Welcome to OGeek Q&A Community for programmer and developer-Open, Learning and Share
Welcome To Ask or Share your Answers For Others

Categories

0 votes
395 views
in Technique[技术] by (71.8m points)

html - HTML5 section tag meanings?

I know there are tons of questions about this topic but I can't find an authoritative source for the answer.

This is the official definition and the wiki page, and there there is more documentation, but there they don't explain the correct usage if not in a very simple examples or in different ways.

What I've "understood" so far:

<section> defines a part(section) of the page, like blogrolls, headlines news, blog entries list, comments list, and everything which can be with a common topic.

<article> defines a content which has sense estranged from the rest of the page (?) and which has a single topic (blog entry, comment, article, etc).

But, inside an <article>, we can split parts of it in sections using <section>, and in this case it has the function of container to mark chapters of a bigger text.


The doubt

If these sentences are correct (or partially correct) that means that <section> has two completly different usage cases.

We could have a page written in this way:

<!DOCTYPE html>
<html lang=en>
    <head>
        <meta charset=utf-8>
        <title>Fruits</title>
    </head>

    <body>

        <h1>Fruits war blog</h1>

        <section id="headlineNews"> <!-- USED AS CONTAINER -->

            <h1>What's new about fruits?</h1>   
            <article><h1>Apples are the best</h1>Apples are better than bananas</article>
            <article><h1>Apple's cakes</h1>With apples you can prepare a cake</article>

        </section>

        <section id="blogEntries"> <!-- USED AS CONTAINER -->

            <h1>Articles about fruits</h1>

            <article>
                <h1>Apples vs Bananas</h1>
                <section>  <!-- USED AS CHAPTER -->
                    <h2>Introduction:</h2>
                    Bananas have always leaded the world but...
                </section>
                <section>  <!-- USED AS CHAPTER -->
                    <h2>The question:</h2>
                    Who is the best? We don't know so much about apples...
                </section>
            </article>

        </section>

    </body>
</html>

And this is how looks the Outline:

1. Fruits war blog
   1. What's new about fruits?
      1. Apples are the best
      2. Apple's cakes
   2. Articles about fruits
      1. Apples vs Bananas
         1. Introduction:
         2. The question:

So the <section> is thought with two completly different and not related semantic meanings?

Is it correct use:

<!-- MY DOUBT -->
<section> <!-- USED AS CONTAINER -->
  <article>
    <section></section> <!-- USED AS CHAPTER -->
  </article>
</section>

in this neasted way?
I've found that is possible to use in the inversed way:

<!-- FROM W3C -->
<article> <!-- BLOG ENTRY -->
  <section> <!-- USED AS CHAPTER ABOUT COMMENTS -->
    <article></article> <!-- COMMENT -->
  </section>
</article>

But I can't find an answer to the way I've written below.

I guess read the discussion where the W3C group has wrote the basis of the <section> tag could be useful but I can't find it.

N.B. I'm looking for replies documented with authorative sources

See Question&Answers more detail:os

与恶龙缠斗过久,自身亦成为恶龙;凝视深渊过久,深渊将回以凝视…
Welcome To Ask or Share your Answers For Others

1 Reply

0 votes
by (71.8m points)

http://www.w3.org/wiki/HTML/Elements/section is not the official definition of section. section is defined in the HTML5 specification, which currently is a Candidate Recommendation (which is a snapshot of the Editor’s Draft).

In the CR, section is defined as:

The section element represents a generic section of a document or application. A section, in this context, is a thematic grouping of content, typically with a heading.

section is a sectioning content element (together with article, aside and nav). Those sectioning elements and the headings (h1-h6) create an outline.

The following three examples are semantically equivalent (same meaning, same outline):

<!-- example 1: using headings only -->
<h1>My first day</h1>
<p>…</p>
<h2>Waking up</h2>
<p>…</p>
<h2>The big moment!</h2>
<p>…</p>
<h2>Going to bed</h2>
<p>…</p>

<!-- example 1: using section elements with corresponding heading levels -->
<section>
  <h1>My first day</h1>
  <p>…</p>
  <section>
    <h2>Waking up</h2>
    <p>…</p>
  </section>
  <section>
    <h2>The big moment!</h2>
    <p>…</p>
  </section>
  <section>
    <h2>Going to bed</h2>
    <p>…</p>
  </section>
</section>

<!-- example 1: using section elements with h1 everywhere -->
<section>
  <h1>My first day</h1>
  <p>…</p>
  <section>
    <h1>Waking up</h1>
    <p>…</p>
  </section>
  <section>
    <h1>The big moment!</h1>
    <p>…</p>
  </section>
  <section>
    <h1>Going to bed</h1>
    <p>…</p>
  </section>
</section>

So you can use section whenever (*) you use h1-h6. And you use section when you need a separate entry in the outline but can’t (or don’t want to) use a heading.

Also note that header and footer always belong to its nearest ancestor sectioning content (or sectioning root, like body, if there is no sectioning element) element. In other words: each section/article/aside/nav element can have its own header/footer.

article, aside and nav are, so to say, more specific variants of the section element.


two completly different usage cases

These two use-cases are not that different at all. In the "container" case, you could say that section represents a chapter of the document, while in the "chapter" case section represents a chapter of the article/content (which, ouf course, is part of the document).

In the same way, some headings are used to title web page parts (like "Navigation", "User menu", "Comments", etc.), and some headings are used to title content ("My first day", "My favorite books", etc.).


与恶龙缠斗过久,自身亦成为恶龙;凝视深渊过久,深渊将回以凝视…
OGeek|极客中国-欢迎来到极客的世界,一个免费开放的程序员编程交流平台!开放,进步,分享!让技术改变生活,让极客改变未来! Welcome to OGeek Q&A Community for programmer and developer-Open, Learning and Share
Click Here to Ask a Question

...