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html - Why is an input tag not allowed directly within a form tag?

I just read the following at http://w3fools.com/#html_forms:

Non-block-level elements (such as <input>) are not valid directly inside <form> tags until HTML5.

I had never heard of anything along these lines, and every basic HTML tutorial I've seen seems to be just fine with putting input tags directly inside a form tag. So my question has three parts:

  • Is the above statement legitimate?
  • Why is this the case? (Was it simply an oversight, or were the creators of the HTML spec trying to prevent specific problems by creating this rule?)
  • What is the recommended way to construct a form with inputs? (Are we just supposed to create a div or a table directly inside the form tag?)
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It's standards pedantics.

  • The statement is legitimate as far as the standard goes: in HTML 4.01, the definition for <form> specifies that it may only contain block elements or <script>. As far as what every browser in the world allows, it's fine.
  • I can only guess that they consider <form> to not be a layout tag at all, and they want all inline elements to be contained inside a block element.
  • Yes, you're supposed to place a <div>, <table>, <p>, or some other block presentational element inside the <form>.

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