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Today I made a typo while helping someone with a question and wrote target="blank" instead of target="_blank". The interesting thing was that it still worked. I decided to try it out in other browsers as well to see if it was only Chrome that allowed for target="blank" without the underscore, but it seems to work in Firefox and Safari as well.

Is there a reason why the underscore can be dropped? And if it's legitimate to write it as target="blank", why do most if not all sources still say to write it out as target="_blank"?

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1 Answer 1

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If you have target="blank", open it twice and it opens in the same window. If you have target="_blank" twice, it opens in two different windows. You can check using:

<a href="http://google.com/" target="blank">Google</a>
<a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/" target="blank">Wikipedia</a>

Same with, _blank opening in two different windows:

<a href="http://google.com/" target="_blank">Google</a>
<a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/" target="_blank">Wikipedia</a>

In simple terms, it would be considered as blank will be the name of the new window, while _blank is a special keyword, opens a new window without a name. Correct me if I am wrong.

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