6

I was wondering if the audio and video elements block or inline elements?

2 Answers 2

3

I ran the following web page in Chrome 11...

<!DOCTYPE html>

<audio></audio>
<canvas></canvas>

<script>
var c = document.getElementsByTagName('audio')[0];
alert(getComputedStyle(c, null).display);
</script>

...and it reported inline for both canvas and audio. For what it's worth.

1
3

Like many (most?) HTML elements it depends on the context. In this example they are 'inline' elements (what are now called 'phrasing' elements):

<!DOCTYPE html>

<p><audio></audio><video></video></p>

</html>

In this example they are 'block' elements (what are now called 'flow' elements):

<!DOCTYPE html>

<p></p>
<audio></audio>
<video></video>
<p></p>

</html>

Whether or not your browser is conforming to the spec is another issue entirely.

For further reading: https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/HTML/Content_categories

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