Note that the 'locale' attribute is deprecated. What happens if you
remove it? I think that might be what's causing the 'lang' attribute to
be generated.
L.
Xavier Vanderstukken wrote:
In the top on my jsp page :
<html:html xhtml="true" locale="true">
The generated html page looks like that :
<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" lang="en" xml:lang="en">
--> 2lang attributes
and the w3c validation fails :
/Result:
Failed validation, 1 error
/
/
Error /Line 8 column 48/: there is no attribute "lang"./
/|<html xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml" lang=*"*fr-BE"
xml:lang="fr-BE">|/
/ You have used the attribute named above in your document, but the
document type you are using does not support that attribute for this
element. This error is often caused by incorrect use of the "Strict"
document type with a document that uses frames (e.g. you must use the
"Transitional" document type to get the "target" attribute), or by using
vendor proprietary extensions such as "marginheight" (this is usually
fixed by using CSS to achieve the desired effect instead). /
/ This error may also result if the element itself is not supported in
the document type you are using, as an undefined element will have no
supported attributes; in this case, see the element-undefined error
message for further information. /
/ How to fix: check the spelling and case of the element and attribute,
(Remember XHTML is all lower-case) and/or check that they are both
allowed in the chosen document type, and/or use CSS instead of this
attribute./
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