Question

I am working on a CMS that generates CSS "style='xyz'" statements from user input. The user input will be validated but as an additional safeguard, I want to check the validity of the values on generation of the CSS code.

If an invalid value is encountered - e.g. a relative width ("50%") where only absolute values are allowed due to layout restrictions - I would like to return a comment INSIDE the style attribute to help debugging:

<div class="content" style="background-color: lightblue; /* WIDTH was invalid: Only absolute values allowed here */; border: 1px orange dotted;">

Is this "safe", i.e. will all major browsers still parse the settings before and after the comment properly? It is difficult to Google information about this.

Was it helpful?

Solution

It is probably safe but I wouldn't put the wrong values commented into the markup.

Let the user know they did something wrong in the very beginning before you generate markup.

A good idea would be to create such a test case and feed it to the W3C validator to see what it would say says about it.

http://validator.w3.org/

OTHER TIPS

From the top of my head, IE supports it, Fx doesn't.

Licensed under: CC-BY-SA with attribution
Not affiliated with StackOverflow
scroll top