HTML 的隐藏特性

HTML 作为使用最广泛的语言(至少作为一种标记语言)还没有得到应有的认可。
考虑到它已经存在了这么多年,像 FORM/INPUT 控件这样的东西仍然保持不变,没有添加新的控件。

所以至少从现有的特性来看,你知道哪些特性是 不是很出名但是非常有用的吗。

当然,这个问题大致是这样的:

JavaScript 的隐藏特性
CSS 的隐藏特性
C # 的隐藏特性
VB.NET 的隐藏特性
Java 的隐藏特性
经典 ASP 的隐藏特征
ASP.NET 的隐藏特性
Python 的隐藏特性
TextPad 的隐藏特性
Eclipse 的隐藏特性

不要提及 HTML 5.0的特性,因为它是在 < a href = “ https://stackoverflow. com/questions/605439”> 工作草案中

请为每个答案指定一个特性

41234 次浏览

The "!DOCTYPE" declaration. Don't think it's a hidden feature, but it seems it's not well known but very useful.

e.g.

<!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01//EN"
"http://www.w3.org/TR/html4/strict.dtd">

Simplest way to refresh the page in X seconds - META Refresh

<meta http-equiv="refresh" content="600">

The value in content signifies the seconds after which you want the page to refresh.
[Edit]

<meta http-equiv="refresh" content="0; url=foobar.example/index.html">

To do a simple redirect!
(Thanks @rlb)

I recently found out about the fieldset and label tags. As above, not hidden but useful for forms.

<fieldset> explanation

Example:

<form>
<fieldset>
<legend>Personalia:</legend>
Name: <input type="text" size="30" /><br />
Email: <input type="text" size="30" /><br />
Date of birth: <input type="text" size="10" />
</fieldset>
</form>
<blink>

Must be used for anything important on the site. Most important sites wrap all of content in blink.

<marquee>

Creates a realistic scrolling effect, great for e-books etc.

Edit: Easy-up fellas, this was just an attempt at humour

Special characters for math, greek,... not known very well

You can use the object tag instead of an iframe to include another document in the page:

<object data="data/test.html" type="text/html" width="300" height="200">
alt : <a href="data/test.html">test.html</a>
</object>

The label tag logically links the label with the form element using the "for" attribute. Most browsers turn this into a link which activates the related form element.

<label for="fiscalYear">Fiscal Year</label>
<input name="fiscalYear" type="text" id="fiscalYear"/>

Specify the css for printing

<link type="text/css" rel="stylesheet" href="screen.css" media="screen" />
<link type="text/css" rel="stylesheet" href="print.css"  media="print" />

My favourite bit is the base tag, which is a life saver if you want to use routing or URL rewriting...

Let's say you are located at:

www.anypage.example/folder/subfolder/

The following is code and results for links from this page.

Regular Anchor:

<a href="test.html">Click here</a>

Leads to

www.anypage.example/folder/subfolder/test.html

Now if you add base tag

<base href="http://www.anypage.example/" />
<a href="test.html">Click here</a>

The anchor now leads to:

www.anypage.example/test.html

A much underused feature is the fact that just about every element, that provides visible content on the page, can have a 'title' attribute.

Adding such an attribute causes a 'tooltip' to appear when the mouse is 'hovered' over the element, and can be used to provide non-essential - but useful - information in a way that doesn't cause the page to become too crowded. (Or it can be a way of adding information to an already crowded page)

Not exactly hidden, but (and this is IE's fault) not enough people know about thead, tbody, tfoot for my tastes. And how many of you knew tfoot is supposed to appear above tbody in markup?

Not very well known but you can specify lowsrc for images which will show the lowsrc while loading the src of the image:

<img lowsrc="monkey_preview.png" src="monkey.png" />

This is a good option for those who don't like interlaced images.

A little bit of trivia: at one point this property was obscure enough that it was used to exploit Hotmail, circa 2000.

Applying multiple html/css classes to one tag. Same post here

<p class="Foo Bar BlackBg"> Foo, Bar and BlackBg are css classes</p>

The contentEditable property for (IE, Firefox, and Safari)

<table>
<tr>
<td><div contenteditable="true">This text can be edited<div></td>
<td><div contenteditable="true">This text can be edited<div></td>
</tr>
</table>

This will make the cells editable! Go ahead, try it if you don't believe me.

The button tag is the new input submit tag and a lot of people are still not familiar with it. The text in the button can for example be styled using the button tag.

<button>
<b>Click</b><br />
Me!
</button>

Will render a button with two lines, the first says "Click" in bold and the second says "Me!". Try it here.

The wbr or word-break tag. From Quirksmode:

(word break) means: "The browser may insert a line break here, if it wishes." It the browser does not think a line break necessary nothing happens.

<div class="name">getElements<wbr>ByTagName()</div>

I give the browser the option of adding a line break. This won't be necessary on very large resolutions, when the table has plenty of space. On smaller resolutions, however, such strategically placed line breaks keep the table from growing larger than the window, and thus causing horizontal scrollbars.

The there is also the &shy; HTML entity mentioned on the same page. This is the same as wbr but when a break is inserted a hypen (-) is added to signify a break. Kind of like how it is done in print.

An example:

Text­Text­Text­Text­Text­Text­Text­Text­Text­Text­Text­Text­Text­Text­Text­Text­Text­Text­Text­Text­Text­Text­Text­Text­Text­Text­Text­Text­Text­Text­Text­Text­Text­Text­Text­Text­Text­Text­Text­Text­Text­Text­Text­Text­Text­Text­Text­Text­Text­Text­Text­Text­Text­Text­Text­Text­Text­Text­Text­Text­Text­Text­Text­Text­Text­Text­Text­Text­Text­Text­Text­Text­

We all know about DTD's or Document Type Declarations (those things which make you page fail with the W3C validator). However, it is possible to extend the DTDs by declaring an attribute list for custom elements.

For example, the W3C validator will fail for this page because of behavior="mouseover" added to the <p> tag. However, you can make it pass by doing this:

<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Strict//EN"
"http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-strict.dtd"
[
<!ATTLIST p behavior CDATA #IMPLIED>
]>

See more at about Custom DTDs at QuirksMode.

A form can be submitted when you press the Enter key on a text input only if there is a submit button in the form. Try it here. It won't work if you don't change the type of the button to "submit".

I think the optgroup tag is one feature that people don't use very often. Most people I speak to don't tend to realise that it exists.

Example:

<select>
<optgroup label="Swedish Cars">
<option value="volvo">Volvo</option>
<option value="saab">Saab</option>
</optgroup>
<optgroup label="German Cars">
<option value="mercedes">Mercedes</option>
<option value="audi">Audi</option>
</optgroup>
</select>

Using a protocol-independent absolute path:

<img src="//domain.example/img/logo.png"/>

If the browser is viewing an page in SSL through HTTPS, then it'll request that asset with the HTTPS protocol, otherwise it'll request it with HTTP.

This prevents that awful "This Page Contains Both Secure and Non-Secure Items" error message in IE, keeping all your asset requests within the same protocol.

Caveat: When used on a <link> or @import for a stylesheet, IE7 and IE8 download the file twice. All other uses, however, are just fine.

<img onerror="{javascript}" />

onerror is a JavaScript event that will be fired right before the little red cross (in IE) picture is shown.

You could use this to write a script that will replace the broken image with some valid alternative content, so that the user doesn't have to deal with the red cross issue.

On the first sight this can be seen as completely useless, because, wouldn't you know previously if the image was available in the first place? But, if you consider, there are perfect valid applications for this thing; For instance: suppose you are serving an image from a third-party resource that you don't control. Like our gravatar here in SO... it is served from http://www.gravatar.com/, a resource that the stackoverflow team doesn't control at all - although it is reliable. If http://www.gravatar.com/ goes down, stackoverflow could workaround this by using onerror.

Colgroup tag.

<table width="100%">
<colgroup>
<col style="width:40%;" />
<col style="width:60%;" />
</colgroup>
<thead>
<tr>
<td>Column 1<!--This column will have 40% width--></td>
<td>Column 2<!--This column ill have 60% width--></td>
</tr>
</thead>
<tbody>
<tr>
<td>Cell 1</td>
<td>Cell 2</td>
</tr>
</tbody>
</table>

If the for attribute of a <label> tag isn't specified, it is implicitly set as the first child <input>, i.e.

<label>Alias: <input name="alias" id="alias"></label>

is equivalent to

<label for="alias">Alias:</label> <input name="alias" id="alias">

DEL and INS to mark deleted and inserted contents:

HTML <del>sucks</del> <ins>rocks</ins>!

the <dl> <dt> and <dd> items are often forgotten and they stand for Definition List, Definition Term and Definition.

They work similarly to an unordered list (<ul>) but instead of single entries it's more like a key/value list.

<dl>
<dt>What</dt><dd>An Example</dd>
<dt>Why</dt><dd>Examples are good</dd>
</dl>

Button as link, no JavaScript:

You can put any kind of file in the form action, and you have a button that acts as a link. No need to use onclick events or such. You can even open-up the file in a new window by sticking a "target" in the form. I didn't see that technique in application much.

Replace this

<a href="myfile.pdf" target="_blank">Download file</a>

with this:

<form method="get" action="myfile.pdf" target="_blank">
<input type="submit" value="Download file">
</form>

<html>, <head> and <body> tags are optional. If you omit them, they will be silently inserted by the parser in appropriate places. It's perfectly valid to do so in HTML (just like implied <tbody>).

HTML in theory is an SGML application. This is probably the shortest valid HTML 4 document:

<!DOCTYPE HTML PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.0//EN">
<title//<p/

The above doesn't work anywhere except W3C Validator. However shortest valid HTML5 text/html document works everywhere:

<!DOCTYPE html><title></title>

<optgroup> is a great one that people often miss out on when doing segmented <select> lists.

<select>
<optgroup label="North America">
<option value='us'>United States</option>
<option value='ca'>Canada</option>
</optgroup>
<optgroup label="Europe">
<option value='fr'>France</option>
<option value='ir'>Ireland</option>
</optgroup>
</select>

is what you should be using instead of

<select>
<option value=''>----North America----</option>
<option value='us'>United States</option>
<option value='ca'>Canada</option>
<option value=''>----Europe----</option>
<option value='fr'>France</option>
<option value='ir'>Ireland</option>
</select>

My favorite hidden feature was already mentioned, which is the "base" tag. Very handy for when you have a chunk of code that has relative URLs and suddenly they all move but your page doesn't.

But one that wasn't mentioned is the list header tag <lh>. It probably wasn't mentioned because it is considered "depreciated" but most browsers still support it. I don't know why it was phased out, nearly every unordered list I make could use a header, and it feels icky just dropping a h3 tag, and it feels just incorrect to make the first list item the title of the list.

The <kbd> element for marking up for keyboard input

Ctrl+Alt+Del

Most are also unaware of the fact that you can distinguish the form button pressed by just giving them a name/value pair. E.g.

<form action="process" method="post">
...
<input type="submit" name="edit" value="Edit">
<input type="submit" name="delete" value="Delete">
<input type="submit" name="move_up" value="Move up">
<input type="submit" name="move_up" value="Move down">
</form>

In the server side, the actual button pressed can then be obtained by just checking the presence of the request parameter associated with the button name. If it is not null, then the button was pressed.

I've seen a lot of unnecessary JS hacks/workarounds for that, e.g. changing the form action or changing a hidden input value beforehand depending on the button pressed. It's simply astonishing.

Also, I've seen almost as many JS hacks/workarounds to gather the checked ones of multiple checkboxes like as in table rows. On every select/check of a table row the JS would add the row index to some commaseparated value in a hidden input element which would then be splitted/parsed further in the server side. That's result of unawareness that you can give multiple input elements the same name but a different value and that you can still access them as an array in the server side. E.g.

<tr><td><input type="checkbox" name="rowid" value="1"></td><td> ... </td></tr>
<tr><td><input type="checkbox" name="rowid" value="2"></td><td> ... </td></tr>
<tr><td><input type="checkbox" name="rowid" value="3"></td><td> ... </td></tr>
...

The unawareness would give each checkbox a different name and omit the whole value attribute. In some JS-hack/workaround-free situations I've also seen some unnecessarily overwhelming magic in the server side code to distinguish the checked items.

We can assign base 64 encoded string as a source/href attribute of image, JavaScript,iframe,link

e.g.

<img alt="Embedded Image" width="297" height="246"
src="data:image/png;base64,iVBORw0KGgoAAAANSUhEUgAAASkA..." />


div.image {
width:297px;
height:246px;
background-image:url(data:image/png;base64,iVBORw0KGgoAAAANSUhEUgAAASkA...);
}


<image>
<title>An Image</title>
<link>http://www.your.domain</link>
<url>data:image/png;base64,iVBORw0KGgoAAAANSUhEUgAAASkA...</url>
</image>


<link rel="stylesheet" type="text/css"
href="data:text/css;base64,LyogKioqKiogVGVtcGxhdGUgKioq..." />


<script type="text/javascript"
href="data:text/javascript;base64,dmFyIHNjT2JqMSA9IG5ldyBzY3Jv..."></script>

References

How can I construct images using HTML markup?

Binary File to Base64 Encoder / Translator

The lang attribute is not very well known but very useful. The attribute is used to identify the language of the content in either the whole document or in a single element. Langage codes are given in ISO 2-letter Language code (i.e. 'en' for English, 'fr' for French).

It's useful for browsers who can adjust their display of quotation marks, etc. Screen readers also benefit from the lang attribute as well as search engines.

Sitepoint has some nice explanation of the lang attribute.

Examples

Specify the language to be English for the whole document, unless overridden by another lang attribute on a lower level in the DOM.

<html lang="en">

Specify the language in the following paragraph to be Swedish.

<p lang="sv">Ät din morgongröt och bli stor och stark!</p>

Definition lists:

<dl>
<dt>Some Term</dt>
<dd>Some description</dd>
<dd>Some other description</dd>


<dt>Another Word/Phrase</dt>
<dd>Some description</dd>
</dl>

I've also retasked this for form layouts and navigation menus for various sites.

That's only lowly related to HTML, but very few people know it.

People abuse the <meta> tag with the http-equiv attribute:

<meta http-equiv="Content-Type" content="text/html; charset=UTF-8"/>
<meta http-equiv="Refresh" content="5; url=somewhere/"/>

However, many developers don't even know what this does. The http-equiv attribute means that the tag is meant to replace an HTTP header in cases where you aren't in control of them. Therefore, most work done through http-equiv should be done on the server side.

Besides, it's not as powerful: several properties of a document can't be changed through <meta> tags. Content-Type in a <meta> tag can tell the browser to use a certain charset, but most will ignore any change to the MIME type of the document (so you can't make a text/html document an application/xhtml+xml one that way).

Both tags from the example should be replaced by these simple calls:

<?php
header('Content-Type: text/html; charset=UTF-8');
header('Refresh: 5; url=somewhere/');
?>

It's bound to work on any HTTP-compliant browser (which means, pretty much every single browser).

Superscript with <sup> x </sup>