I am trying to validate my HTML5 document with the w3c. I am using the fancybox jQuery plugin for simple light boxes and image galleries. In order to differentiate between each image gallery I am using the rel
tag.
When I validate my page I get the following error:
Bad value gallery for attribute rel on element a: Not an absolute IRI. The string gallery is not a registered keyword or absolute URL.
Here is my code:
<div class="portItem">
<div class="thumbs">
<div class="items">
<img src="images/rsl.jpg" class="col" alt="A website for R.S.Lynch and Company"/>
<div class="caption">
<a class="fancybox" rel="gallery1" href="images/rs1.jpg">R.S.Lynch & Company</a>
<div class="hidden">
<a class="fancybox" rel="gallery1" href="images/rs2.jpg"></a>
<a class="fancybox" rel="gallery1" href="images/rs3.jpg"></a>
<a class="fancybox" rel="gallery1" href="images/rs4.jpg"></a>
<a class="fancybox" rel="gallery1" href="images/rs5.jpg"></a>
</div>
</div>
</div>
</div>
</div>
Is there a better tag to use and get the same result? Thanks
I'd suggest using data
-family attribute here, like this:
<a class="fancybox" data-gallery="1" href="images/rs1.jpg">R.S.Lynch & Company</a>
<a class="fancybox" data-gallery="1" href="images/rs2.jpg">...</a>
<a class="fancybox" data-gallery="1" href="images/rs3.jpg">...</a>
<a class="fancybox" data-gallery="1" href="images/rs4.jpg">...</a>
<a class="fancybox" data-gallery="1" href="images/rs5.jpg">...</a>
... as this type of attribute was designed specifically for attaching some data to DOM elements. It's more semantic than using class
, in my opinion.
You can easily access these values with $('some selector').data('gallery')
syntax.
As for rel
attribute, it looks like in HTML5 it's restricted to the set of predefined attributes, and is used to define more high-level relationships between documents.