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I'm sure everyone here knows that we cannot serve the pages with the correct MIME type (application/xhtml+xml) for XHTML without breaking IE compatibility, and that any content served with text/html will be parsed as HTML by any browser out there. So if the content is not parsed as XML.

I use a xhtml doctype only for one reason: it helps me find “errors” in my markup in a more stricter way compared to html. Even if my documents are served as text/html

Is there any other benefit to use XHTML 1.0 Strict with content="text/html; over HTML 4.01 strict at all? At present or and in the future.

  1. if i'm already writing well formed valid HTML 4.01 strict and
  2. not want to use any extra XHTML features (SVG, Docbook, MathML, OFX, etc),
  3. never going to manipulate my XHTML to XSL(T)
  4. never goint to server document as application/html+xml
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this is a duplicate: stackoverflow.com/questions/867498/… – Mark Elliot Jan 24 '10 at 3:32

3 Answers

up vote 6 down vote accepted

None. You don't get any of XHTML's benefits. As far as the browser is concerned, it's getting weird HTML, not XML. If you want to get the benefits of XML, like extensibility and the stricter parser (if that's a benefit), you have to serve your page as application/xhtml+xml, and IE won't support it. Not to mention XHTML 1.0 is incompatible with 2.0, while HTML will always be future proof.

You may want to read this, among many others. In short, only use XHTML if you know you need to, otherwise it's useless.

XHTML also doesn't necessarily mean that the browsers will adjust to standards. Don't worry about the Standards vs Quirks mode stuff, it's something that has be mantained for backwards compatibility. When a browser encounters a page with a doctype (any doctype, HTML or XHTML), it will try to render it according to standards. It doesn't mean that it will render it just like the W3C says, it just means that it will try to (and maybe not succeed).

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+1 great reference – Mark Elliot Jan 24 '10 at 3:36
Is the IE only browser which do not support application/xhtml+xml, and does no ie version support application/xhtml+xml , IE 7, 8 ? or only IE6 doesn't support – Jitendra Vyas Jan 24 '10 at 3:36
No version of IE supports it: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Internet_Explorer#Features – Javier Badia Jan 24 '10 at 3:39
Not all doctypes cause browsers to render in standards mode. Here (dev.w3.org/html5/spec/syntax.html#quirks-mode-doctypes) is a list of doctypes that don't. – Alohci Jan 24 '10 at 12:19

XHTML comes with default style rules (css), at least to some degree. And also some strict rendering rules. Any browser implementing XHTML doesn't have much leeway in how to present things, so in making an XHTML document, developers may find that their document renders the same in most browsers (although there are still some minor problems, especially with IE).

In later years this has improved greatly, and most XHTML documents' styles render the same way in "all" browsers.

You may also have heard of "standards mode" and "quirks mode". Quirks mode is when (mainly IE) takes into account all the wrong things it's been doing in previous versions, and renders pages the way it used to, so it will render the way it was intended THEN. Standards mode is a strict mode, which uses only standardized rules. This breaks some older pages, but lightens the load for many developers.

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Although XHTML doesn't have much leway in how to present things, IE won't render it, so the point is more or less moot. – Javier Badia Jan 24 '10 at 3:39
you mean HTML document don't styles render the same way in "all" browsers? – Jitendra Vyas Jan 24 '10 at 3:39
Of course they don't. Maybe a very simple one will, but in many cases you'll have to test against different browsers and adjust the CSS and stuff. IE is especially quirky with this. – Javier Badia Jan 24 '10 at 3:41
My question is XHTML 1.0 strict vs. HTML 4.01 strict, so u mean HTML 4.01 strict do not render page in standards mode, only XHTML can? – Jitendra Vyas Jan 24 '10 at 3:43
@Javier Badia - but this site using HTML and looking same in all browsers – Jitendra Vyas Jan 24 '10 at 3:44
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XHTML consists of all the elements in HTML 4.01, combined with the strict syntax of XML.

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What is practical benefit of "strict syntax of XML"? – Jitendra Vyas Jan 24 '10 at 3:32
2  
None, really. It forces you to write well formed code, but if you care about that you can do it in HTML. And if you have user-submitted content, a sinalge malformed tag will bring your whole page down. – Javier Badia Jan 24 '10 at 3:35
Because XHTML documents need to be well-formed, they can be parsed using standard XML parsers—unlike HTML, which requires a lenient HTML-specific parser – Derek Adair Jan 24 '10 at 3:35
@Javier Badia- is well formed document means W3C valid document? – Jitendra Vyas Jan 24 '10 at 3:41
@Jitendra: Nope. See the link I gave in my answer, I think the difference is epxlained somewhere in that site. – Javier Badia Jan 24 '10 at 3:44
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