This document is a draft, and is designed to show changes from a previous version. It is presently showing added text, changed text, deleted text, [start]/[end] markers, and Issue Numbers.
Changes are displayed as follows:
Any markup languages and many other technologies.
This technique relates to:
The objective of this technique is to avoid ambiguities in Web pages that often result from code that does not validate against formal specifications. Each technology's mechanism to specify the technology and technology version is used, and the Web page is validated against the formal specification of that technology. If a validator for that technology is available, the developer can use it.
Validation will usually eliminate ambiguities (and more) because an essential step in validation is to check for proper use of that technology's markup (in a markup language) or code (in other technologies). Validation does not necessarily check for full conformance with a specification but it is the best means for automatically checking content against its specification.
HTML pages include a document type declaration (sometimes referred
to as !DOCTYPE
statement) and are valid according to
the HTML version specified by the document type declaration. The
developer can use off-line or online validators (see Resources
below) to check the validity of the HTML pages.
XHTML, SVG, SMIL and other XML-based documents reference a Document Type Definition (DTD) or other type of XML schema. The developer can uses online or off-line validators (including validation tools built into editors) to check the validity of the XML documents.
The xmlvalidate
task of Apache Ant can be used for
batch validation of XML files. The following Apache Ant target is a
simple example for the validation of files with the extension
.xml
in the directory dev\\Web
(relative to the Ant build file).
<target name="validate-xml"> <xmlvalidate lenient="no"> <fileset dir="dev/web" includes="*.xml" /> </xmlvalidate> </target>
Resources are for information purposes only, no endorsement implied.
Do not forget to add a doctype by the W3C Quality Assurance Initiative explains what doctypes are and why you should use them.
Recommended DTDs to use in your Web document by the W3C Quality Assurance Initiative is a list of commonly used declarations.
How do I validate my code or check for possible errors? describes the tools in the free editor HTML-Kit for checking HTML, CSS and XML.
Validating HTML and XHTML
The W3C Markup Validation Service by the World Wide Web Consortium allows you to validate HTML and XHTML files by URL, by file upload and by direct input of complete HTML or XHTML documents. There are also separate pages with an extended interface for file upload and for validating by URL (advanced options such as encodings and document types).
Installation Documentation for the W3C Markup Validation Service explains how to install this service (for example for use on an intranet).
HTML Validator is a German version of the W3C Markup Validation Service.
WDG HTML Validator by the Web Design Group allows you to enter a URL to validate single pages or entire sites. There are also versions to validate Web pages in batch mode (by specifying one or more URLs of HTML documents to validate), by file upload and by direct input of HTML code.
Offline HTMLHelp.com Validator is a tool for Unix users; it is the off-line version of the online WDG HTML Validator.
Off-line HTML Validator – A clipbook for NoteTab by Professor Igor Podlubny is an extension for the programming editor NoteTab. It uses James Clark's open-source SGML parser, which is also used by the W3C Markup Validation Service.
Off-line HTML Validator for Windows by Jan Kacur is another validator based on James Clark's open-source SGML parser. Source code (in Delphi) is also available.
Do-it-yourself Offline HTML Validator by Matti Tukiainen explains how you can create a simple validator with James Clark's SGML parser on Windows.
Validating an entire site by Peter Kranz explains how you can install a modified version of the W3C Markup Validation Service that outputs validation results as XML on Mac OS. Source code (in Perl and Python) is available.
XHTML Validator to RSS by Ben Hammersley explains how you can get the validation results of the W3C Markup Validation Service as an RSS feed. Source code is available.
HTML Validation Widget adds a "Validate HTML" option to Internet Explorer's context menu and validates the current HTML document with the Web Design Group's HTML Validator.
Can I use the W3C MarkUp Validation Service to validate HTML? explains how you can validate HTML from within the free editor HTML-Kit.
HTML/XML Validator is an online repair tool for HTML and XHTML based on Tidy and PHP 5. It is available in several languages but it is not a real validator.
Fix Your Site With the Right DOCTYPE! by Jeffrey Zeldman explains what HTML and XHTML doctypes work and what their effect is on the rendering mode of a few browsers.
Modifying Dreamweaver to Produce Valid XHTML by Carrie Bickner.
XHTML-Schemata für FrontPage 2003 und Visual Studio .NET by Christoph Schneegans is a German article that explains how the W3C XML Schemas for XHTML 1.0 can be used in FrontPage 2003 and Visual Studio .NET to create valid code.
Nvu is a free and open-source Web authoring tool for Windows, Macintosh and Linux that can call the W3C HTML Validation Service.
Amaya by the World Wide Web Consortium is a free and open-source Web authoring tool with support for HTML, XHTML, CSS, SVG and MathML that alerts you to validity errors when you save a document.
Web Developer Extension is an extension for Mozilla, Firefox and Flock by Chris Pedrick that allows you to use the W3C Validation Services for HTML and CSS.
Validating XML
HTML/XHTML/WML/XML Validator allows you to validate documents by URL or by file upload. An extended interface is also available.
HTML/XHTML/WML/XML Validator is a German version of the same validator.
XML Validator - A Document Validation Service by JavaView allows you to check wellformedness and validity of XML files, by file upload or by direct input of XML code.
Apache Ant's XMLValidate Task can be used to validate XML-based documents. This tool can be used to validate entire directories (and subdirectories) of XML files.
XML Schema Validator by Christoph Schneegans is an online tool that allows you to validate XML (and XHTML) files by by URL, by file upload, by direct input of complete XML documents, and by direct input of XML code fragments. A bookmarklet that allows you to validate the page currently displayed in your browser is also available. This validator claims to be more accurate than the W3C validator.
XML Schema Validator by DecisionSoft is an online tool that allows you to validate an XML file against a W3C XML Schema, both of which can be uploaded.
STG XML Validation Form by the Scholarly Technology Group of Brown University allows you to validate XML files by URL, by file upload and by direct input of complete XML documents.
NetBeans: Working with XML, Part 1 and NetBeans: Working with XML, Part 2 by Tim Boudreau and others, explains how to enable XML support, validation and other related functionality in the open-source NetBeans framework. .
Schema Validator: this is a validator that allows you to paste XML and W3C XML Schema code into text boxes to validate XML code.
XML Nanny: a graphical tool for validating XML and XHTML, with support for DTD, W3C XML Schema, RELAX NG and Schematron (Max OX X).
Note that many programming editors, XML editors and integrated development environments (IDEs) can validate XML files. These include the following free and/or open-source tools:
the programming editor JEdit with the XML and SideKick plugins, which supports DTDs and W3C XML Schemas,
the “workbench" Eclipse with the Web Tools Platform,
the Web authoring tool SCREEM for the Gnome desktop environment, which supports DTDs,
the XML editor Jaxe, which validates XML files with Apache Xerces,
the XML editor Xerlin, which supports DTDs and to some extent W3C XML schema,
the XML editor xmloperator, which supports DTDs and RELAX NG schemas,
Emacs in nXML mode (see the YahooGroup Emacs nXML Mode),
the XML editor Pollo, which supports DTDs, W3C XML Schemas and RELAX NG schemas, and is best suited for tree-like XML files.
Validating CSS
The W3C CSS Validation Service allows you to validate CSS files by URL, by file upload and by direct input of CSS code.
The W3C CSS Validation Service: Validate by URI is an extended interface that allows you to specify a CSS stylesheet or an HTML page with CSS, specify the CSS profile and medium, and choose the types of warnings that should be displayed.
CSSCheck by the Web Design Group allows you to validate CSS files by URL and by direct input of CSS code. Note that it is primarily a CSS 1 checker.
CSSCheckUp by the Web Design Group allows you to validate CSS files by file upload. Note that it is primarily a CSS 1 checker.
CSS (Cascading Style Sheets) Validator allows you to validate CSS files by URL.
(none currently listed)
For HTML, SGML-based and XML-based technologies:
Load each page or document into a validating parser.
Check that no validation errors are found.
For CSS:
Load each external or internal stylesheet into a CSS validator.
Check that no validation errors are found.
For other technologies:
Follow the validation procedure defined for the technology in use, if any exists.
For HTML, SGML-based and XML-based technologies:
Step 2 is true.
For CSS:
Step 2 is true.