Matthew Raymond wrote:
The role attribute currently describes behavior, and is added so that
users with disabilities know what the behavior for a given element is,
according to well-known semantics. CSS is supposed to be for
presentational. In your scenarior, will there be any way to easily
On Wed, 16 Aug 2006 05:33:26 +0200, mozer [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
A lot of work as already been done by the W3C XSL WG on calendar (and
even negative year in needed)
http://www.w3.org/TR/xslt20/#lang-cal-country
On 8/15/06, Ian Hickson [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Mon, 10 Apr 2006,
James Graham wrote:
Matthew Raymond wrote:
The role attribute currently describes behavior, and is added so that
users with disabilities know what the behavior for a given element is,
according to well-known semantics. CSS is supposed to be for
presentational. In your scenarior, will
On Aug 16, 2006, at 06:33, mozer wrote:
A lot of work as already been done by the W3C XSL WG on calendar
(and even negative year in needed)
http://www.w3.org/TR/xslt20/#lang-cal-country
The first sentence reads:
The set of languages, calendars, and countries that are supported in
the
On Aug 16, 2006, at 13:17, Charles McCathieNevile wrote:
I disagree. There are a lot of use cases for simple forms dealing
with dates before 0001-01-01 even if we just use the proleptic
Gregorian calendar.
Could you elaborate on the use cases? Are there a lot of use cases on
the Web now