HTML tags which are deprecated in HTML5


One of the main points on which HTML5 win over XHTML2.0 is “backward compatibility”. XHTML2.0 sought to enforce well-written code by using very harsh error handling. If a page returns error based on syntax the user agent will stop parsing the code.

But the problem with this approach is that the earlier versions of HTML allows page to be rendered even if it is not a well-written, erroneous HTML code. So the Internet is full with badly written HTML. Strict error enforcement will disallow these websites to be displayed at all.

An HTML5 specification states that certain HTML tags should not be used but it is only a guideline to the HTML authors. The implementations, however, must support these tags to be backward compatible.

The tags, which are deprecated, are the following:
  • <basefont>
  • <big>
  • <center>
  • <font>
  • <s>
  • <strike>
  • <tt>
  • <u>
  • <frame>
  • <frameset>
  • <noframe>
  • <acronym>
  • <applet>
  • <isindex>
  • <dir>
Several tag attributes are also removed. Few of the most notable ones are

element

attribute removed

a,link

rev, charset

img

longdesc, name

html

version

th

abbr

td

scope

all block level elements

align

body

background

img

hspace, vspace

table, tr, th, td

bgcolor

table

border, cell padding, cell spacing

td, th

height, width

table

valign


HTML5 is a working draft, so these tag and attribute removal is still under discussion. They may finally get supported or be replaced by other attributes.
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