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The Importance of Validation
by Anthony Stai
Once you've written a web page, you can upload it to an HTML validator.
This site, run by the web's standards body, will check that your site
is valid ('correct') HTML, and give you some idea of how to fix it if
it isn't. This is an essential step in the development of any website
– as vital as running your text through the spell checker –
but whenever I recommend it there's always someone who wonders why it's
so important. Well, here's why.
You Know Your Code is Correct.
If your code validates, then it's correct, and therefore very likely to
work as intended on every web browser out there. If you don't validate
your pages, then you might find that people who visit your site with
less forgiving browsers see nothing at all. Correct code is more likely
to display correctly on many different browsers, because it puts them
into their 'standards' mode. If code is even slightly incorrect, many
browsers will use a different way of displaying it, known as quirks
mode, which is designed to handle old and bad HTML, takes a long time
and may make your page end up with errors you didn't expect.
Without web standards, you end up going back to the bad old days of
having to develop entirely separate web pages for different browsers.
Validating by the standards ensures that all working browsers can view
your content – if they can't, the fault's with them, not with
you.
Search Engines Like Valid Pages.
When it comes time for a search engine to add your page to its results,
it's going to have a much easier time understanding the page if it's
been validated. This will often get you a higher ranking in the
results, which means free visitors for you. If your page isn't valid,
search engines will often miss keywords in your pages or not understand
your navigation, and may list nonsensical parts of your code under your
site's name in the search results – not exactly helpful to
potential visitors who want to know what your site is about.
Mobile Devices.
More and more people are accessing the web using mobile devices like
mobile phones and PDAs, and these devices have a lot of trouble with
code that isn't valid. Because they have limited processing power, it
would take them a very long time to try to untangle invalid code
– they will simply strip out the formatting and do the best they
can with it. Writing valid HTML lets users with mobile devices see your
pages as you intended.
Disabled People.
When you write valid code, it becomes much easier to view with things
that aren't web browsers, such as screen readers. Technology for
disabled people doesn't tend to be as forgiving as web browsers, so
having valid code is important when it comes to working with these
programs.
Future-Proofing.
Before your code will validate, you need to explicitly say which
version of HTML you had in mind when you created it. This future-proofs
your code, as each version of the standard doesn't change once it's
been decided on: a valid XHMTL 1.1 page will always be a valid XHTML
1.1 page, even if everyone else has moved on to XHTML 5. Once you've
validated your site once, you can put it on the web and be confident
that people are going to be able to read it for a long time to come.
Finding Errors.
If there's a mistake in your website's code, validation gives you an
easy way to track it down and fix it. Before validation, people had to
test their site after each change and look carefully to make sure that
nothing had gone wrong. Writing valid code lets you use programs that
will examine what you've written and point at the exact place where the
code doesn't validate.
A List of Validators.
Here are a few validators that you can try. Most HTML validators are
online, but there are a few that you can download and use on your own
computer.
The W3C validator: validator.w3c.org
The WDG validator: www.htmlhelp.com/tools/validator
CSE validator: www.htmlvalidator.com (downloadable)
WebTechs validator: www.webtechs.com/html-val-src
Doctor HTML: www.doctor-html.com (downloadable)
You might also be interested in visiting the W3C's main site at
w3c.org, as well as the Web Standards Project at www.webstandards.org.
About
The Author:
Anthony Stai invites you to
take your
website to the next level. Get one of the best Search Engine
Optimization (SEO) books on the market for Free! Learn the techniques
that differentiate the amateurs from the pros. Get your book at http://www.makemoneyonline4you.com/seo.html
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