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Start your free trialChloe Milne
323 PointsWhy would you use the <label> attribute as opposed to something like <h1>? Are there any main differences/reasons?
Why would you use the <label> attribute as opposed to something like h1? Are there any main differences/reasons?
When we don't associate the label with anything in particular (aka label for="") what would be the benefit to using it at all? Is it purely because of the css rules associated with "label"?
3 Answers
Michael Brown
7,431 PointsSemantic markup encourages us to use tags/elements that describe the meaning of the content. In a form, the word(s) outside the INPUT (data entry box) are more clearly described as a LABEL than they are a heading like an H1 or H2, or a generic piece of text like a P.
In addition, there is the helpful behavior you mentioned, which is really quite nice. When associated with an INPUT, a user "click" on the words in the LABEL will move their insertion point inside the data entry box. An H1 or P won't do that.
Evan Agee
13,088 PointsI think the main reason for using a label tag is semantic markup. Whereas h1 is meant to indicate the weight of a piece of content in the overall doc outline, labels indicate that a piece of content is a label for a form element on the page.
Jason Neel
11,073 PointsIf that's the argument, using a label in this case is for semantic's sake, why not use another fieldgroup/legend combination? After all, you are defining a group of fields (checkmark or radio inputs) for one particular value that could then be described by the fieldgroup's legend.
But I realize there could be many solutions to this pattern.