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Home/ Questions/Q 31373
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 10, 20262026-05-10T13:35:41+00:00 2026-05-10T13:35:41+00:00

Even though I always strive for complete validation these days, I often wonder if

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Even though I always strive for complete validation these days, I often wonder if it’s a waste of time. If the code runs and it looks the same in all browsers (I use browsershots.org to verify) then do I need to take it any further or am I just being overly anal?

What level do you hold your code to when you create it for:

a) yourself b) your clients

P.S. Jeff and company, why doesn’t stack overflow validate? 🙂

EDIT: Some good insights, I think that since I’ve been so valid-obsessed for so long I program knowing what will cause problems and what won’t so I’m in a better position than people who create a site first and then ‘go back and fix the validation problems’

I think I may post another question on stack overflow; ‘Do you validate as you go or do you finish and then go back and validate?’ as that seems to be where this question is going

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  1. 2026-05-10T13:35:41+00:00Added an answer on May 10, 2026 at 1:35 pm

    a) Must look the same

    b) As standards-compliant as possible, but not so anal that it blocks finishing work

    In a situation where you have perpetual access to the code, I don’t think standards-compliance is all that important, since you can always make changes to the code if something breaks. If you don’t have perpetual access (ie, you sign off on the code and it becomes someone else’s responsibility), it’s probably best to be as standards-compliant as possible to minimize maintenance headaches later… even if you never have to deal with the code again, your reputation persists and can be transmitted to other potential clients, and many teams like to blame the previous developer(s) for problems that come up.

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