Is there a limit to the length of HTML attributes?
How long is too long for an attribute value in HTML?
I'm using HTML5 style data attributes (data-foo="bar"
) in a new application, and in one place it would be really handy to store a fair whack of data (upwards of 100 characters). While I suspect that this amount is fine, it raises the question of how much is too much?
HTML 4
From an HTML 4 perspective, attributes are an SGML construct. Their limits are defined in the SGML Declaration of HTML 4:
QUANTITY SGMLREF ATTCNT 60 -- increased -- ATTSPLEN 65536 -- These are the largest values -- LITLEN 65536 -- permitted in the declaration -- NAMELEN 65536 -- Avoid fixed limits in actual -- PILEN 65536 -- implementations of HTML UA's -- TAGLVL 100 TAGLEN 65536 GRPGTCNT 150 GRPCNT 64
The value in question here is "ATTSPLEN" which would be the limit on an element's attribute specification list (which should be the total size of all attributes for that element). The note above mentions that fixed limits should be avoided, however, so it's likely that there is no real limit other than available memory in most implementations.
HTML 5
It would seem that HTML 5 has no limits on the length of attribute values.
As the spec says, "This version of HTML thus returns to a non-SGML basis."
Later on, when describing how to parse HTML 5, the following passage appears (emphasis added):
The algorithm described below places no limit on the depth of the DOM tree generated, or on the length of tag names, attribute names, attribute values, text nodes, etc. While implementors are encouraged to avoid arbitrary limits, it is recognized that practical concerns will likely force user agents to impose nesting depth constraints.
Therefore, (theoretically) there is no limit to the length/size of HTML 5 attributes.
I've just written a test (Note! see update below) which puts a string of length 10 million into an attribute and then retrieves it again, and it works fine (Firefox 3.5.2 & Internet Explorer 7)
50 million makes the browser hang with the "This script is taking a long time to complete" message.
Update: I've fixed the script: it previously set the innerHTML to a long string and now it's setting a data attribute. https://output.jsbin.com/wikulamuni It works for me with length 100 million. YMMV.
el.setAttribute('data-test', <<a really long string>>)
I really don't think there is any limit. I know now you can do
<a onclick=" //...insert 100KB of javascript code here">
and it works fine. Albeit a little unreadable.
From HTML5 syntax doc
9.1.2.3 Attributes
Attributes for an element are expressed inside the element's start tag.
Attributes have a name and a value. Attribute names must consist of one or more characters other than the space characters, U+0000 NULL, U+0022 QUOTATION MARK ("), U+0027 APOSTROPHE ('), U+003E GREATER-THAN SIGN (>), U+002F SOLIDUS (/), and U+003D EQUALS SIGN (=) characters, the control characters, and any characters that are not defined by Unicode. In the HTML syntax, attribute names may be written with any mix of lower- and uppercase letters that are an ASCII case-insensitive match for the attribute's name.
Attribute values are a mixture of text and character references, except with the additional restriction that the text cannot contain an ambiguous ampersand.
Attributes can be specified in four different ways:
Empty attribute syntax
Unquoted attribute value syntax
Single-quoted attribute value syntax
Double-quoted attribute value syntax
Here there hasn't mentioned a limit on the size of the attribute value. So I think there should be none.
You can also validate your document against the
HTML5 Validator(Highly Experimental)