I may be wrong but I never saw tabbed data on a website.
I always thought you need some kind of <span> or <div> or at least a table 
for this.
But who knows: a less tech-savvy user would use tabs.

I would go with commas, too.

Greetings, Martin

Am Sonntag, 16. Februar 2014 20:01:18 UTC+1 schrieb Dan:
>
> Hi all, another quick question...
>
> BoltWire already converts tabs (when cutting and pasting from another 
> document) into 5 spaces/tab.
>
> Yet you can't enter tabs directly, because the browser just shifts you out 
> of the edit box and to the submit button (or whatever is next in line). If 
> you want to manually create your own tabs (say an outline) you have to add 
> a lot of spacing.  I'm thinking about using one of the following and 
> soliciting feedback:
>
> ===word (three tabs)
> ---word
> ,,,word
> +++word
>
> I like the first but it conflicts with bullets a bit and many wikis use = 
> for headers (rather than !) The second option is good but it might conflict 
> with natural input from a user. The commas look a little clunky but might 
> be best. The +'s require a shift to enter, but it almost looks like a t for 
> tab. 
>
> Any thoughts? Is this even a feature people would use?
>
> Cheers,
> Dan
>
>
>

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