On 17 June 2009 23:56, PJ advised:

> Nisse Engström wrote:
>> On Wed, 17 Jun 2009 10:18:09 +0100, "Ford, Mike" wrote:
>> 
>> 
>>> This is very true -- but XHTML requires *all* attributes to have a
>>> value, so an XHTML conformant page will use <select multiple="multiple"
>>> name="selector"> (or something similar such as <select multiple="yes"
>>> name="selector">). The only inconsistency here is that different people
>>> have chosen to validate against different standards.
>>> 
>> 
>> The multiple attribute only has one value: "multiple", so
>> it has to be <select multiple="multiple">. I don't think
>> "yes" cuts the mustard. In HTML, you can shorten it to <select multiple>.
>> 
> From my limited experience, and vast reading of those glorious 20,000
> entries on the Internet, multiple does not take a parameter. I had my
> fingers slapped once when I validated or something - multiple is just
> plain multiple ! :-P ;-) :-) 

Oh, good grief! Did you even read what you've quoted from me above?

If you code to an HTML standard, then multiple can indeed be just plain 
multiple, but HTML 4 does allow the addition of ="multiple" for compatibility 
reasons.

But if you code to an XHTML standard, multiple must be multiple="multiple", as 
XHTML **requires** that all attributes have an argument, and (as I've just 
learned!) "multiple" is the only valid argument for the multiple attribute.

No modern browser that I know of will object to the multiple="multiple" usage.

Cheers!

Mike

 --
Mike Ford,  Electronic Information Developer,
C507, Leeds Metropolitan University, Civic Quarter Campus, 
Woodhouse Lane, LEEDS,  LS1 3HE,  United Kingdom
Email: m.f...@leedsmet.ac.uk
Tel: +44 113 812 4730


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