I've been out of the HTML loop for a while, but I'm getting up to speed again. Forgive 
me if this is silly or out-of-line.

I've noticed that the HTML in Nukes is out of date compared to the latest W3C 
standards. Current trends seem to indicate that XHTML is the new standard for HTML and 
CSS 2.1 is the current standard for style. Most browsers are still getting up to speed 
on XHTML but will not blow up on the XHTML 1.0 Transitional DOCTYPE tag. It appears to 
be foolish to rely on CSS greater than 1.0 for good cross-browser compatibility, 
however. The problem I see is with tags like <center><strong><font class="something"> 
There is obviously some CSS use here, but what I've been reading lately about XHTML 
and CSS has impressed upon me the value of keeping only content in the HTML code and 
relying on CSS for style and layout. Current CSS evangelists would frown on the use of 
"center", "strong", and "font" tags in HTML.

I would like to see this type of detail delegated to themes. This would allow 
table-less CSS themes, old HTML 3.2 themes, WAP themes (perhaps), etc. Design control 
and browser interaction can be assigned to designers and be a bit more separated from 
J2EE developers.

What's the process for getting Nukes more up to date? Should we submit patches to the 
forums?

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http://www.jboss.org/index.html?module=bb&op=viewtopic&p=3840314#3840314

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