Sorry, I've been away for a while and lost track of this, thanks to
everyone for your comments. I think what you have said is right in
that perhaps the intro text doesn't really have any semantic value, so
there doesn't need to be any tag to match it.
Thanks again for all your replies.
On
OK, thanks for your help, I just thought there may be some kind of
HTML tag that adds seperate semantic value to the introductory
paragraph, to differentiate it from the strong text in the body, like
the big tag for example.
I will probably use the strong tag then.
Cheers
Paul
On 25/05/07,
Stay away from Strong. Strong is presentational, same as B, and I.
Presentation
should be in HTML and content in HTML.
use span class=important for text that needs to be emphasised.
On 5/26/07, Paul Collins [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
OK, thanks for your help, I just thought there may be some
TYPO ALERT!
Presentation should be in CSS and Content in HTML.
God knows what made me type HTML twice.
On 5/26/07, Jamie Collins [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Stay away from Strong. Strong is presentational, same as B, and I.
Presentation
should be in HTML and content in HTML.
use span
Stay away from Strong. Strong is presentational, same as B, and I.
Presentation
should be in HTML and content in HTML.
use span class=important for text that needs to be emphasised.
I would argue to the contrary. Strong has much more meaning than a span
class. The word /tag itself implies
Jamie Collins wrote:
Stay away from Strong. Strong is presentational, same as B, and I.
Aeh...excuse me? Since when?
Presentation
should be in CSS and content in HTML.
use span class=important for text that needs to be emphasised.
Sorry, but that's rubbish. If text *needs to be
Patrick,
It all depends on the person using it. I have seen alot of people use strong
to bold general peices of text. There is
a big difference in making text bold and empasising its meaning.
If the use for stong is a valid use, then i wont disagree. I must have
read the first post wrong, i
Stay away from Strong. Strong is presentational, same as B, and I.
Presentation
should be in HTML and content in HTML.
use span class=important for text that needs to be emphasised.
I would argue to the contrary. Strong has much more meaning than a
span class. The word /tag itself implies
At 5/26/2007 05:59 AM, Paul Collins wrote:
OK, thanks for your help, I just thought there may be some kind of
HTML tag that adds seperate semantic value to the introductory
paragraph, to differentiate it from the strong text in the body, like
the big tag for example.
I will probably use the
Paul Novitski wrote:
I think the problem with using strong to demarcate your introduction
isn't that strong is presentational (it's not) but rather that it does
nothing to express what's different semantically about an introduction.
You may wish to present the introductory paragraph in a
On 26 May 2007, at 18:04:38, Designer wrote:
Presumably, p title=introduction and p id=introduction
would do the trick also?
Using the title attribute means pointing-device-users would get a
tooltip saying introduction obscuring the text if they happened to
have the cursor hovering over
levels as low as 4x, given that magnifier users also tend to use 800x600
resolution.
Steve
-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On
Behalf Of Nick Fitzsimons
Sent: 26 May 2007 18:53
To: wsg@webstandardsgroup.org
Subject: Re: [WSG] semantic HTML for intro
] semantic HTML for intro text
On 26 May 2007, at 18:04:38, Designer wrote:
Presumably, p title=introduction and p id=introduction would
do the trick also?
Using the title attribute means pointing-device-users would get a tooltip
saying introduction obscuring the text if they happened to have
At 5/26/2007 10:04 AM, Designer wrote:
Presumably, p title=introduction and p id=introduction
would do the trick also? My own preference would be for the latter.
Of course, if you are referring to a GROUP of paragraphs
constituting the introduction, then Paul's class would have to be used.
On 25 May 2007, at 18:03:06, Paul Collins wrote:
Hi all,
Just marking up a page, the layout seems to require various tags, as
far as I can gather, I need seperate tags for:
- The intro heading (a H2)
- The orange intro text (not sure what tag to add here)
- a smaller, bold heading, same size
Hi,
If the choice of the colour orange is to add emphasis to this text, the
answer to this part is really a no brainer - code it with emphasis (the
actual colour/styling is down to the CSS). I would use strong markup for
this.
On Fri, May 25, 2007 7:56 pm, Nick Fitzsimons wrote:
On 25 May
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