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Home/ Questions/Q 7677313
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 31, 20262026-05-31T17:23:41+00:00 2026-05-31T17:23:41+00:00

I’ve always thought html requires quotation marks in his properties: <div class=service_definition> or <div

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I’ve always thought html requires quotation marks in his properties:

<div class="service_definition"> or <div class='service_definition'>

But recently i noticed that the w3 validator doesn’t recognize the following as an error:

<div class=service_definition>

So is it all right if i omit the quotation marks? Or are there any restrictions?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-31T17:23:42+00:00Added an answer on May 31, 2026 at 5:23 pm

    Always use quotation marks.

    I don’t believe that HTML properties without quotation marks are classed as Invalid HTML, but they will potentially cause you problems later on down the line.

    By default, SGML requires that all attribute values be delimited using
    either double quotation marks (ASCII decimal 34) or single quotation
    marks (ASCII decimal 39). Single quote marks can be included within
    the attribute value when the value is delimited by double quote marks,
    and vice versa. Authors may also use numeric character references to
    represent double quotes (") and single quotes ('). For double
    quotes authors can also use the character entity reference ".

    In certain cases, authors may specify the value of an attribute
    without any quotation marks. The attribute value may only contain
    letters (a-z and A-Z), digits (0-9), hyphens (ASCII decimal 45),
    periods (ASCII decimal 46), underscores (ASCII decimal 95), and colons
    (ASCII decimal 58). We recommend using quotation marks even when it is
    possible to eliminate them.

    Source: http://www.w3.org/TR/REC-html40/intro/sgmltut.html#h-3.2.2


    I think they’re a great way of clearly defining when an attribute value starts and finishes.

    Take for example the class attribute which can have multiple classes seperated by spaces:

    <div class="classa classb" id="123">
    

    This clearly shows the browser that my classes are classa and classb, with an element id of 123.

    Take away the quotation marks and we’ve got:

    <div class=classa classb id=123>
    

    A browser could now interpret this as 3 classes, with no id. classa, classb and id=123.

    Or it may even interpret it as 3 attributes. class="classa", classb="" and id="123"

    (Even stackoverflow’s syntax styling is struggling with this one!)

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