422
votes

I wonder what is the difference between the following two code snippets:

<label>Input here : </label>
<input type='text' name='theinput' id='theinput'/>

and

<label for='theinput'>Input here : </label>
<input type='text' name='theinput' id='theinput'/>

I'm sure it does something when you use a special JavaScript library, but apart from that, does it validate the HTML or required for some other reason?

7

7 Answers

651
votes

The <label> tag allows you to click on the label, and it will be treated like clicking on the associated input element. There are two ways to create this association:

One way is to wrap the label element around the input element:

<label>Input here:
    <input type='text' name='theinput' id='theinput'>
</label>

The other way is to use the for attribute, giving it the ID of the associated input:

<label for="theinput">Input here:</label>
<input type='text' name='whatever' id='theinput'>

This is especially useful for use with checkboxes and buttons, since it means you can check the box by clicking on the associated text instead of having to hit the box itself.

Read more about this element in MDN.

58
votes

The for attribute associates the label with a control element, as defined in the description of label in the HTML 4.01 spec. This implies, among other things, that when the label element receives focus (e.g. by being clicked on), it passes the focus on to its associated control. The association between a label and a control may also be used by speech-based user agents, which may give the user a way to ask what the associated label is, when dealing with a control. (The association may not be as obvious as in visual rendering.)

In the first example in the question (without the for), the use of label markup has no logical or functional implication – it’s useless, unless you do something with it in CSS or JavaScript.

HTML specifications do not make it mandatory to associate labels with controls, but Web Content Accessibility Guidelines (WCAG) 2.0 do. This is described in the technical document H44: Using label elements to associate text labels with form controls, which also explains that the implicit association (by nesting e.g. input inside label) is not as widely supported as the explicit association via for and id attributes,

14
votes

In a nutshell what it does is refer to the id of the input, that's all:

<label for="the-id-of-the-input">Input here:</label>
<input type="text" name="the-name-of-input" id="the-id-of-the-input">
3
votes

The for attribute of the <label> tag should be equal to the id attribute of the related element to bind them together.

0
votes

The for attribute shows that this label stands for related input field, or check box or radio button or any other data entering field associated with it. for example

<li>
    <label>{translate:blindcopy}</label>
    <a class="" href="#" title="{translate:savetemplate}" onclick="" ><i class="fa fa-list" class="button" ></i></a> &nbsp 
            <input type="text" id="BlindCopy" name="BlindCopy" class="splitblindcopy" />

</li>
0
votes

Using label for= in html form

This could permit to visualy dissociate label(s) and object while keeping them linked.

Sample: there is a checkbox and two labels. You could check/uncheck the box by clicking indifferently on any label or on box, but not on text nor on input content...

<label for="demo1"> There is a label </label>
<br />
Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetuer adipiscing elit. Duis sem velit, ultrices et, fermentum auctor, rhoncus ut, ligula. Phasellus at purus sed purus cursus iaculis. Suspendisse fermentum. Pellentesque et arcu. Maecenas viverra. In consectetuer, lorem eu lobortis egestas, velit odio imperdiet eros, sit amet sagittis nunc mi ac neque. Sed non ipsum. Nullam venenatis gravida orci.
<br />
<label for="demo1"> There is a 2nd label </label>
<input id="demo1" type="checkbox">Demo 1</input>

Some useful tricks

By use stylesheet CSS power, you could do a lot of interresting things...

#demo2:checked ~ .but2:before { content: 'Des'; }
#demo2:checked ~ .box2:before { content: '☒'; }
.but2:before { content: 'S'; }
.box2:before { content: '☐'; }
#demo1:checked ~ .but1:before { content: 'Des'; }
#demo1:checked ~ .box1:before { content: '☒'; }
.but1:before { content: 'S'; }
.box1:before { content: '☐'; }
<input id="demo1" type="checkbox">Demo 1</input>
<input id="demo2" type="checkbox">Demo 2</input>
<br />
<label for="demo1" class="but1">elect 2</label> - 
<label for="demo2" class="but2">elect 1</label>
<br />
Lorem ipsum dolor sit amet, consectetuer adipiscing elit. Duis sem velit, ultrices et, fermentum auctor, rhoncus ut, ligula. Phasellus at purus sed purus cursus iaculis. Suspendisse fermentum. Pellentesque et arcu. Maecenas viverra. In consectetuer, lorem eu lobortis egestas, velit odio imperdiet eros, sit amet sagittis nunc mi ac neque. Sed non ipsum. Nullam venenatis gravida orci.
<br />
<label for="demo1" class="but1">elect this 2nd label </label> - 
<label class="but2" for="demo2">elect this another 2nd label </label>
<br />
<label for="demo1" class="box1"> check 1</label>
<label for="demo2" class="box2"> check 2</label> 
-1
votes

It labels whatever input is the parameter for the for attribute.

<input id='myInput' type='radio'>
<label for='myInput'>My 1st Radio Label</label>
<br>
<input id='input2' type='radio'>
<label for='input2'>My 2nd Radio Label</label>
<br>
<input id='input3' type='radio'>
<label for='input3'>My 3rd Radio Label</label>