jun 4, 2021 at 0:52
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With Javascript, you can only reference to one element using ID. document.getElementById and jQuery's $ selector will return only the first element matching. So it doesn't make sense using the same ID on multiple elements.

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There are great answers for the same question at https://softwareengineering.stackexchange.com/questions/127178/two-html-elements-with-same-id-attribute-how-bad-is-it-really.

One tidbit not mentioned above is that if there are several identical ids one the same page (which happens, even though it violates the standard):

If you have to work around this (that's sad), you can use $("*#foo") which will convince jQuery to use getElementsByTagName and return a list of all matched elements.

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Yes, IDs are unique. Class are not.

0

IDs always have to be unique.

Everybody has a unique identification number (ex. Social Security number), and there are lots of people in a social class

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I'm adding to this question, because I feel it has not been answered adequately in any of the above,

As a point reference: I've implemented non-unique id's, and all works just fine (across all browsers). Importantly, when coding, I've not run into any css logic errors, which is where the rubber hits the road (IMO) on this question. Have also not run into any conflicts in js (as one can glean out id's in context with classes)

So, why do id's have to be unique? Obvious answer (as stated and re-stated above) is 'cause the 'standards' say so. The missing part for me is why?

i.e. what actually goes awry (or could theoretically go awry) if (heaven forbid) someone inadvertently used the same id twice?

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The reference with all browsers these days?

Makes div possible in such terms of being used multiple times.

There is no rule that it must be unique. When all browsers understand:

<script>div#some {font-size: 20px}</script>
<div id="some"><p>understand</p></div>
<div id="some"><h1>me too</h1></div>

When you add new style CSS codes you have the possibility to use the addition of styles. Since that even is not supposed to be unique it describes the opposite use, so make more styles but do not make more objects? And as you can; assign several div objects, so why didn't they tell you that class must be unique? That's because the class does not need unique value. And that makes the ID in legal terms obsolete if not being unique.

<script>.some {font-size: 25px}</script>
<div class="some"><p>enter</p></div>
<div class="some"><h1>enter</p></div>

"When there is no rule when a rule is said. Then the rule is not fulfilled. It's not inherent to exist. By only in the illusion of all rules that it should have existed only to make life much harder."

Just because some people say div must be unique, this might be right, but at least through their professional perspective to say it, they have to say it. Unless they didn't check the modern browsers, which from nearly the beginning were able to understand the code of several different div objects with the same style.

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ID must be unique - One reason for that is, that in the Browser-JavaScript-Context exists a methode: Document.getElementById()

  • This method can only return one element.
  • If a Document has not unique IDs, this function behaves in an undocumented and unforeseeable way.

I think, this is reason enough to only use one ID per Document.

Reference: https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/API/Document/getElementById

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This is and old post and I'm not necessarily providing the answer or maybe even an answer at all but wanted to add some context in regards HTML element IDs after an experience I had recently (and not being too technical of a perspective)..

I was always under the impression that ID's had little relevance to anything other than CSS styling until recently in an Angular app I was dealing with a component someone had written using dynamically generated IDs.

Presicely the same IDs implemented into 2 components that were alive in the DOM at the same time (but not all visible). In this scenario, 2 components with duplicate IDs binding to the (change) output binding resulted in behaviour where component A was triggering methods in component B. I probably would never have recognized this if the components were created and destroyed as they were visible in the DOM..

I assume the "change" API uses something like "document.GetElementById(x).setValue()" and picks the first instance of this element ID in the markup while doing so, resulting in the observed behaviour. It's a mistake I certainly won't mistake again anyways

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