2

I'm new to HTML5 markup.

I'm wondering if I'm allowed to have a header and footer tag within section tag like the below:

<section>
  <header>
    <h2>HEADER</h2>
  </header>
  <p>Section's Content</p>
  <footer>
    <h2>FOOTER</h2>
  </footer>
</section>

Or is it better to replace them with div tag and set classes for them.

Thank you in advance.

2
  • The HTML specification is very clear about this.
    – Rob
    Jun 25, 2018 at 9:51
  • yes you can refer to this answer
    – ishimwe
    Jun 25, 2018 at 9:53

3 Answers 3

4

According to MDN you can use it.

Header tag Permitted parents: Any element that accepts flow content. Note that a element must not be a descendant of an <address>, <footer> or another <header> element.

Footer tag Permitted parents: Any element that accepts flow content. Note that a element must not be a descendant of an <address>, <header> or another <footer> element.

And section is a flow content element. You can have header and footer tags in it.

0

Best practice is to do something like that (you can also replace section by div, if you want)

  <header>
    <h2>HEADER</h2>
  </header>
  <section>
    <p>Section's Content</p>
  </section>
  <footer>
    <h2>FOOTER</h2>
  </footer>
1
  • Dear Zahori, thank you for your respond. I have already Header tag and Footer tag for the whole content. But I have 5 sections within the main tag and every section tag has h2 and div tag with the class "section-footer". That's why I'm wondering if is it better to set header and footer tags for every section.
    – Doynedo
    Jun 25, 2018 at 10:02
0

You can have as many header tags as you want, and place them in almost any other element with some exceptions:

Header
https://www.w3schools.com/tags/tag_header.asp

Note: A <header> tag cannot be placed within a <footer>, <address> or another <header> element.

Footer
https://www.w3schools.com/tags/tag_footer.asp

The <footer> tag defines a footer for a document or section.

So <header> and <footer> are fine within sections, the corresponding w3c links even explicitly states that they are fine to use within sections.

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