In message [EMAIL PROTECTED], Guillaume Lebleu
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes
Andy Mabbett wrote:
My preference would be to use the previously-described
[[title-trigger]] solution:
span class=hmoney title-trigger title=USD 0.1
10 cents
/span
In the latter, the rule for
In message [EMAIL PROTECTED], Manu Sporny
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes
There only seems to be one issue with the current proposal:
http://microformats.org/wiki/currency-issues#Problem
That's the issue of
10 cents
having no whole-currency identifier. Some of the solutions there,
including
Andy Mabbett wrote:
My preference would be to use the previously-described
[[title-trigger]] solution:
span class=hmoney title-trigger title=USD 0.1
10 cents
/span
In the latter, the rule for the title is that it MUST contain only an
ISO 4217 currency code and a
Andy Mabbett wrote:
Can you provide examples of people publishing such a legend, alongside
prices and other such monetary amounts?
See http://investor.google.com/fin_data.html - top legend. These are
very common in tabular reporting.
Of the two models, which do you think would be easier, for
In message [EMAIL PROTECTED], Guillaume Lebleu
[EMAIL PROTECTED] writes
Another solution, conceptually, would be to use the ideas used in
XBRL, and markup on a separate page/footnote/legend the definition 1
cent is 1/100th of a US dollar, and then refer to that definition
using the include
Andy Mabbett wrote:
I don't see anything like 1 cent is 1/100th of a US dollar on that page.
Indeed, in this case, the unit defined is $ in thousands, but I
believe this is a similar enough case. One way to mark this up would be to:
* Define a unit called, say KUSD. For instance span