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But if there is a problem with these ephemeral and hard-to-define elements, standardistas should use their sense of order and clear markup to help integrate these elements - attempting to remove them is futile, if anything it'll just result in them being used or simulated badly.
So, what's so bad with separators "simulated" with CSS. Con: you won't have them with CSS off. Pro: cleaner code, more flexibility. (http://rimantas.com/bits/hr/nohr.html was a quick example I made in May 2005, when similar discussion is going on some of w3 mailing list). I doubt that anybody is arguing against the visual separator per se. The way it comes to life is another matter. Regards, Rimantas -- http://rimantas.com/ ******************************************************************* List Guidelines: http://webstandardsgroup.org/mail/guidelines.cfm Unsubscribe: http://webstandardsgroup.org/join/unsubscribe.cfm Help: [EMAIL PROTECTED] *******************************************************************
