HTML Guide
The <a>
element requires either a href
attribute, or a role
attribute.
Learn more:
Related W3C validator issues
An a element with an href attribute provides a link to a resource, so adding the link role to it is redundant.
When not using semantic HTML for its intended purpose, interactive features must be re-implemented. For example, when role="link" is added to an element, the tab key should enable giving focus to the link and the enter key should execute the link when focused.
A button element, or an element with the role=button attribute, is not allowed to be nested inside an <a> element.
The href attribute of an <a> element contains an invalid character, that should be properly encoded as a URI percent-encoded character.
The href attribute on an a tag expects a valid URL, but only http(s):// was found.
<a> tags can be used to link to an email address using the mailto protocol in the href attribute. Ensure that there is no space in the email address.
<a href="mailto: liza@example.com">This is wrong as it contains an space</a>
<a href="mailto:liza@example.com">This is OK</a>
The W3C HTML Validator issue you encountered indicates that the URL provided in the href attribute of an anchor (<a>) element is not formatted correctly.
How to Fix the Issue
- Check the Protocol: For a valid URL, make sure that after https: there are two slashes (//).
- Update the URL: Correct the URL format to include the missing slash.
Example of Incorrect HTML
Here is an example of the code that would trigger the validation error:
<a href="https:/example.comf">Example</a>
Corrected HTML
Here’s how the corrected code should look:
<a href="https://example.com">Example</a>
Summary
Make sure that all URLs within href attributes are correctly formatted with both slashes following the protocol (https:// or http://).
Hash (#) characters can be used in an href attribute to link to a specific part of a document.
For example, if we have this page with several sections, each of them marked with an ID:
<h1>Frequently Asked Questions</h1>
<h2 id="pricing">Pricing</h2>
<p>All about pricing...</p>
<h2 id="terms">Terms</h2>
<p>You can find our terms at...</p>
<h2 id="guarantee">Guarantee</h2>
<p>We offer a guarantee...</p>
You can link to a specific part of that document, for example if this page URL is /faqs and you want to link to the Guarantee section you could use:
<a href="/faqs#guarantee">Guarantee</a>
Or, if you’re linking from inside the same document, for example in a table of contents, you could just use:
<a href="#guarantee">Guarantee</a>
As there can only be one fragment in an URL, the # character should only be used once. The following would be an invalid href:
<a href="/faqs#guarantee#pricing">Bad</a>
If needed, the # could be encoded as %23.
Space characters are not allowed in href attributes. Instead, they should be converted to %20. In this example, the first line is invalid and the second is valid:
<a href="https://example.com#some term">invalid</a>
<a href="https://example.com#some%20term">valid</a>
The href attribute on an <a> tag contains an space, which is not allowed. Consider replacing space characters with “%20”.
An href attribute on an a element contains an invalid URL that has space characters in the domain.
The domain in a URL cannot contain space characters, for example the following are invalid:
<a href="http://my domain.com">link</a>
<a href="http://my%20domain.com">link</a>