Cristi Toth said the following On 4/19/2008 3:51 AM PT:
or @agent ie and (version:6) and (version:8)
This rule would never be true because it is asserting that the agent must match IE and the version must match both 6.* and 8.*

-- Blake Sullivan


On Sat, Apr 19, 2008 at 1:31 AM, Blake Sullivan <[EMAIL PROTECTED] <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]>> wrote:

    Glauco P. Gomes said the following On 4/18/2008 4:28 PM PT:
    I think that I'm not expressed correctly, what I wanted to say
    was not sequencial major versions.
    Eg.:
    @agent ie and (version: 6 and 8) {
       /* styles for all 6.*, and 8.* versions of the IE agent
    versions */
    }
    @agent ie and (version:6), ie and (version:8)

    -- Blake Sullivan



    Or this doesn't make sense?

    Glauco P. Gomes

    Matt Cooper escreveu:
    It does:

    @agent ie and (min-version:5) and (max-version:7) {
      /* styles for all 5.*, 6.*, and 7.* versions of the IE agent versions */
    }

    Regards,
    Matt

    On Fri, Apr 18, 2008 at 5:02 PM, Glauco P. Gomes
    <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
    +1 if this includes multiple major versions (5, 6, 7)



     Glauco P. Gomes

     Blake Sullivan escreveu:

    Glauco P. Gomes said the following On 4/18/2008 3:45 PM PT:

    I like this option, but what hapens if the user wants to match the
    version 5? (Only 5, not 5.5)
    @agent ie and (version:5.0)

    That will match version 5.0.* but that's probably what he wants

    -- Blake Sullivan


    Glauco P. Gomes

    Blake Sullivan escreveu:

    OK, how about

    option 5)  the version feature is a String that matches the native
    "major.minor.whatever" format of the browser's engine.  If the browser's
    engine uses non "." for separating versions, "." is used instead.
    For matches, the "*" character is allowed in any version section.
    For comparisons, the "*"  is always a valid match regardless of <, >,
    or =  comparison
    For comparisons where the comparison side contains fewer version
    sections than the actual browser version, the comparison side is padded with
    * version sections and the comparison occurs as above.
    For comparisons where the comparison side contains more version
    sections than the actual browser version, the browser version is padded with
    0 version sections and the comparison occurs as above.
    // user wants to match IE 5, actual browser version ie 5.5
    @agent ie and (version:5)

    matches because version:5 expands to version 5.* and 5.* matches 5.5

    @agent ie and (min-version:5)

    matches because version:5 expands to version 5.* and 5.*  < 5.5 = true

    @agent ie and (max-version:5)

    matches because version:5 expands to version 5.* and 5.* > 5.5 = true

    // actual browser version gecko 1.9
    @agent gecko and (min-version:1.9.2)

    does not match because the browser version 1.9 expands to 1.9.0 and
    1.9.2 is > than 1.9.0
    // actual browser version gecko 1.9
    @agent gecko and (min-version:1.9.*)

    matches because the browser version 1.9 expands to 1.9.0 and 1.9.* ==
    1.9.0
    -- Blake Sullivan





    Blake Sullivan said the following On 4/17/2008 12:31 PM PT:

    If we agree that we like the we like the media query syntax and that
    the only issue is how to handle less than (as opposed the <=) for the
    max-version, then we can just collect up the proposals and pick one:
    1) The verbose and explicit  (max-version-less-than:8).
    2) Define that for the version feature, max-version means < not <=.
    Inconsistent with other uses of max (max-version:8)
    3) Let the skinning author provide enough precision to avoid the
    need to distinguish between < 8 and <= a number that apporaches 8
    (max-version:7.99)
    4) Add an operator suffix (max-version-lt:8)

    1) is gross
    2) is potentially confusing due to inconsistency
    3) might not be immediately obvious and could theoretically have
    precision problems
    4) is not immediately obvious either but incredibly flexible

    I vote for 3) since it gets the job done and doesn't preclude doing
    more later.
    -- Blake Sullivan




    Andrew Robinson said the following On 4/17/2008 11:53 AM PT:

    http://www.w3.org/TR/REC-CSS2/media.html

    @import url("loudvoice.css") aural;

    so here are multiple groups of characters that show that spaces
    are
    acceptable (import url and aural keywords in one "bunch")

    url("loudvoice.css")
    shows that parenthesis with at least one argument is acceptable

    @media screen, print {
    Shown that a comma separated list, unlike normal CSS selectors
    applies
    to the whole @ (meaning that it wasn't "@meda screen, @media
    print")
    From css3 (http://www.w3.org/TR/css3-reader/):
    @import "my-print-style.css" print;
    here, a quoted string is permissible (goes with the url values in
    CSS rules)
    <?xml-stylesheet href="style1.css" type="text/css"
     media="screen and (color) and (max-width: 400px"?>
    <?xml-stylesheet href="style2.css" type="text/css"
     media="reader and (max-device-ratio: 1/1)"?>
    Hmmm.... interesting, but do we want to reuse something that
    relates
    to CSS but is not in a CSS file?

    @media reader and (grid: 0)
    Ah, now we are talking. This looks like what Blake was referring
    to
    From http://www.css3.info/preview/media-queries/:
    @media all and (min-width: 640px) {
    Even better, showing an "all" keyword and having "normal CSS
    properties" in parens.

    http://www.css3.info/preview/attribute-selectors/:
    Do we dare take RegExp like syntax from attr. selectors and apply
    them
    to @agent rules?


    So I can see Blake's suggestion being backed by these, but IMO
    "max-version-less-than:8" is too long to remember.

    Perhaps just:
    IE 5.5 or greater:
    @agent ie and (min-version: 5.5)

    IE 5.0 or greater:
    @agent ie and (min-version: 5)

    IE >= 5.0 and < 6.0:
    @agent ie and (version: 5)
    or (I like this one less):
    @agent ie and (major-version: 5)

    IE <= 6.0:
    @agent ie and (max-version: 6)

    IE < 6:
    @agent ie and (max-version: 5.9)

    IE >= 6.0 and < 8.0:
    @agent ie and (min-version: 6) and (max-version: 7.9)
    same as:
    @agent ie and (min-version: 6) and (max-version: 7)

    IE >= 6.0 and <= 8.0:
    @agent ie and (min-version: 6) and (max-version: 8.0)

    IE >= 6.0 and <= 8.x:
    @agent ie and (min-version: 6) and (max-version: 8)

    So x.y (ie 5.5) means precisely that, no vagueness and x (ie 6)
    means
    major version x regardless of minor version. If it is too hard to
    parse the decimal and remember it, "max-major-version",
    "min-major-version" and "major-version" could be used for integer
    only
    comparison with the major version and "max-version", "min-version"
    and
    "version" could be used for full major.minor comparison.

    I think using something like 7.9 or  7.99 could theoretically be
    used
    for less than but not equal to. I think the fewer number of
    keywords
    the clearer it will be to use. Just my opinion.

    Just adding some thoughts to chew on since concrete ideas were
    asked for.
    -Andrew


    On Thu, Apr 17, 2008 at 12:26 PM, Cristi Toth
    <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
    Hi guys,

    You're right, I should have discussed the format before
    committing it.
    I started fixing the issue using the format that was specified
    there...
    (there weren't to many comments on that issue btw...)
     During I was fixing it, I noticed that XSS suppported multiple
    versions,
    so I adapted what was suggested on the issue to support that
    too.
    Anyway, lets get this subject out in a new thread
    and stick here to discussing the format.

    Guys, those of you that suggested some general guidelines, they
    all sound
    good,
    but please try to think of some concrete format that comply with
    those
    guidelines.

    If we decide a final format and implement it until its get
    released, then no
    big harm done.
     So please be constructive ;)

    Thanks for any feedback!

    cheers,
    --

    Cristi Toth

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    www.codebeat.ro <http://www.codebeat.ro>







--
Cristi Toth

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www.codebeat.ro <http://www.codebeat.ro>

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