On Wed, 15 Oct 2008 21:45:18 -0400
Came this utterance fomulated by Twayne to my mailbox:

> > On Tue, 14 Oct 2008 19:09:50 -0400
> > Came this utterance fomulated by Twayne to my mailbox:
> >
> >> Hi,
> >>
> >> I can't seem to find an answer in the CSS manuals/tuts/google etc.;
> >> thuoght I'd try here.  No big dea either; more a curiousity issue
> >> than anything else.
> >>
> >> Other than readability and "best practices" possibly, is it
> >actually> necessary to end an Hn section?  In quickly throwing
> >together a form> just now I accidentally left out all but the last
> >closing H header> size. And everything worked perfectly well.  In
> >other words:> <H1> Title
> >> <H2> Sub Title
> >> <H4> text, text, text,form, text, text
> >> <H6> copyright text, symbol, owner clarifications, etc.
> >> </H6>
> >>
> >
> > Nothing to do with CSS and freckle all to do with OO.o. But i'm a
> > sucker so i'll bite.
> >
> > This is quite legal HTML but not XHTML. It is a bad practise that
> > was not discouraged in the early days where every byte slowed down
> > the network and took a relevant spot on your disk drive. It is
> > discouraged now as it requires knowledge to follow which elements
> > are block level(and consequently self close when another block
> > element opens) and which are not.
> >
> > Do you know if a <p> element closes when you start a <cite> or a
> > <blockquote> element?
> >
> > In other words - for future proof code close all elements with the
> > appropriate tag. It is a safer writing style and allows you to
> > convert from HTML to XHTML with minimum fuss. Similarly for future
> > use avoid capitals in elements, they are not legal in XHTML.
> >
> > http://www.w3schools.com/html/html_primary.asp
> >
> > This example from w3schools shows what you are talking about. My
> > main beef here is they confuse the word tag with element. They also
> > do not always conform to the standards with their examples.
> 
> Hmm, thanks, that puts it in a context that feels better to me.  I've 
> managed to get away from the caps OK; just used them for emphais more
> or less in my post, but don't use caps in real life.  I've noticed
> they aren't used in XHTML and so made the switch anyway.  Now if I
> could just remember to reliably put all the "/" s and "\"s  where they
> belong! <g>
> 
> I probably should have indicated this was OT but ... CSS kinda did
> that for me anyway.  Interestingl enough I can't locate a CSS group;
> that sort of surprised me. Lots of Google hits & half-fast info, but
> ... not even the tuts are accurate, it seems.

After posting i found this additional tut which is much better.
http://www.html.net/tutorials/html/lesson3.asp

For CSS (as well as most things computer based) i like to have a tree
reference first, then when i understand that i will use internet
tutorials. My tree:
http://www.sitepoint.com/books/css2/

A great CSS help list is CSS-d (about 10 - 20 emails per day avg). Be
warned you must stay on topic or you will be pinged hard. There are Uni
professor type CSS experts there that can answer or wrangle out any
question. On topic is practical issues with online examples only. Good
resource wiki too:
http://www.css-discuss.org/
http://www.css-discuss.org/policies.html
Wiki:
http://css-discuss.incutio.com/
Subscribe here:
http://www.css-discuss.org/mailman/listinfo/css-d/

*** QUOTE (policies) ***
My philosophy is that there are two kinds of questions:
good questions and unasked questions. I much prefer the former. It
doesn't matter how "dumb" you think the question might be, because I
guarantee you that at least five other subscribers are wondering the
same thing, and will learn from the answer.
***

-- 
Michael

All shall be well, and all shall be well, and all manner of things shall
be well

 - Julian of Norwich 1342 - 1416

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