834

The <output> Tag

Problem with <output> is that it is half-baked making its usage almost useless.

It would be significantly more practical for the output to have "type" attribute in the same way as in the input.

I did experiment with oputput|type in my Sciter and added these:

   type="text" - default value, no formating
   type="number" - formats content as a number using users locale settings,
   type="currency" - formats content as a currency using users locale settings,
   type="date"  - as a date, no TZ conversion, 
   type="date-local" - as a date in users format, UTC datetime to local,
   type="time" - as a time
   type="time-local" - as a local time, value treated as UTC datetime. 
This way server can provide data without need to know users locale.
2 days agoc-smile

From the article: and spec:

> The output element represents the result of a calculation performed by the application, or the result of a user action.

<output> is for changing content. It's the ARIA semantics that matter. The content gets announced after page updates.

You can put whatever you want inside the <output> to represent the type. "text" is the default. You can represent dates and times with the <time> element. And while there is currently no specific number formatting element, since Intl has arrived there have been many requests for this.

For example:

    <output>The new date is <time datetime="2025-10-11">Oct 11</time></output>
IOW, <output> should not have to handle all these types when it handles HTML and HTML needs to represent the types anyway.
2 days agospankalee

> half-baked making its usage almost useless.

It's sad how many elements this is still the case for in 2025. A good chunk of them can be blamed on Safari.

Probably the most extreme example of this is <input type="date"> which is supposedly production-ready but still has so many browser quirks that it's almost always better to use a JS date picker, which feels icky.

2 days agoPikamander2

Omg yes, I thought I was crazy when I was pushing for native input type=date instead of JS date picker, it worked perfectly with minimal configuration on my phone and on my Mac, but then my coworkers said it didn't work for them on their browsers, turns out, yeah, it's not consistent.

I then proceeded to spend the next week crying trying to get JS date picker to work as well as native did on my browsers.

2 days agoabustamam

On all the projects I worked that involved ui elements library, datepicker consistently was the biggest pain in the ass, rivaled only by modals.

2 days agoMuromec

Modals at least are a solved problem these days.

2 days agodawnerd

It's the one place we still use user-agent sniffing: if the built in date picker works we show that (iPhone / iPad), otherwise we do a JS picker.

2 days agospeleding

Wait which browsers can’t support html5 date field?

2 days agoVladVladikoff

It's not a question of support, it's a question of consistency. I don't remember the details, I just remember it was barely usable on one of my coworkers device/browsers. It worked, for some definition of the word, but it was not intuitive.

https://caniuse.com/input-datetime

2 days agoabustamam

The one that gets me is the fact that there's no user-editable combobox. There's a select drop down, and "input + datalist" (and that doesn't help when there's effectively 0 hint about what the things you can use actually are), but no way to have the two combined.

It's actually a little surprising to me since these are somewhat basic controls that have been around in UI toolkits for decades. It's in that weird sweet spot where the building blocks are almost usable enough to build rich applications, but it's just out of reach.

17 hours agojkrejcha
[deleted]
2 days ago

Safari and Firefox together seem to always be dragging their feet on things. Sure, sometimes it's "standards" chrome is ramming through, but many times it's things like this, that have been around since before chrome

2 days agoparadox460

You are thinking about it wrong, output is not symmetrical to input to have a type, it's a container for content that updates while you're using the page.

2 days agosto11z

I'd prefer:

    <output for=input>
      <!-- bring your own time-locale component -->
      <time is=time-locale datetime=2001-02-03>2001-02-03</time>
    </output>
With the component replacing the value dependent on locale. I don't think having HTML/CSS fiddling around with making fake content is a great idea, it already causes issues with trying to copy things injected by CSS's :before/:after psudoelements, let alone having a difference between the DOM's .innerText and, well, the inner text.

Not saying decisions can't be made about these things, just that, making those decisions will pretty much make a dedicated DSL out of a single element (dependent on input, desired kind of output (absolute or relative), other data sent along side (type of currency, does it need to be a "real" currency? Since instead of just calling something in mutable/overridable JS, its now part of the HTML processing, something that can't directly be touched)

2 days agoits-summertime

I agree in general but I think for showing a date/time in the users chosen locale I’d make an exception. Just seems a lot easier than managing that in your application.

2 days agoSoftTalker

That is a complete separate issue from <output> though. We'd like to do that in static parts of a page that aren't changing content from user actions.

There have been a bunch of requests for Intl-driven related elements in HTML, and I expect them to be added at some point.

2 days agospankalee

It's still better than <span> or <div> though, isn't it? Which is what most people are using right now...

2 days agoDangerousPie

Unlike <div> and <span>, <output> becomes part of the form and you can target it as a named form item, e.g.

    <form id="my-form">
      <input name="number" type="number">
      <output name="result"></output>
    </form>

    <script>
      const myForm = document.getElementById("my-form");
      const inputField = document.elements.namedItem("number");
      const outputField = document.elements.namedItem("result");

      outputField.textContent = inputField.valueAsNumber ** 2;
    </script>
2 days agorunarberg

Too late to edit, but there is a mistake s/document.elements/myForm.elements/r :

    -   const inputField = document.elements.namedItem("number");
    -   const outputField = document.elements.namedItem("result");
    +   const inputField = myForm.elements.namedItem("number");
    +   const outputField = myform.elements.namedItem("result");
2 days agorunarberg

"better" in what sense? If in hypothetical semantic meaning then another old zombie <var> is better in that sense, isn't it?

2 days agoc-smile

Those semantics make it more accessible for free.

2 days agosamhh

I would be on board with most of these, but...Why on earth would the server send a currency value without knowing the users locale? Are you expecting the browser to be constantly pinging services to see exchange rates?

2 days agozdragnar

Not sure I understand why do you need exchange rates with it.

<output type="currency"> uses the same convention as "Intl.NumberFormat/style=currency": https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Refe...

2 days agoc-smile

You're talking about currency formatting while they are talking about currency value. In essence, you're both correct.

They are correct in that if you're displaying a currency value, you have to know which currency it is in, right? It wouldn't make sense for the server to be "unaware" of the locale of the value.

That said, your comment sidesteps that issue and addresses how the number itself is displayed, since ultimately the value itself is a number, but different locales display numbers differently.

So the person you're responding to is asking: since the server ostensibly already knows which currency it's in, shouldn't it already be formatting the value appropriately, and that's more a question of where one thinks localization formatting should ultimately live in web app context.

2 days agodclowd9901

Bingo. Take the swapping of periods and commas between US and maybe Germany.

If you see a price in Euros and there's a chance the browser converts the number to my locale, then the price becomes completely ambiguous. Information is lost unless I change my locale just to see if the number changed.

If, on the other hand, the browser doesn't apply such formatting, then the number is probably the number.

What's more, wouldn't you need to specify an origin locale so the browser knows how to correctly interpret the value?

2 days agozdragnar

<output type="currency">123456.00</output> formats output using user's settings: https://www.elevenforum.com/attachments/currency_format_cont...

If you want specific country format then you may use lang:

<output type="currency" lang="de-DE">123456.00</output>

Currency conversion is not a subject of a browser.

2 days agoc-smile

I got totally mad about it and wanted to write a snark comment, but then I checked what it does and it's just number formatting. It doesn't add a euro sign to it. That would have been a bad idea of course.

2 days agoMuromec

More relevantly, take the swapping of full stops and commas (and the position of the currency sign) between Ireland and Germany, which use the same currency.

€1,000.48 = 1.000,48€

2 days agoTRiG_Ireland

But if it’s just formatting, how is that different from the “number” type?

2 days agokortilla

Different rule set

2 days agograftak

!!!

A payment, bill, price, etc has a particular currency.

For example, 59.95 Australian dollars:

In en-AU locale, that is $59,95.

In en-US locale, that is 59.95 AUD or AU$59.95.

Either way, the quantity and units are the same, but they are presented differently.

In some cases, there may be currency exchange services. That will depend on the current exchange rate, and possibly exchange fees. And yes, that will take some more work. But that’s a fundamentally distinct concept than pure presentation of a monetary amount.

2 days agopaulddraper

In en-AU locale, I’d prefer AU$ or AUD too - because you can just never be sure what you are dealing with - my work pays for me to use a coworking space not far from my house, and the app we use shows the price in US dollars, and doesn’t even mark it as US$ or USD, just plain $, I’m expected to know what it means. I’ve seen hotel sites quote amazingly cheap deals for hotel rates in Australia, only to realise they were quoting me USD (without clearly marking it as such), despite the fact that I was searching for a hotel in Australia from within Australia. In today’s global economy, you can’t go wrong by always being explicit about which currency you are using.

2 days agoskissane

Maybe if we had <output type=“currency”> there would be fewer such snafus

a day agopaulddraper

You shouldn’t ever need to poll from the browser. If you were using WebSockets you could send 5 stock updates to the browser per second with almost no resource costs.

2 days agoaustin-cheney

Top personal issue, be nice if it could just attach to an <input> and list the result. Like:

  <input type="range" id="example_id" name="example_nm" min="0" max="50">
  <output name="example_result" for="example_id"></output>
And it would just show you the input value. Maybe with a "type" specifier like talked about. Maybe the ::before or ::after css and it would allow content: updates or something.

Bunch of <input> types that there's a reasonable case for. Especially if it allowed for formatting. Did you put in the type="tel" the way you believed? It prints it out formatted.

'checkbox, color, date, datetime-local, file, month, number, radio, range, tel, time, url, week' might all have possible uses. Some of the text cases might have uses in specific conditions. 'email, text, url'

Also be nice if the for="" attribute actually did very much. The attachment seems mostly irrelevant in the examples seen. Most example just use a variation on:

  <output name="result">
  <form oninput="result.value=...">
2 days agoaraes

It is trivial to do that with JavaScript as you fill in the content of <output> using Intt, e.g.

    const outputEl = document.getElementById("my-output");
    const currencyFormat = new Intl.NumberFormat("default", {
      style: "currency",
      currency: "ISK",
    });

    outputEl.textContent = currencyFormat.format(value);
https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/JavaScript/Refe...
2 days agorunarberg

Ok, but as a peer comment points out, doing this client-side is fraught / potentially nonsensical to convert a monetary number value to a different currency if you don't know the exchange rate.

2 days agochrisweekly

Is currency exchange rate even part of the WHATWG standard? You will always need do to do something fraught / potentially nonsensical to convert between different currency, if not on the client, then on the server.

Formatting output values to the user’s locale has nothing to do with currency exchange rate. And JavaScript does the former rather excellently (except when the locale is not supported [ahm, Chromium]).

2 days agorunarberg

How is that currency one supposed to work? Converting between currencies depends on their browser picking an exchange rate that you would never want to trust if your doing anything that involves actual transactions.

2 days agokortilla

It formats numbers and that's it, it doesn't know what currency it is and doesn't try to guess.

2 days agoMuromec

Also, if to allow form.value to accept JSON-ish objects it will be possible to set form values in single shot:

   form.value = { transAmount: 12345n, transDate: new Date() };
where form is

   <form>
     ... <output type="currency" name="transAmount" />
     ... <output type="date-local" name="transDate" />
   </form>
2 days agoc-smile

That's basically the story with every browser feature. How did we get to the point that everything is built for this awful platform?

2 days agoPxtl

I think we got to this point because the browser was originally a tool to browse documents and media. Now it’s kind of a software distribution platform with interactivity. And we got there by quick implementations/workarounds.

2 days agoSvenL

Every other platform tends to be either worse, locked or both.

a day agodelian66

> But <output>? Most have never touched it. Some don’t even know it exists.

Yeah, count me on with those who don't even know it exists. I'm adding this to my TIL.

> When I searched GitHub public repos, it barely showed up at all.

> That absence creates a feedback loop: if no one teaches it, no one uses it.

This has triggered an instant question in my head: Do LLMs actually use it when generating code or they are not well-trained for this specific tag?

2 days agoredbell

I, too, am concerned about AIs not reading the docs. What happens when a new W3C spec comes out and most people are vibe coding? If AIs don't take current specs into account and just regurgitate old code patterns, then disseminating spec updates or new specs will be harder than it already is.

2 days agomcdonje

Most people don't care about W3C specs as it is, nevermind with vibe coding. The React release notes are the important web standards they follow.

2 days agoDevasta

I was filled with a definite sadness after reading your comment. It is what it is.

2 days agoabnercoimbre

Alternate problem. I was trying to fix up an old repo I found which used some pdf tool, but when trying an LLM it insisted on reading all the documentation, but the docs were woefully out of date and didn't match the actually binaries, so it got terribly twisted up.

6 hours agoqingcharles

Yeah llms don’t read docs. They repeat the info in docs. And swap letters around the code to make it fit.

2 days agonashashmi

I actually discovered <output> because Claude generated it !

2 days agodidi_bear

LLMs generate code based on statistical patterns found in vast amounts of training data from existing projects, not by reading language specifications. If the tag is rare in the wild, it will be rare in their output.

2 days agolpln3452

LLMs also don't know about new MCP tools when they are training but they use them perfectly fine when presented with the information about them.

AI software development models and agents can be "taught" to go look at the official version documentation for languages via the prompt (just as one example) without needing to modify their weights.

One call to getSpecification('Python','3.14') or some similar tool call and they know exactly what they are working with, even if the language version did not exist when the model was trained.

2 days agoEMM_386

I mean, they're trained on specs, too. I'll have to play with asking for semantic HTML and see what they come up with.

2 days agoClamchop
[deleted]
2 days ago

> Update 7 Oct 2025: Some screen readers have been found not to announce updates to the tag, so explicitly emphasising the role attribute might be worthwhile for now until support improves: <output role="status">.

Waiting for support to improve on a 17 year old tag that is barely used anymore?

3 days agoNoahZuniga

To improve the usage of screen readers that don’t respect a tag that’s parts of the standard for 17 years.

It’s obviously the screen readers’ fault.

3 days agocroes

If adding the ARIA role fixes the problem, then it's not the fault of screen readers: it's browsers not exposing the semantics properly (unless explicitly instructed to). Please don't assign blame to the "obvious" target unless you actually know who's at fault.

2 days agowizzwizz4

The output tag has an implicit aria-role=”status”. This is 100% on the particular screen reader(s) that don’t support it.

https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/Accessibility/A...

2 days agocluckindan

If the screen reader were at fault, then explicitly specifying the implicit role (something that should be a no-op) would not fix the problem. It's the responsibility of web browsers to implement and expose implicit ARIA roles (see https://www.w3.org/TR/html-aam-1.0/#mapping-html-to-accessib...). Screen readers do not (in general) speak HTML, just like computer monitors do not (in general) speak CSS.

2 days agowizzwizz4

If that were true, no screen readers would work, which is not the case.

2 days agocluckindan

Have you ever used a screen reader? A lot of their failure modes are exactly as you'd expect from the model I've described: look at, for example, the differences in how definition lists are exposed to Windows Narrator between Firefox, Chrome, Edge, and Edge-in-IE-mode.

2 days agowizzwizz4

You’re right, some screen readers work better with specific browsers. The article doesn’t mention anything about that, though.

2 days agocluckindan

As a screen reader user, I think aria live regions (and hence the output tag) were actually a mistake.

What we should have had instead is a `document.speak(text, priority)` method, which would just pass the text straight through to the screen reader.

Sure, that approach is less pure, yet it is far more pragmatist and practical, as you only need aria when you heavily use js anyway.

Aria live regions, as they currently stand, basically encourage three anti-patterns:

First is the "if it changes, it should be announced" anti-pattern, think e.g. a constantly changing stock ticker on a news website. People make these into aria live regions because "it's live, we want to be good citizens and do semantics, right?". Sites that do this are almost impossible to use, as you're constantly distracted by the ticker. Another instance of this are timers that change every second. With a `document.speak` method, it would be far more obvious that you don't want the screen reader to announce the ticker every time it changes.

The second anti-pattern is the one of outputting the same message twice. Think a calculator where the user executes two different expressions which both produce a result of 0. The result of the second expression won't be announced, as there will be no change to the live region contents. With `document.speak`, this wouldn't be a problem, as the method would just be executed twice.

The third anti-pattern is actually somewhat specific to the `output` tag. It's very tempting to use it for terminal, log and chat outputs, and that is a mistake. Those processes append to the output instead of replacing it, but with the aria status of atomic, the entire output area would be announced every time the output changes.

15 hours agomiki123211

Semantic html is a novice trap, just do the thing that works and that browsers expect (aria-live)

It's fun to play around with things like this, but if you're a developer you have a responsibility to build things that work for your users using the existing tools and ecosystem. Don't use semantic HTML tags that aren't widely used, just do the thing that works.

2 days agomgraczyk

In the article:

> And because it has been part of the spec since 2008, support is excellent across browsers and screen readers. It also plays nicely with any JavaScript framework you might be using, like React or Vue.

So what makes you think this isn’t a “thing that works”?

2 days agoniek_pas

> Update 7 Oct 2025: Some screen readers have been found not to announce updates to the tag

a day agolol768

> Semantic html is a novice trap, just do the thing that works and that browsers expect (aria-live)

html isn't just "browsers". I've been doing alot of epub work, and semantic pages make everything easier and better.

2 days agoNoMoreNicksLeft

> Like <label>, <output> has a for="" attribute. Here you list the ids of any <input> elements the result depends on

Any screen reader users able to comment on whether this is worth doing? I suspect this would be such a rarity online that screen reader users wouldn’t be familiar with it, but it depends on the UX of the software

3 days agolelandfe

Not a screen reader user but I have used them a lot in testing. I'd be surprised if it's meaningfully exposed to assistive tech. Not at the computer right now so I can't test.

That said, I imagine it's more useful to do the opposite, label the output itself e.g.

<label for="output">Total</label> <output id="output">£123.45</output>

That way it will be announced like "Total, £123.45" rather than a random number with no context

2 days agoWickyNilliams

For static scenarios this works well with screen readers. On the output tag the "for" property helps screen readers deal with dynamic values, essentially adding reactivity to the element. I use it so infrequently I've never explored how it works but screen readers will catch that the value has been updated.

This is handy for testing with screen readers, and includes links to the appropriate spec (for output and all elements):

https://stevefaulkner.github.io/AT-browser-tests/test-files/...

2 days agoskeeter2020

It's often the case that screen readers do not support the more exotic aspects of html (hell even some basics, unfortunately).

The browser may add a reference from one to the other in the accessibility tree, but whether a screenreader announces it is another matter. I'd be surprised if it's supported in any meaningful way here. Happy to be shown otherwise!

2 days agoWickyNilliams

I have completed multiple courses on front-end web accessibility and never run into <output>, somehow. Thanks so much for the awesome share.

2 days agoty_2k
[deleted]
3 days ago

I came to this article expecting to see <output> misused, and was pleasantly surprised. :-)

(Actually, the dodgy GenAI calculator image at the top primed me for even more failure, making the excellent content that followed even more surprising. But I soon forgot about it and only remembered when I scrolled back to the start for no particular reason when done.)

3 days agochrismorgan

This dodgy GenAI calculator is funny... You can only add, multiply and divide. No subtractions allowed!

3 days agoaruggirello

> the dodgy GenAI calculator image

It appears human beings are already forgetting the even more dodgy images some of us created before AI allowed us to reduce said dodginess. Or actually get a picture we could post without too much shame. :)

And in this case, IMHO, the image has a significant amount of dodgy vintage tech charm.

Not every use of AI replaces a professional artist.

3 days agoNevermark

> Not every use of AI replaces a professional artist.

It normalises it.

3 days agoKudos

There is no reality past or present where someone would have been paid to make this

2 days agollbbdd

I love those handmade bad sketch

3 days agouonr

I did/do too. I think it is possible to value:

1. The techniques, inspiration and creativity of skilled human artists.

2. The personality of art by unskilled artists.

3. The use of generative AI to replace generic clip art. A little whimsy to dress up plain text.

Is anyone really crusading to protect generic clip art? No?

There should be something like rule 34 for social and cultural movements. For every movement, the ideological version will get performatively or knee jerk expressed, with shame throwing, in benign situations.

> Actually, the dodgy GenAI calculator image at the top primed me for even more failure, making the excellent content that followed even more surprising.

This was poor spirited, personal itch scratching. We can just compliment a writer on their writing, if they are a writer, presenting themselves as a writer, not a visual artist.

2 days agoNevermark

> We can just compliment a writer on their writing

I'm fairly confident that this article is primarily AI-written as well

2 days agopastel8739

Apparently, it's about screen reader support in web pages.

Also "ARIA" stands for Accessible Rich Internet Applications and it's "a set of HTML attributes that make web content more accessible to people with disabilities."

3 days agoeps

This is like explaining what JavaScript is under a post about React. There’s no shame in not knowing accessibility basics, but there’s also no need to act like it’s ridiculous to expect the reader to know some.

3 days agoskrebbel

I think "act like it's ridiculous" is pretty hyperbolic here. I didn't know what ARIA stood for until now (though I knew what it was).

You'd be surprised how many people barely know it exists... I was a TA for my uni's Web Engineering and Ethics in CS courses and accessibility never even came up in either course.

3 days agoakk0

> I was a TA for my uni's Web Engineering and Ethics in CS courses and accessibility never even came up in either course.

That is genuinely baffling to me. How does a university teach web engineering without even mentioning accessibility? It’s not just best practice—it’s often a legal requirement for public-sector sites in many countries. Even outside government work, major companies (FAANG included) publicly invest in accessibility to avoid both reputational and legal fallout. Ignoring it entirely sends the wrong message to students about professional responsibility and real-world standards.

2 days agoacka

Many schools are not very good at teaching real world skills. Always been this way.

It’s why ‘self taught’ in many disciplines is very doable too, if someone focuses on what people actually want/need.

They might not be good at articulating the differences between fizzbuzz and bubble sort, but they can get shit done that works.

Every PhD that I know that went from Academia to Industry immediately had their stress levels decrease 10x and their pay roughly double too - because they could finally do a thing, see if it worked or not, and if it did, get paid more.

Instead of insane constant bullshitting and reputation management/politics with a hint of real application maybe sprinkled in. Few ‘knives’ have to be as sharp as the academics, in my experience.

2 days agolazide

Didn’t come up in my ethics course either. Unless you actually know someone with an accessibility issue, it’s unlikely you have encountered it or recognized it if you did.

For example: You don’t realize how absolutely abysmal voice control is for computers until you have to use it.

There are so many assumptions about the world that causes things like neurodivergence to become a disability instead of a difference.

2 days agokayodelycaon

Not knowing about ARIA is like not knowing about requirements for ramp slopes when designing a building. You just... can't.

2 days agoMuromec

> * I think "act like it's ridiculous" is pretty hyperbolic here.*

Fair. I might’ve read more snark in the “Apparently,” than the commenter intended to convey.

For what it’s worth, the comment you read is the toned down version of what I had initially come up with. I really don’t think being dismissive of accessibility concerns is good style.

2 days agoskrebbel

Yeah, I knew “aria” was “accessibility stuff”, but I couldn’t tell you what it stood for.

2 days agobena

Tbh I really don't think it matters what the letters stand for.

2 days agoChrisSD

You made me realize it's like NASA: a good chunk of the worlds knows it, but I bet most don't know what it stands for (at least outside the US I bet 99.9% don't know -- me included haha)

2 days agokaoD

North American Space Astronauts!

13 hours agoskrebbel

[dead]

2 days agoajjahs

MDN has decent docs on this, including (and echoed by the author) this top-level guidance:

>> The first rule of ARIA use is "If you can use a native HTML element or attribute with the semantics and behavior you require already built in, instead of re-purposing an element and adding an ARIA role, state or property to make it accessible, then do so."

https://developer.mozilla.org/en-US/docs/Web/Accessibility/A...

2 days agoskeeter2020

The top of a lot of the ARIA docs pages say "No ARIA is better than bad ARIA"

2 days agosmall_scombrus

I really like (not) when people read about accessibility and the first thing they decide to do is adding keydown handlers on all the buttons that have clicks handlers. Like, please, treat it like the rest of UX and design for it, instead of going with a checklist over all the places linter flagged.

2 days agoMuromec

Hey thanks for clarifying. I could have googled it, but lazily reading your comment on a cloudy Saturday afternoon is easier. Thanks again, appreciate it. ;)

2 days agorambambram

If you have to use `role=status` to make it work with screenreaders, I'm not sure I see the point.

Maybe I'm jaded, I was all in on semantic xhtml and microformats before we got HTML5, but this seems like being overly-pedantic for the sake of pedantry rather than for a11y.

3 days agopbhjpbhj

Chicken-and-egg. As soon as more websites start using the tag, screenreaders will catch up and role=status will not be needed.

3 days agorglullis

So there's useful html tags from 2008 that no one uses or knows about... How can that be the case? Because there's just so many tags? Because people don't read the docs? Because the benefits are not obvious?

3 days agofroobius

Most sites today are not using HTML in the way it was originally envisioned. They use something called "DHTML" instead. The D stands for DIV, because people seldom use any other tag. E.g. in normal HTML you would use the TABLE, TR and TD tags to build a table. In modern DHTML (aka DIV-HTML) people build the table from fixed size DIVs, and calculate the column sizes via JavaScript.

3 days agomeindnoch

The D in DHTML is usually short for "Dynamic".

Around the time that abbreviation became fashionable using a lot of DIV elements also did, but that wasn't what the "D" stood for.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Dynamic_HTML

3 days agoasjo

I think that was known by meindnoch and was a joke.

3 days ago1718627440
[deleted]
3 days ago

I'd say DHTML was more of a thing in the early 2000s when we were still using tables for layout. The divs came later, when the abbreviation had fallen out of fashion because all HTML kinda was dynamic by default.

2 days agothrow-the-towel

Not sure if a joke but this is factually inaccurate.

2 days agojunon

Accurate to some substantial usage, whatever definitional inaccuracy or backronym action is in play.

Descriptivism usually reflects some reality no matter the intended prescriptives.

2 days agowwweston

No, sorry. It's factually inaccurate. DHTML stood for Dynamic HTML, it was an extension before Javascript and whatnot was added.

2 days agojunon

Be sure to correct all the people who are using the term “cool” for things other than relative temperature, as it was originally defined.

See also the dictionary fallacy, and again descriptivism vs prescriptivism.

Additionally, even leaving alone the div/dynamic language issue, there really isn’t a point in usage history where DHTML came without JS — believe me, I was doing it when the term first came into usage. JS was required for nearly all dynamic behavior.

2 days agowwweston

> See also the dictionary fallacy, and again descriptivism vs prescriptivism

DHTML is an acronym that expands to: Dynamic HyperText Markup Language.

There is no dictionary fallacy or descriptivism vs prescriptivism or defined meaning. It was simply an industry standard way to shorten all those words.

Changing one of the letters to stand for something else reassigns the pointer to something else entirely, or is the making of a joke, which I think the above may have been.

2 days ago1659447091

Wow, you should try out for the olympics with those acrobatics. I didn’t realise it was possible to miss every point so hard.

a day agojama211

Man I live for takedowns like these, nice work

2 days agojama211

what takedown?

a day agojunon

You can work it out, I believe in you.

a day agojama211

DHTML is literally just HTML that is dynamically modified by JavaScript. DHTML became a term when JavaScript became ubiquitous. It was not an extension.

2 days agok33n

Javascript was not ubiquitous when the term DHTML was last seriously used. And yes, CSS and javascript were extensions at the time, not very widely supported across all browsers.

We had table based layouts and then divs when CSS started to take off, mostly used by artists rather than companies at first.

Javascript had vanishingly limited uses at first, too. I don't remember exactly how long it took us to get XHR but before that we had "Comet frames", before iframe security was given much focus. Javascript couldn't do that for a while. It was also dodgy and considered bad practice for quite a while, too.

I don't remember when the term javascript was even really used in regular vernacular but DHTML was not so much referring to CSS as it was the myriad of weird mechanisms introduced to make pages dynamic. It was never "Div-based HTML" or whatever, the div craze came way later once CSS was Good Enough to eschew table layouts - after which, Dreamweaver died and photoshop's slice tool finally got removed, and we started inching toward where the web sits today.

I also do distinctly recall needing a doctype for DHTML for some browsers.

2 days agojunon

> Javascript was not ubiquitous when the term DHTML was last seriously used.

It wasn't as fast or as usable as it is today, but Javascript has been in every mainstream browser since before Microsoft started pushing "DHTML".

Interestingly, in my memory, it seemed like we had JS for a long time before DHTML, but it was only a couple years between Eich writing it and IE4, which was the start of the "DHTML" moniker. Looking back at the timeline, everything seems much more compressed than it felt at the time.

2 days agorandallsquared
[deleted]
2 days ago

That could be. And yeah, DHTML came and went pretty quickly even by today's standards.

2 days agojunon

DHTML was just JavaScript that mutated the DOM. That’s literally all it ever was. There was also not a DHTML doctype. There was also not anything even called “an extension”. There were Java applets, ActiveX controls, and ActionScript -> JavaScript bridges, which the concept of DHTML (dynamic HTML) eventually fully replaced.

Divs weren’t a “craze”. They were popularized by the (brand new) XHTML spec, which did have its own doctype.

2 days agok33n

> I don't remember when the term javascript was even really used in regular vernacular

2004 or 2005. Gmail and Google Maps were a "holy crap this is actually possible?" for a lot of people, both technical and non, and was when javascript switched from mostly-ignored* to embraced.

*Just minor enhancements, outside of technical people mostly only known to MySpace users who wanted to add a little flair to their page. XmlHttpRequest was almost entirely unknown even in technical spaces until gmail showcased interaction without page refreshes.

2 days agoIzkata

Not sure why you're being downvoted, but actually yeah, this isn't far off from my recollection either.

a day agojunon

What does SHTML stand for?

2 days agoepcoa

SPAN-HTML, obviously.

2 days agoandrewflnr

This is a legacy of old apache configurations, the common mime type configuration files used .html to send the straight file, and .shtml to turn on the server side processing instructions. Server side includes could be static files or executable scripts that generated text on STDOUT. If you were using a lot of server side includes, it was cleaner just to turn on server side parsing for the whole site.

2 days agotingletech

It's short for SHiTML.

2 days agoDonHopkins

Please delete this comment. If you're being sarcastic, this is not obvious at all to people who don't know.

3 days agobapak

[dead]

2 days agodecremental

Because a lot of web frontend developers are addicted to <div> soup and fancy CSS and JavaScript libraries.

3 days agovaylian

It's also due to browser not doing anything useful with the additional tags, if I use <article>, <section> or <div> doesn't make any difference, my browser doesn't use that to generate a TOC or let me open an <article> in a new Tab. Even the, in theory, incredible useful <time> tag seems to be completely invisible to my browser and many other potentialy useful tags don't exist in the first place (e.g. <unit> would be useful).

3 days agogrumbel

> It's also due to browser not doing anything useful with the additional tags,

It's clear that you are sighted and never use reader mode.

2 days agosodapopcan

Exactly this. I really wish browsers would use semantic html to make content more accessible for me, a sighted user! Why does my browser not give me a table of contents I can use to navigate a long page?

I think the parent has a good point: browsers don't do anything with these tags for sighted users, who are unfortunately the majority of developers. If they were to notice benefits to using semantic tags, maybe they'd use them more often.

2 days agocrabmusket

Developers of all people should be in a position to notice how tag semantics can keep them oriented in a document or target behavior and styling…

2 days agowwweston

It’s interesting, because if you imagine sites actually using these tags to be maximally compatible with reader mode and other accessibility modes, they’re setting themselves up perfectly to be viewed without ads.

I use reader mode by default in Safari because it’s essentially the ultimate ad blocker: it throws the whole site away and just shows me the article I want to read.

But this is in opposition to what the website owners want, which is to thwart reader mode and stuff as many ads in my way as they can.

It’s possible good accessibility is antithetical to the ad-driven web. It’s no wonder sites don’t bother with it.

2 days agoninkendo

Reader mode seems to still work if you have a div with article text in it. I would be interested to see a comparison of what works and what doesn’t if such a reference exists though!

2 days agosefrost

Reader mode is based on a whole slew of heuristics including tag names, class names, things like link-to-text-content ratio, and other stuff I can't recall. IIRC it considers semantic tag names a stronger signal than e.g. class names, so having <article> in your page isn't necessary but helps a lot.

2 days agoTheFlyingFish

Yes, I think that is what browser should spend money on instead of inventing new syntax. Google Chrome still doesn't support alternate stylesheets. But I refuse to not use them simply because a rich company can't be bothered to implement decades old standards.

3 days ago1718627440

Maybe not the browser itself, but in combination with semantic CSS [1], it's incredibly useful.

[1] - eg https://picocss.com/

3 days agokitd

Not true. Using semantic HTML and relying on its implicit ARIA roles allows the browser to construct an accurate AOM tree (Accessibility Object Model) which makes it possible for screen readers and other human interface software to create TOCs and other landmark-based navigation.

2 days agocluckindan

> Not true. Using semantic HTML and relying on its implicit ARIA roles allows the browser to construct an accurate AOM tree (Accessibility Object Model) which makes it possible for screen readers and other human interface software to create TOCs and other landmark-based navigation.

Sure, it allows the browser to do that. GP is complaining that even though browsers are allowed to do all that, they typically don't.

2 days agolelanthran

The point of the reply was that they actually do. It's just not obvious that they do if you don't use that method yourself.

2 days agoVinnl

We just don't have enough tags that we can really take advantage of on a semantic or programmatic level, and that has lead to other tags getting overloaded and thus losing meaning.

Why don't we just have markup for a table of contents in 2025?

2 days agothreatofrain

That'd open a whole new can of worms. Browsers are already gargantuan pieces of software even with the relatively primitive tags we have today. We don't need to further argue with each other what the <toc> tag should look and behave like, deal with unforeseen edge cases and someone's special use cases which end up requiring them to implement the whole thing with <ol>s and <li>s anyway.

2 days agofleebee

Then let the edge cases use <ol> and <li>, and in some sense all those website style simplifiers that comes built-in with Safari will just have to deal with those edge cases. Similarly we have a built-in date picker, and if you don't think it's good enough then build a better one.

2 days agothreatofrain

If you want a specific behavior for <time> then write a browser plugin which e.g. converts the <time> content to your local time.

But if you are a developer you should see value in <article> and <section> keeping your markup much much nicer which in turn should make your tests much easier to write.

2 days agorunarberg

Semantic tags were never widely used, even before the overuse of JavaScript.

2 days agodiego_sandoval

Because no one cares about HTML except as a payload carrier for the real website: the JavaScript output from React/Tailwind/Typescript compilation.

You have to remember, this is an industry that thinks having code without syntax errors was too unreasonable a requirement for XHTML, there is no reason to expect them to know anything beyond div and maybe a dozen other tags.

3 days agoDevasta

For anybody wondering, there are 112 of them:

    a
    abbr
    address
    area
    article
    aside
    audio
    b
    base
    bdi
    bdo
    blockquote
    body
    br
    button
    canvas
    caption
    cite
    code
    col
    colgroup
    data
    datalist
    dd
    del
    details
    dfn
    dialog
    div
    dl
    dt
    em
    embed
    fieldset
    figcaption
    figure
    footer
    form
    h1
    h2
    h3
    h4
    h5
    h6
    head
    header
    hgroup
    hr
    html
    i
    iframe
    img
    input
    ins
    kbd
    label
    legend
    li
    link
    main
    map
    mark
    menu
    meta
    meter
    nav
    noscript
    object
    ol
    optgroup
    option
    output
    p
    picture
    pre
    progress
    q
    rp
    rt
    ruby
    s
    samp
    script
    search
    section
    select
    slot
    small
    source
    span
    strong
    style
    sub
    summary
    sup
    table
    tbody
    td
    template
    textarea
    tfoot
    th
    thead
    time
    title
    tr
    track
    u
    ul
    var
    video
    wbr
3 days ago1718627440

My guess would be that most people just copy (mimic) what is already there. I sometimes work as a freelance web administrator and I can assure you 95% of people who create websites for a living have never read through a list of HTML tags, have only a slight idea of the semantic web and in the end they are more like people who cobble existing things together and are out of their depth pretty quickly.

Not that this is problematic per se, everybodies milage may vary and we're all out there to learn. But if I told one of them about the output tag thry probably wouldn't even understand why that would be important.

3 days agoatoav

Maybe because most HTML tags are not well supported by browsers, because they are doing by themselves only half of what a developer would want, hard to style, hard to enhance the native behavior, ... most recently-added tags have those problems (ex: <progress>), this one from 2008 is an even better example

3 days agogregoriol

please elaborate, how is <output> a better example for only doing half of what a developer would want? what is missing?

3 days agoem-bee

> Update 7 Oct 2025: Some screen readers have been found not to announce updates to the tag, so explicitly emphasising the role attribute might be worthwhile for now until support improves: <output role="status">.

Maybe it's because like most things html/css related, it's a semi-broken implementation of a half-feature?

3 days agob_e_n_t_o_n

In some cases, because there was a period of time where it might not have been in HTML in all browsers, and javascript was used instead, and then HTML had it.

Then no one checked, and the javascript train had already left the station.

3 days agoj45

People who already have a habit of solving a problem a specific way are generally unlikely to switch when a new solution appears unless it is considerably easier. If it's not immediately easier, it will feel easier to continue the ingrained habit.

3 days agoTimwi

I mean with modern javascript/dom manipulation tools the only tag you really need is div.

In before comments - not advocating for div only development, just that the nature of www moved from html with some js to well ... only js.

3 days agoReptileMan

Then you might as well use a single instance of the canvas tag.

3 days ago1718627440

Doesn't Flutter do exactly that?

2 days agothrow-the-towel

It’s nice seeing stuff like this.

Another is structuring your form names to help align with how it’s going to be used in the backend so you don’t have to use JavaScript to gather all the data or be doing a lot of restructuring of the request data.

This is an oversimplified example but now even if you submit with JS, you just have to submit the form and the form data is already there.

<input name=“entity[id]”>

<input name=“entity[relation]”>

2 days agohk1337

For a website speaking accessibility, it does something very bad and annoying with scrolling. Not using the native browser scrolling I think. When I use the middle wheel of my mouse to go up or down, sometimes it suddenly it ignore the command or stutter or go back a little bit instead of continue going down or some random movement. Even with using 2 fingers scroll with the touchpad, I can feel very slightly that there a subtle lag or stutter.

2 days agogreatgib

Hell html in 2025 feels so underdeveloped, semantic html should just be declared dead and we should just move on. How many years we wasted by having "experts" underlining the semantic meaning of aside, article, main etc? Good lord, perhaps we should just totally skip the dom and use a graphics, input and accessibility api the way we want

2 days agohollowturtle

It seems to me that most semantic HTML has helped third parties extract data from web pages for their own use. Perhaps if you are an important primary source of information like a government service that could be useful if it helps you advance your cause of sharing data, but I don’t think it is in the interest of most website operators if it reduces traffic to your site.

I understand that their are some accessibility benefits to some semantic HTML tags.

2 days agosefrost

The discussion of past years instead of being focused on "what we could do next to make developing apps for the web better?" has been focused on which semantic meaning the x tag has and where it should be used, creating just a lot of confusion and disagreements, vs the reality: people just use divs, you can still specify aria attributes there, why not giving us an api to specify semantic meaning as well the way we want? I'd like to have something like flash back, html5 was a step back, partially has already been achieved by flutter and react native. Please Browser vendors just give us a goddman drawing api that doesn't feel limited as canvas is with a semantic, accessibility and input apis that don't suck!

2 days agohollowturtle

I feel like you’re worked up about a hype that began in 2005 and fizzled out in 2015.

2 days agoskrebbel

Please tell me then what I've been missing. Modals/Dialogs?

2 days agohollowturtle

I don’t know man, I just havent seen anyone get excited about “the semantic web” for many many years. I associate modern HTML features with stuff like color pickers, custom elements, and indeed, dialogs and popovers. I’ve to see someone get in trouble for using <div> where an <aside> would be more appropriate.

2 days agoskrebbel

Interestingly I've often seen this in Claude outputs, especially on long prompts. I've assumed this is because of Claude's XML-based instruction format, but this does make me wonder how related the two are. And if Claude may have a harder time using <output> given it's related to both accessibility and its instructions

2 days agoford

I suppose claude is trained on the spec and docs like MDN

2 days agostefvw93

I don't think this was ignored for no reason or simply forgotten. I don't see it bringing a great feature or value compared to input tag. You still need to code up the logic for setting its value, via a script, like any other container tags. You could pretty much use a read-only input tag to include the output with the form.

2 days agozkmon

> You could pretty much use a read-only input tag to include the output with the form.

You could, but then you wouldn't be gaining any of the accessibility wins the article is discussing...

2 days agoswiftcoder

I can see this having extreme value 20 years ago. Then it could take more than a minute to asynchronously get data back and you needed to tell people what content on the page changed.

Now, the bottleneck is entirely the database first and the framework second. Those can be switched if the framework code is extra garbage. When those are taken out of the equation I am seeing text update to the screen in about 5-15ms in response to a user interaction that requires execution on the localhost server, 45ms for networked server.

At that speed you don’t need to alert the user of any content changes. You only need to structure the content such that walking the DOM, using a screen reader, from point of interaction to area of output is direct and logical, expected, for a human.

3 days agoaustin-cheney

these days with llms we're back to over a minute to get a response...

3 days agoarccy

I think the lesson here is if you want to provide an accessibility feature, you have to also make it do something useful for people that don't care about accessibility.

2 days agoIshKebab

The article was all good until he started to use react for implementation. I would not have done that for an article about web standards, and I use react all the time.

2 days agothrow_m239339

I have no idea if it was based on the HTML tag, but ColdFusion/CFML has (always?) had the <cfoutput> tag for displaying and parsing dynamic data.

2 days agobdcravens

> dynamic results that are announced to screen readers by default.

> It’s been in the spec for years. Yet it’s hiding in plain sight.

Almost as if we're... blind to it?

No? Too on the nose?

2 days agomoffkalast

>When I searched GitHub public repos, it barely showed up at all.

Is there a way to search by code?

3 days agoandai

That's literally what search does on Github?

3 days agoEtheryte

Turns out there is a Code Search option, but it's not the default (default is repo names and descriptions). Neat!

2 days agoandai

Only if you're signed in.

2 days agoameliaquining

I honestly don't know what is it for. Why is it important to have an output tag.

The output of any actions will be shoved into any N random elements. So every `<div>` will have `<output>`? Why? Waste of payload size and CPU cycles in parsing.

The designers of semantic tags truly live in ivory towers.

2 days agodidip

Imagine a world where you don't have to deal with legacy js, css and html stuff and you could opt-in for an alternative, better solution that just works on every single computer, the very same way it works on your own.

Imagine you place a textfield in precise spot on a screen, with your choice of font and it renders the way it renders on your screen on every client device, everywhere.

Oh wait, we had, it was called Flash.

2 days agozeroq

Okay

2 days agoHadimns57

> So why don’t we use it?

Because we don’t need another fucking tag, that’s why.