For most practical purposes, it is best to read “replaced” as “embedding”. So “non-replaced element” is just an element that is rendered as such, instead of causing some external content to appear in its place.
The expression “non-replaced inline element” has no definition of its own: it simply refers to any element that is both a non?replaced element and an inline element. Such as <a>
. Most elements in HTML are non-replaced. A non-replaced element is simply an element that is not a replaced element.
However, in CSS specifications, there are just general characterizations the concept “replaced element”, not any definitive list of such elements. This is understandable, since HTML evolves rather independently of CSS.
The concept has somewhat changed over time. The CSS 1 spec said: “In HTML, IMG, INPUT, TEXTAREA, SELECT, and OBJECT elements can be examples of replaced elements.” In newer specs, form fields are not included any more. This is reflected in the HTML5 draft, where the Rendering section explicitly lists form controls under Non-replaced elements. The only replaced elements, according to it, are those that embed external content, such as an image, video, applet, or HTML5 canvas into an HTML document – except that the revamped menu
element is mentioned too (it is expected to be implement in a manner that echoes browser controls, so it sort-of embeds external content too).
This change reflects browser development. Early browsers implemented form fields using system routines in a manner that was immune to anything in CSS, and there are still some remains of such approaches, but nowadays form fields can mostly be formatted with CSS, so they have effectively changed from replaced to non-replaced elements.
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