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Clarified that doctypes are still needed
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Machavity Mod
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Initially I was against this. There are some major distinctions between prior HTML and HTML5 (I started in the dark ages of 4.01 and boy have we come a long way). But what got me was this

There is no point in distinguishing between versions of HTML and I get the impression that people are very bad at correctly tagging a question with [html] or [html5].

He's right. The tag usage is all over the place, with about 90k questions tagged only [html5], when it should really have both that and [html].

For those unfamiliar, HTML5 dropped the different DOCTYPE declarations (you used to need to declare that so the browser would parse properly) and runs with a basic, versionless DOCTYPE. Heck, you could declare no DOCTYPE at all (not recommended) and start slapping HTML5 in and it would probably render properly. In practice, this means the browser gets to decide how best to run. So you can use whatever tags or features the browser supports, as opposed to declaring what type of HTML you're using.

As such, the [html] and [html5] ecosystems are being segmented for no good reason, and we're doing a disservice to users who are making poor tag choices. The synonym makes a lot of sense.

Initially I was against this. There are some major distinctions between prior HTML and HTML5 (I started in the dark ages of 4.01 and boy have we come a long way). But what got me was this

There is no point in distinguishing between versions of HTML and I get the impression that people are very bad at correctly tagging a question with [html] or [html5].

He's right. The tag usage is all over the place, with about 90k questions tagged only [html5], when it should really have both that and [html].

For those unfamiliar, HTML5 dropped the different DOCTYPE declarations (you used to need to declare that so the browser would parse properly) and runs with a basic, versionless DOCTYPE. Heck, you could declare no DOCTYPE at all and start slapping HTML5 in and it would render properly. In practice, this means the browser gets to decide how best to run. So you can use whatever tags or features the browser supports, as opposed to declaring what type of HTML you're using.

As such, the [html] and [html5] ecosystems are being segmented for no good reason, and we're doing a disservice to users who are making poor tag choices. The synonym makes a lot of sense.

Initially I was against this. There are some major distinctions between prior HTML and HTML5 (I started in the dark ages of 4.01 and boy have we come a long way). But what got me was this

There is no point in distinguishing between versions of HTML and I get the impression that people are very bad at correctly tagging a question with [html] or [html5].

He's right. The tag usage is all over the place, with about 90k questions tagged only [html5], when it should really have both that and [html].

For those unfamiliar, HTML5 dropped the different DOCTYPE declarations (you used to need to declare that so the browser would parse properly) and runs with a basic, versionless DOCTYPE. Heck, you could declare no DOCTYPE at all (not recommended) and start slapping HTML5 in and it would probably render properly. In practice, this means the browser gets to decide how best to run. So you can use whatever tags or features the browser supports, as opposed to declaring what type of HTML you're using.

As such, the [html] and [html5] ecosystems are being segmented for no good reason, and we're doing a disservice to users who are making poor tag choices. The synonym makes a lot of sense.

Source Link
Machavity Mod
  • 31.6k
  • 38
  • 283
  • 382

Initially I was against this. There are some major distinctions between prior HTML and HTML5 (I started in the dark ages of 4.01 and boy have we come a long way). But what got me was this

There is no point in distinguishing between versions of HTML and I get the impression that people are very bad at correctly tagging a question with [html] or [html5].

He's right. The tag usage is all over the place, with about 90k questions tagged only [html5], when it should really have both that and [html].

For those unfamiliar, HTML5 dropped the different DOCTYPE declarations (you used to need to declare that so the browser would parse properly) and runs with a basic, versionless DOCTYPE. Heck, you could declare no DOCTYPE at all and start slapping HTML5 in and it would render properly. In practice, this means the browser gets to decide how best to run. So you can use whatever tags or features the browser supports, as opposed to declaring what type of HTML you're using.

As such, the [html] and [html5] ecosystems are being segmented for no good reason, and we're doing a disservice to users who are making poor tag choices. The synonym makes a lot of sense.