In fact this is true, but these cases are a minority absolute, and in my views on the harm justifies a majority that few may need. And XHTML is the recommendation to run on any device, so has much more likely to be not working is a common HTML.
What are the devices that you refer to? What i know, flex apps can't runs on mobile devices like flash lite can, only on the browser or with AIR. Other solution would generate a property htmltext and a xhtmltext ... I will post this sugestions in bugs.adobe ... but this is not really, only sugestions. I will create new comp extended from richtexteditor to fix this problems but this will fix only my problem and not for comunity. Thanks --- In [email protected], Tom Chiverton <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > On Thursday 29 Nov 2007, danielvlopes wrote: > > I already do substitutions with regular expression to clean up the > > giant size of the text. Now i must do for transform the html to w3c > > valid html. But this is strange way to fix problem, why this comp > > don't generate really html we can use in HTML documents? > > It's real HTML as far as my web browser is concerned - the fact it doesn't > work too well in some situations isn't going to go away. Suppose you fix it > to generate XHTML markup with embeded CSS. Maybe someone else is going to > want that to work on a device that can't render CSS, or wants to over ride > the CSS. > > > There is a site to be able to make sugestions for the team flex to > > help improve? I think some improvements in that component would be > > simple enough to let it useful. > > http://bugs.adobe.com/flex > > > -- > Tom Chiverton > Helping to confidentially exploit extensible content > on: http://thefalken.livejournal.com > > **************************************************** > > Please note, as of 10th December 2007 the registered office address of Halliwells LLP will be at 3 Hardman Square, Spinningfields, Manchester, M3 3EB > > **************************************************** > > This email is sent for and on behalf of Halliwells LLP. > > Halliwells LLP is a limited liability partnership registered in England and Wales under registered number OC307980 whose registered office address is at St James's Court Brown Street Manchester M2 2JF. A list of members is available for inspection at the registered office. Any reference to a partner in relation to Halliwells LLP means a member of Halliwells LLP. Regulated by The Solicitors Regulation Authority. > > CONFIDENTIALITY > > This email is intended only for the use of the addressee named above and may be confidential or legally privileged. If you are not the addressee you must not read it and must not use any information contained in nor copy it nor inform any person other than Halliwells LLP or the addressee of its existence or contents. If you have received this email in error please delete it and notify Halliwells LLP IT Department on 0870 365 2500. > > For more information about Halliwells LLP visit www.halliwells.com. >

