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How do we go about doing W3C validation with an Angular application?

Since custom directives make for invalid HTML validation, we typically see lots of W3C validation errors. Are there any strategies for this?

2 Answers 2

35

Strict w3c validation allows any data-* attributes, and any class.

Directives can be applied to DOM elements with any of:

  1. <tag directive-name>
  2. <tag data-directive-name> (*)
  3. <tag x-directive-name>
  4. <tag directive_name>
  5. <tag x_directive_name>
  6. <tag data_directive_name>

At least the data- one is fully W3C compliant (provided you declare HTML5 doctype). So the following code validates (the attribute name, of course it fails for missing title, missing encoding etc):

<!DOCTYPE html>
<html>
 <body data-ng-app="MyApp">
 </body>
</html>
8
  • I think this is also mentioned in this excellent video: youtube.com/watch?v=WqmeI5fZcho Jun 6, 2013 at 3:43
  • The answer only applies to experimental validation according to HTML5, which is work in progress. HTML5 does not accept literally any data-* attribute (essentially, : is not allowed in the name), and x-* attributes are not valid (they cause validator error messages): “Attribute names beginning with the two characters "x-" are reserved for user agent use and are guaranteed to never be formally added to the HTML language.” Jun 6, 2013 at 4:09
  • 3
    Prepend the attributes with data- and declare it to be HTML5.
    – rewritten
    Jun 6, 2013 at 11:17
  • 1
    Following up, data- prefix worked great with Tidy algorithm validator, and apparently works with custom directives too!
    – AndyB
    Jun 6, 2013 at 18:57
  • 1
    @wbyoung, the Extensibility section in HTML5 CR says about x-* attributes: “Note: Pages that use such attributes are by definition non-conforming.” Oct 16, 2013 at 5:04
-1

W3 Validation of Angular code online

If you tried to validate your AngularJS code with http://validator.w3.org/, you must have noticed that it does not allow AngularJS ng-* attributes.

One way to validate (as @rewritten explained), is to prefix your ng-* with data-, or x-.

I do not want to do this on the 800 attributes of my app. In my point of view, it reduces the clarity of the code, especially when we use a lot of these attributes.


The W3C HTML5 validation team has developed a tool which allow to filter errors during the validation, and accept well ng-* attributes.

You can try it at this URL: http://validator.w3.org/nu/

After you submit a document for checking, on the results page you’ll see a Message filtering button, and if you press that, you’ll get a list of all the error messages grouped into sets, with Show/Hide checkboxes.


Screenshot of the validator

Source

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