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.htm Or .html Extension - Which One Is Correct And What Is Different?

When I save a file with an .htm or .html extension, which one is correct and what is different?

Solution 1:

Neither is wrong, it's a matter of preference. Traditionally, MS software uses htm by default, and *nix prefers html.

As oded pointed out below, the .htm tradition was carried over from win 3.xx, where file extensions were limited to three characters.

Solution 2:

Mainly, the number of characters is different.

".htm" smells of Microsoft operating systems where the file system historically limited file name extensions (the part of the file name after the dot) to 3 characters.

".html" smells of Un*x operating systems that did not have this limitation and that were used for all the serious internet work at the time.

Pragmatically, the two are equivalent.

The difference is cultural. ".html" is regarded by some as more correct. The same people tend to look down at Microsoft operating systems and regard ".htm" as unsightly reminder of their limitations.

Solution 3:

When you save the file locally, the difference doesn't matter - your local system will likely treat the two file extensions as interchangeable for loading by your browser. The reason for it is that historically Windows-based systems used 3 letter extensions (htm) and Unix-based systems the 4 letters (html).

On a server-side, there may be some differences when it comes to serving default filenames:

The one situation in which there may be a difference between the two extensions is that of a server's default filenames. When a URL that does not specify a filename is requested from a server, such as http://www.domain.dom/dirname/, the server returns a file from the requested URL that matches a default filename. Examples of common default filenames include "index.html," "index.htm," "default.html," "default.htm," etc. However, an administrator can make the server's default filename anything he/she so desires.

Note that servers are often configured with more then one default filename.

So if you have any level of control over your server's default filenames, then this shouldn't be an issue.

Solution 4:

Personally I prefer the .html but as other have said both will work.

Just make sure you only use one. Never both on the same site! link to mypage.html is not the same as link to mypage.htm

Solution 5:

Also notice that as part of a URI, the file extension doesn't play any role. In fact, it isn't even a file extension, it just looks like one. The type of the resource identified by a URI is not encoded in its name. Instead, it is decided by the Content-Type HTTP header field. It's completely legitimate (but perhaps a bit stupid) to deliver a bitmap picture as myimage.html and conversely, to deliver an HTML page as index.png. This is also the reason why it is argued that file extensions shouldn't be part of URIs at all.

Sir Tim Berners-Lee elaborates on this in Hypertext Style: Cool URIs Don't Change.

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