You should read the section "Headings and sections" of the HTML5 spec. Getting the headings right is an important aspect of accessibility.
With headings (and sections) you are telling various user-agents how your page is structured, which content belongs together and which is separate from each other.
Think of a typical website with 3 columns. In the first column you have the site navigation, in the second column you have the main content and in the third column you have secondary content. Now, humans able to see might grasp immediately that there are three "areas" on the page, thanks to a different background color, margins, borders, whatever. But visually impaired or blind humans can't get clues from the graphical design of the page. Machines (like search engines) neither. Therefor we use heading/sectioning elements, so they can get the information (how the page is structured) from the markup.
Each HTML5 document has an outline, which gets created by the use of the headings h1
-h6
(and hgroup
) and/or the sectioning elements (section
, article
, nav
, aside
). You can think of it as some kind of TOC.
While a human able to see gets a first idea about the page structure by looking at the graphical design, humans using screenreaders and machines get this idea by reading the page outline, e.g.:
(1.) John Doe's Example Blog
(1.1) Navigation
(1.2) My first year at ACME
(1.3) Recent blog posts
This could be the outline of the following example documents:
Using headings only:
<body>
<h1>John Doe's Example Blog</h1>
<h2>Navigation</h2>
<h2>My first year at ACME</h2>
<h2>Recent blog posts</h2>
</body>
Using sectioning elements and headings with the level according to the calculated outline:
<body>
<h1>John Doe's Example Blog</h1>
<nav>
<h2>Navigation</h2>
</nav>
<article>
<h2>My first year at ACME</h2>
</article>
<aside>
<h2>Recent blog posts</h2>
</aside>
</body>
Using sectioning elements with h1
everywhere:
<body>
<h1>John Doe's Example Blog</h1>
<nav>
<h1>Navigation</h1>
</nav>
<article>
<h1>My first year at ACME</h1>
</article>
<aside>
<h1>Recent blog posts</h1>
</aside>
</body>
(The latter two are semantically equivalent!)
When using sectioning elements, you could even omit the headings altogether, the outline would still be the same, although "unnamed" (which is not very helpful!):
<body>
<nav></nav>
<article></article>
<aside></aside>
</body>
This would be the corresponding outline:
(1) (Untitled Section)
(1.1) (Untitled Section)
(1.2) (Untitled Section)
(1.3) (Untitled Section)
You can play with this online outliner to see which documents create which outlines.
so, should we skip them or not?
Why would you want to skip levels in the first place? It's probably never good, so no, you should not skip levels. But if it would happen, I wouldn't consider it a serious error.
Note however, depending on how exactly you skip, especially if you don't skip all headings of that level, a wrong outline could be created. See for example this simple document:
<body>
<h1>Interesting stories</h1> <!-- this is the site heading -->
<h2>My first snow</h2> <!-- this is a story -->
<h3>What I thought snow would be like</h3> <!-- this is a subsection of that story -->
<h3>How I experienced it actually</h3> <!-- also subsection -->
<h3>Why I'm disappointed by snow</h3> <!-- also subsection -->
<h2>More stories about snow</h2> <!-- this is not part of the story, but a kind of "See also" for the site/page -->
</body>
Now, if you'd change the last h2
to h3
, suddenly this "More stories" section would become a subsection of the story. If you'd change it to h4
, it would become a subsubsection.
When designing a sidebar - what headings should be used? H2
?
When designing a footer - what headings should be used? H2
?
These questions can't be answered in general. It depends on your site and your page and your content. But yes, in many cases for a "typical page" h2
would be the right candidate. The page heading (not to confuse with main content heading!) is h1
, the main content is h2
, the secondary content (sidebar etc.) is h2
. If your footer would need a heading (not each one does), it would be h2
also in this case.
Headings are meant to be used for lists (like a list of posts in a footer) anyway?
It really depends on the content and the context.
The important question you have to ask (in general, for all heading decisions):
- Does this content "belong" to the previous heading?
- If yes:
- Is it some kind of sub-section? → use a heading one level higher, resp. use a
section
element (and optionally a heading inside of it)
- Is there no natural "sub-heading" for this content? → don't use a heading here
- If no: use a heading one level lower, resp. use a sectioning element that is not a child of the sectioning element in question
- (you'd have to repeat this step until your heading/section is a child of a heading that it belongs to)
Should H1
be used only once on a page?
Nope. As I explained, you could use h1
for all your headings on a page (if you use sectioning elements!).
When designing a "posts listing page" - each entry usually consists of TITLE and EXCERPT - should we use H1
for titles? Or H2
or DIV
?
You should probably use an article
element for each entry. So you'd get an heading automatically (= an entry in the outline), so to speak, as article
is a sectioning element. Now, you could use h1
for it (no matter where the article
is placed!), or you could use the calculated heading level (if the article
is a direct child of body
, you'd use h2
. If it is one level deeper, h3
. And so on.).
Use sectioning elements and headings so that a useful outline is created.
If you mark-up a webpage, look for a minute at the created outline only: Does it make sense? Do you understand by that how the page is structured, what sections it got? Is the hierarchy correct? Is a separate area/section of the page missing in this outline? Is a section a child of a section it doesn't belong to? (for example, often you see that the site navigation is a child of the page's main content, which is not correct, of course: typically they should be on the same level, both being childs of the site heading).