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Home/ Questions/Q 605529
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 13, 20262026-05-13T17:09:21+00:00 2026-05-13T17:09:21+00:00

Note: I know <b> is presentational and <span style=font-weight:bold> is a better way, and

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Note: I know <b> is presentational and <span style="font-weight:bold> is a better way, and <strong> and <em> are for emphasis but my question is not regarding this.


Should we convert every <b> to <strong> blindly? Many people do this, they think <b> is not good as per web standards so they convert every <b> to <strong> upon site redesign, content re-population, new site design and people suggest this to others also.


Dreamweaver has also given the option to convert all <b> and <i> to <strong> and <em> on code paste in design view and when we use B and I Which people use blindly.

alt text http://shup.com/Shup/280420/1101118332-My-Desktop.png

And Dreamweaver (if above option is checked) and many online WYSIWYG editor give output in <strong> and <em> while button shows B and I.

alt text http://shup.com/Shup/280425/1101118921-My-Desktop.png

In my opinion it’s creating a misconception about <strong> and <b>


When we get content from a client we don’t know where the client wants to give emphasize and where he just wants to use bold text for presentation purposes. What should we do in this circumstance? No one has the time to give to decide for each instance (us and the client), whether it should be <b> or <strong>, <i> or <em>

What are the pros and cons to convert every <b> and <i> into <strong> and <em> blindly if we are saying our site is accessible?


Update: remember <b> and <i> are not deprecated they are in HTML 5 specification

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-13T17:09:21+00:00Added an answer on May 13, 2026 at 5:09 pm

    As others have mentioned, using <strong>, <em>, <cite> etc. adds semantics. This is important because you say something about why you want to emphasize something and increase the readability of your html, because you know why it’s in bold.

    Furthermore, screen readers use the strong tags to make an audible difference when reading it aloud.

    Maybe you could think about the audio represenation as a guide. If you would want a difference when read aloud, for instance, mark it as <strong>. If not, use <b>.

    Then there is the issue of rendering: I don’t actually know if all browsers will render a <strong> as bold and if it will stay that way.

    So in short: <strong>No</strong>.

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