We are building an image carousel, it displays clickable thumbnails that when clicked, displays the actual image. We therefore need both url to appears in the Html. Since there is no “actualImageUrl” attribute defined in the img tag, we figured out that we could build the thumbnail url like this : /thumb.png?altUrl=actualImageUrl.png. The server does not care of the actualImageUrl querystring param and we can use javascript to parse the scr attribute and figure out the actualImage Url.
How W3C valid is this ?
Anything is valid as a
srcattribute value, in the XHTML meaning for “valid” (a formal thing). It is also otherwise correct to have a query part in such a value and use it in client-side scripting.But it might be unnecessarily complicated. As you are working with client-side JavaScript, you could include the URLs in a JavaScript array or object, instead of putting them anywhere in HTML markup. For example, you could use an object with thumbnail image URLs as property names and full image URLs as corresponding values, like
And you would then use this object to pick up the full image URL when a thumbnail is clicked on.
For a more robust solution, which would work even when JavaScript is disabled, you would need to generate the code server-side, generating
aelements aroundimgelements.