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HTML vs TEXTILE

HTML vs TEXTILE

A detailed comparison of HTML Document and Textile Markup — file size, quality, compatibility, and which format to choose for your workflow.

HTML

HTML Document

Documents & Text

HTML is the standard markup language for web pages. As a conversion target or source, it carries text content with structural and formatting information that can be extracted or repurposed.

About HTML files
TEXTILE

Textile Markup

Documents & Text

Textile is a lightweight markup language that generates HTML from a human-readable syntax. It was popularized by the Textpattern CMS and the Redmine project management tool, offering a cleaner writing experience than raw HTML.

About TEXTILE files

Strengths Comparison

HTML Strengths

  • Universal — every browser, OS, email client, and document reader displays HTML.
  • Plain text, human-readable, grep-able, and diffable in git.
  • Flexible — pages render even with broken or partial markup (error-tolerant parser).
  • Carries structure, styling (CSS), and behavior (JavaScript) in one file.
  • Accessibility-friendly when written with semantic tags and ARIA attributes.

TEXTILE Strengths

  • More expressive than Markdown in classical usage (tables, footnotes, classes).
  • Mature implementation in RedCloth (Ruby), php-textile, js-textile.
  • Core format of Redmine — millions of daily users.
  • Clean human-readable syntax.

Limitations

HTML Limitations

  • Error tolerance allows sloppy markup to hide real bugs.
  • Rendering depends on browser engine — pixel-perfect cross-browser output is an art form.
  • Security-sensitive — unsafe HTML can execute scripts or leak data (XSS vulnerabilities).
  • File size for equivalent structured data is larger than JSON or XML due to tag verbosity.
  • No built-in typing or schema — contract between server and client is informal.

TEXTILE Limitations

  • Market share decimated by Markdown since the mid-2000s.
  • Not as widely supported outside the Ruby/Rails ecosystem.
  • No CommonMark-style spec — implementations differ on edge cases.
  • Rarely added to new projects in 2026.

Technical Specifications

Specification HTML TEXTILE
MIME type text/html text/x-textile
Extensions .html, .htm .textile
Standard HTML Living Standard (WHATWG)
Character encoding UTF-8 (recommended)
Element count ~110 in current spec
Implementations RedCloth (Ruby), php-textile, js-textile
Primary users Redmine, Textpattern, early Rails
Encoding UTF-8

Typical File Sizes

HTML

  • Hello-world page < 1 KB
  • Blog post (rendered HTML) 5-40 KB
  • Modern SPA (initial HTML shell) 50-200 KB
  • Full archived web page (with inline assets) 500 KB - 10 MB

TEXTILE

  • Blog post 3-30 KB
  • Redmine wiki page 5-50 KB

Ready to convert?

Convert between HTML and TEXTILE online, free, and without installing anything. Encrypted upload, automatic deletion after 2 hours.

Frequently Asked Questions

HTML (HyperText Markup Language) is the core language of the web, created by Tim Berners-Lee in 1993. An HTML file is plain text describing structure (headings, paragraphs, links, images), optionally with styling (CSS) and interactivity (JavaScript). Every web page you visit is rendered from HTML.

HTML files open in every web browser by double-clicking. To edit, use any text editor (Notepad, VS Code, Sublime Text) or a visual editor (Dreamweaver, Pinegrow). Mobile browsers also render HTML files from local storage.

Use KaijuConverter's HTML-to-PDF converter, or print the page from your browser and choose "Save as PDF". For pixel-perfect conversion with page breaks, dedicated tools like wkhtmltopdf or Puppeteer give more control.

Markdown for authoring — it's faster to write, version-control-friendly, and renders to HTML via static-site generators. HTML for delivery and complex layouts where you need full control over styling, forms, and interactivity. Most modern blogs write in Markdown and publish as HTML.

Browsers implement CSS and JavaScript slightly differently, especially for cutting-edge features. Use a CSS reset, test in Chrome/Firefox/Safari, and tools like caniuse.com to check browser support. Modern frameworks (Tailwind, Bootstrap) normalize most cross-browser quirks automatically.

HTML itself is safe, but embedded JavaScript can perform malicious actions (redirects, form hijacking, cryptomining). Only open HTML attachments from trusted sources. Modern browsers sandbox local HTML files to limit their access to your system.