Label Element
Syntax#
<label>Example <input type="radio" name="r"></label>
// Wrapping a control Element<label for="rad1">Example</label> <input id="rad1" type="radio" name="r">
// Usingfor
attribute
Parameters#
Attributes | Description |
---|---|
for | Reference to the target ID Element. I.e: for="surname" |
form | HTML5, [Obsolete] Reference to the form containing the Target Element. Label elements are expected within a <form> Element. If the form="someFormId" is provided this allows you to place the Label anywhere in the document. |
## Basic Use | |
Simple form with labels… |
<form action="/login" method="POST">
<label for="username">Username:</label>
<input id="username" type="text" name="username" />
<label for="pass">Password:</label>
<input id="pass" type="password" name="pass" />
<input type="submit" name="submit" />
</form>
<form id="my-form" action="/login" method="POST">
<input id="username" type="text" name="username" />
<label for="pass">Password:</label>
<input id="pass" type="password" name="pass" />
<input type="submit" name="submit" />
</form>
<label for="username" form="my-form">Username:</label>
About Label
The <label>
element is used to reference a form action element.
In the scope of User Interface it’s used to ease the target / selection of elements like Type radio
or checkbox
.
<label>
as wrapper
It can enclose the desired action element
<label>
<input type="checkbox" name="Cats">
I like Cats!
</label>
(Clicking on the text the target input
will toggle it’s state / value)
<label>
as reference
Using the for
attribute you don’t have to place the control element as descendant of label
- but the for
value must match it’s ID
<input id="cats" type="checkbox" name="Cats">
<label for="cats" >I like Cats!</label>
Note
Don’t use more than one Control Element within a <label>
element