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input type="submit" and button tag are they interchangeable? or if there is any difference then When to use input type="submit" and when button ?

And if there is no difference then why we have 2 tags for same purpose?

3
  • Avoid a funny day while using button and the value attribute in some version of IE, input will just send what you expected, some version of IE doesn't play well with buttons. Feb 2, 2013 at 14:36
  • The answers are basically the same as for input type="button" vs button type=button: stackoverflow.com/questions/469059/… Sep 26, 2014 at 14:26
  • 2
    This is not "duplicate" for unique question.
    – vikramvi
    Sep 20, 2022 at 12:09

10 Answers 10

183

http://www.w3.org/TR/html4/interact/forms.html#h-17.5

Buttons created with the BUTTON element function just like buttons created with the INPUT element, but they offer richer rendering possibilities: the BUTTON element may have content. For example, a BUTTON element that contains an image functions like and may resemble an INPUT element whose type is set to "image", but the BUTTON element type allows content.

So for functionality only they're interchangeable!

(Don't forget, type="submit" is the default with button, so leave it off!)

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  • 8
    Just beware, IE6 submits the values of all buttons on the page, which makes it difficult to determine exactly which button was clicked. Explanation: vancelucas.com/blog/ie6-and-multiple-button-submit-elements
    – Sam
    Mar 13, 2013 at 20:29
  • 10
    Just FYI you don't have to use type="submit" with button, as the default for type is submit.
    – sync
    Feb 4, 2015 at 23:06
  • 15
    That's what W3C says but I'm pretty sure I've seen cases where type default was button. I prefer to explicit each attribute to avoid any browser inconsistency.
    – MatTheCat
    Feb 5, 2015 at 9:14
  • 5
    according to reference yes. but not all browsers stick to reference specs,right ?
    – EKanadily
    Aug 1, 2016 at 9:14
  • 3
    @chharvey, no the former may have child nodes; i.e. non-text content. I suppose you could say that aside from brevity is no reason for the latter to exist. Mar 10, 2018 at 17:47
81

The <input type="button" /> is just a button and won't do anything by itself. The <input type="submit" />, when inside a form element, will submit the form when clicked.

Another useful 'special' button is the <input type="reset" /> that will clear the form.

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  • 24
    The question is about the button tag not <input type="button">
    – Caltor
    Jan 20, 2017 at 0:15
  • 13
    The question is about <input> and <button> tags. You provided useful information about <input> in your answer, but it lacks the <button> side. Mar 9, 2017 at 18:42
  • Ignoring the two comments above, this was actually useful to me.
    – Tigerrrrr
    Jan 3 at 22:33
78

Although both elements deliver functionally the same result *, I strongly recommend you use <button>:

  • Far more explicit and readable. input suggests that the control is editable, or can be edited by the user; button is far more explicit in terms of the purpose it serves
  • Easier to style in CSS; as mentioned above, FIrefox and IE have quirks in which input[type="submit"] do not display correctly in some cases
  • Predictable requests: IE has verying behaviours when values are submitted in the POST/GET request to the server
  • Markup-friendly; you can nest items, for example, icons, inside the button.
  • HTML5, forward-thinking; as developers, it is our responsibility to adopt to the new spec once it is officialized. HTML5, as of right now, has been official for over one year now, and has been shown in many cases to boost SEO.

* With the exception of <button type="button"> which by default has no specified behaviour.

In summary, I highly discourage use of <input type="submit"/>.

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    Thank you. I was looking for this, especially for the HTML5 semantic point. In 2020, we have to think beyond pure functionality. Jun 10, 2020 at 16:43
51

Use <button> tag instead of <input type="button"..>. It is the advised practice in bootstrap 3.

http://getbootstrap.com/css/#buttons-tags

"Cross-browser rendering

As a best practice, we highly recommend using the <button> element whenever possible to ensure matching cross-browser rendering.

Among other things, there's a Firefox bug that prevents us from setting the line-height of <input>-based buttons, causing them to not exactly match the height of other buttons on Firefox."

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    +1 for this. button is far more explicit, and comes along with aria accessibility features, and is far easier to style. It is also forward-thinking, as it is HTML5. Nov 12, 2015 at 1:39
34

<input type='submit' /> doesn't support HTML inside of it, since it's a single self-closing tag. <button>, on the other hand, supports HTML, images, etc. inside because it's a tag pair: <button><img src='myimage.gif' /></button>. <button> is also more flexible when it comes to CSS styling.

The disadvantage of <button> is that it's not fully supported by older browsers. IE6/7, for example, don't display it correctly.

Unless you have some specific reason, it's probably best to stick to <input type='submit' />.

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  • 1
    The answer was from 2 years ago. Also, it's very much possible to specify alternate button text: <input type="submit" value="Log In" />
    – Jared Ng
    Aug 22, 2013 at 13:59
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    @nailer You're perfectly entitled to your opinion, but any answer is going to inevitably reference the current state of technology. Maybe HTML 6 will deprecate <button> in favour of something new. Does that mean we shouldn't mention a specific tag in answers at all, because it might change at some point in the future? I would prefer to leave it as an exercise to the reader to determine how answers apply to their situation. As long as the information is valuable to the reader, I don't see the problem in including it.
    – Jared Ng
    Aug 22, 2013 at 14:23
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    At the time the answer was written, IE6/7 were already out of date. A new web developer reading your post, without checking your supporting arguments and realizing they don't apply anymore, would think there is good reason not to use 'button' elements. Aug 22, 2013 at 17:28
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    @nailer There's no universal "out of date" browsers list that is adhered to by everyone. Different workplaces have different requirements for supported browsers. Just because your standard of "supported browsers" in 2011 didn't include IE6/7 doesn't mean that's the case everywhere.
    – Jared Ng
    Aug 22, 2013 at 17:42
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    I'm aware there's no universal "out of date" browsers list - hence not every mentioning such a thing. All I'm saying is that this could be better worded as "IE6/7 don't support display button correctly. If that's a concern, stick to input" I.e., you know browsers will change, account for it. This stops StackOverflow becoming paused forever at IE6 workarounds. Aug 22, 2013 at 17:55
17

I realize this is an old question but I found this on mozilla.org and think it applies.

A button can be of three types: submit, reset, or button. A click on a submit button sends the form's data to the web page defined by the action attribute of the element.

A click on a reset button resets all the form widgets to their default value immediately. From a UX point of view, this is considered bad practice.

A click on a button button does... nothing! That sounds silly, but it's amazingly useful to build custom buttons with JavaScript.

https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/Guide/HTML/Forms/My_first_HTML_form#And_a_<button>_to_finish

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  • How is it useful if it does nothing?
    – mfaani
    Jul 10, 2017 at 22:28
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    Because you can then hook handlers to the click event via Javascript
    – fonso
    Aug 31, 2017 at 12:06
  • @Honey for example you can code a <button type="button"> to advance a slider/carousel to the next slide.
    – chharvey
    Feb 26, 2018 at 5:30
14

<button> is newer than <input type="submit">, is more semantic, easy to stylize and support HTML inside of it.

0
11

While the other answers are great and answer the question there is one thing to consider when using input type="submit" and button. With an input type="submit" you cannot use a CSS pseudo element on the input but you can for a button!

This is one reason to use a button element over an input when it comes to styling.

5

I don't know if this is a bug or a feature, but there is very important (for some cases at least) difference I found: <input type="submit"> creates key value pair in your request and <button type="submit"> doesn't. Tested in Chrome and Safari.

So when you have multiple submit buttons in your form and want to know which one was clicked - do not use button, use input type="submit" instead.

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  • from my expirience its absolutely other way around, button passes $_POST["submit_name"] and input does NOT. tested on chrome. Firefox sends $_POST["submit_name"] allways. May 18, 2017 at 12:23
  • @GallAnnonim maybe that depends on document type. Because I definitely use input type=submit and it works on chrome May 19, 2017 at 12:13
  • intresting... I used <!DOCTYPE html> using lang "pl" && encoding utf-8 if makes it any diffrence. chrome is 58.0.3029.96 May 19, 2017 at 17:24
-2

If you are talking about <input type=button>, it won't automatically submit the form

if you are talking about the <button> tag, that's newer and doesn't automatically submit in all browsers.

Bottom line, if you want the form to submit on click in all browsers, use <input type="submit">

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  • 14
    You can use <button type="submit"> to auto-submit forms.
    – jumpnett
    Apr 5, 2013 at 22:17

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