Rss Feed Like Us on facebook Google Plus

December 5, 2011

A Beautiful HTML 5 Code Format

View this Picture
It gets me to thinking, what makes beautiful code? In HTML, it comes down to craftsmanship. Let's take a look at some markup written they way markup should be written and see how beautiful it can be.

  • HTML5 - HTML5 and it's new elements make for the most beautiful HTML yet.
  • DOCTYPE - HTML5 has the best DOCTYPE ever
  • Indentation - Code is indented to show parent/child relationships and emphasize hierarchy.
  • Charset - Declared as first thing in the head, before any content.
  • Title - Title of the site is simple and clean. Purpose of page is first, a separator is used, and ends with title of the site.
  • CSS - Only one single stylesheet is used (media types declared inside stylesheet), and only served to good browsers. IE 6 and below are served a universal stylesheet.
  • Body - ID applied to body to allow for unique page styling without any additional markup.
  • JavaScript - jQuery (the most beautiful JavaScript library) is served from Google. Only a single JavaScript file is loaded. Both scripts are referenced at the bottom of the page.
  • File Paths - Site resources use relative file paths for efficiency. Content file paths are absolute, assuming content is syndicated.
  • Image Attributes - Images include alternate text, mostly for visually impaired uses but also for validation. Height and width applied for rendering efficiency.
  • Main Content First - The main content of the page comes after basic identity and navigation but before any ancillary content like sidebar material.
  • Appropriate Descriptive Block-Level Elements - Header, Nav, Section, Article, Aside... all appropriately describe the content they contain better than the divs of old.
  • Hierarchy - Title tags are reserved for real content, and follow a clear hierarchy.
  • Appropriate Descriptive Tags - Lists are marked up as lists, depending on the needs of the list: unordered, ordered, and the underused definition list.
  • Common Content Included - Things common across multiple pages are inserted via server side includes (via whatever method, language, or CMS that works for you)
  • Semantic Classes - Beyond appropriate element names, classes and IDs are semantic: they describe without specifying. (e.g. "col" is much better than "left")
  • Classes - Are used any time similar styling needs to be applied to multiple elements.
  • IDs - Are used any time an element appears only once on the page and cannot be targeted reasonably any other way.
  • Dynamic Elements - Things that need to be dynamic, are dynamic.
  • Characters Encoded - If it's a special character, it's encoded.
  • Free From Styling - Nothing on the page applies styling or even implies what the styling might be. Everything on the page is either a required site resource, content, or describing content.
  • Comments - Comments are included for things that may not be immediately obvious upon reviewing the code.
  • Valid - The code should adhere to W3C guidelines. Tags are closed, required attributes used, nothing deprecated, etc.


follow me on twitter
Subscribe me on Facebook

© 2011-2016 Techimpulsion All Rights Reserved.


The content is copyrighted to Tech Impulsion and may not be reproduced on other websites.