HTML5 Boilerplate homepage | Documentation table of contents
By default, HTML5 Boilerplate provides two html
pages:
index.html
- a default HTML skeleton that should form the
basis of all pages on your website404.html
- a placeholder 404 error pageindex.html
no-js
classThe no-js
class is provided in order to allow you to more easily and
explicitly add custom styles based on whether JavaScript is disabled
(.no-js
) or enabled (.js
). Using this technique also helps avoid the
FOUC.
Please consider specifying the language of your content by adding the lang
attribute to <html>
as in this example:
<html class="no-js" lang="en">
<title>
and <meta>
tagsThe order in which the <title>
and the <meta>
tags are specified is
important because:
1) the charset declaration (<meta charset="utf-8">
):
must be included completely within the first 1024 bytes of the document
should be specified as early as possible (before any content that could
be controlled by an attacker, such as a <title>
element) in order to
avoid a potential encoding-related security
issue in
Internet Explorer
2) the meta tag for compatibility mode
(<meta http-equiv="x-ua-compatible" content="ie=edge">
):
x-ua-compatible
Internet Explorer 8/9/10 support document compatibility modes that affect the way webpages are interpreted and displayed. Because of this, even if your site's visitor is using, let's say, Internet Explorer 9, it's possible that IE will not use the latest rendering engine, and instead, decide to render your page using the Internet Explorer 5.5 rendering engine.
Specifying the x-ua-compatible
meta tag:
<meta http-equiv="x-ua-compatible" content="ie=edge">
or sending the page with the following HTTP response header
X-UA-Compatible: IE=edge
will force Internet Explorer 8/9/10 to render the webpage in the highest available mode in the various cases when it may not, and therefore, ensure that anyone browsing your site is treated to the best possible user experience that browser can offer.
If possible, we recommend that you remove the meta
tag and send only the
HTTP response header as the meta
tag will not always work if your site is
served on a non-standard port, as Internet Explorer's preference option
Display intranet sites in Compatibility View
is checked by default.
If you are using Apache as your webserver, including the
.htaccess
file takes care of
the HTTP header. If you are using a different server, check out our other
server config.
Starting with Internet Explorer 11, document modes are deprecated. If your business still relies on older web apps and services that were designed for older versions of Internet Explorer, you might want to consider enabling Enterprise Mode throughout your company.
There are a few different options that you can use with the viewport
meta
tag. You can find out more in the
Apple developer docs.
HTML5 Boilerplate comes with a simple setup that strikes a good balance for general use cases.
<meta name="viewport" content="width=device-width, initial-scale=1">
The shortcut icons should be put in the root directory of your site. HTML5 Boilerplate comes with a default set of icons (include favicon and one Apple Touch Icon) that you can use as a baseline to create your own.
Please refer to the more detailed description in the Extend section of these docs.
HTML5 Boilerplate uses a custom build of Modernizr.
Modernizr is a JavaScript library which adds classes to
the html
element based on the results of feature test and which ensures that
all browsers can make use of HTML5 elements (as it includes the HTML5 Shiv).
This allows you to target parts of your CSS and JavaScript based on the
features supported by a browser.
In general, in order to keep page load times to a minimum, it's best to call any JavaScript at the end of the page because if a script is slow to load from an external server it may cause the whole page to hang. That said, the Modernizr script needs to run before the browser begins rendering the page, so that browsers lacking support for some of the new HTML5 elements are able to handle them properly. Therefore the Modernizr script is the only JavaScript file synchronously loaded at the top of the document.
If you need to include polyfills in your project, you must make sure those load before any other JavaScript. If you're using some polyfill CDN service, like cdn.polyfill.io, just put it before the other scripts in the bottom of the page:
<script src="https://cdn.polyfill.io/v1/polyfill.min.js"></script>
<script src="https://ajax.googleapis.com/ajax/libs/jquery/1.11.2/jquery.min.js"></script>
<script>window.jQuery || document.write('<script src="js/vendor/jquery-1.11.2.min.js"><\/script>')</script>
<script src="js/plugins.js"></script>
<script src="js/main.js"></script>
</body>
If you like to just include the polyfills yourself, you could include them in
js/plugins.js
. When you have a bunch of polyfills to load in, you could
also create a polyfills.js
file in the js/vendor
directory. Also using
this technique, make sure the polyfills are all loaded before any other
Javascript.
There are some misconceptions about Modernizr and polyfills. It's important to understand that Modernizr just handles feature checking, not polyfilling itself. The only thing Modernizr does regarding polyfills is that the team maintains a huge list of cross Browser polyfills.
The central part of the boilerplate template is pretty much empty. This is intentional, in order to make the boilerplate suitable for both web page and web app development.
The main content area of the boilerplate includes a prompt to install an up to date browser for users of IE 6/7. If you intended to support IE 6/7, then you should remove the snippet of code.
The jQuery CDN version of the jQuery JavaScript library is referenced towards the bottom of the page. A local fallback of jQuery is included for rare instances when the CDN version might not be available, and to facilitate offline development.
The jQuery CDN version was chosen over other potential candidates (like Google's Hosted Libraries) because it's fast (comparable or faster than Google by some measures) and, (unlike Google's CDN) is available to China's hundreds of millions of internet users. For many years we chose the Google Hosted version over the jQuery CDN because it was available over HTTPS (the jQuery CDN was not,) and it offered a better chance of hitting the cache lottery owing to the popularity of the Google CDN. The first issue is no longer valid and the second is far outweighed by being able to serve jQuery to Chinese users.
While the jQuery CDN is a strong default solution your site or application may require a different configuration. Testing your site with services like WebPageTest and browser tools like PageSpeed Insights or YSlow will help you examine the real world performance of your site and can show where you can optimize your specific site or application.
Finally, an optimized version of the Google Universal Analytics tracking code is included. Google recommends that this script be placed at the top of the page. Factors to consider: if you place this script at the top of the page, you’ll be able to count users who don’t fully load the page, and you’ll incur the max number of simultaneous connections of the browser.
Further information:
N.B. The Google Universal Analytics snippet is included by default mainly because Google Analytics is currently one of the most popular tracking solutions out there. However, its usage isn't set in stone, and you SHOULD consider exploring the alternatives and use whatever suits your needs best!