Thank you!
On 7-Nov-07, at 3:08 AM, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
From: Francois Lafortune <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
I will do my studies! But my emotional beef is more about seeing divs
pop-up like it's a division party, and that sorta gets me roughed
up...
The divs and spans that you're worried about aren't mandetory,
they're just there to help describe the block and inline nature of
what you can code up.
Rather than use examples marked up with heading and paragraph
elements, the examples use the neutral div and span elements in
order to not cast assumptions on how you wish to markup your code.
For those playing at home, here's what the FAQ has to say about it.
http://microformats.org/wiki/
faq#Q._Why_do_the_examples_on_the_wiki_use_.3Cspan.3E_and_.3Cdiv.
3E_for_nearly_everything.3F
Q. Why do the examples on the wiki use <span> and <div> for nearly
everything?
A. <span> and <div> are generic elements in HTML. When you use
microformats, you should pick the most specific semantic element
available for the semantics you are trying to express. You might,
for example, apply class="vevent" to a <tr>, or class="vcard" to a
<p>.
--
Paul Wilkins
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-- The QuickRedFox loops over the lazy eval --
Francois Lafortune ( [EMAIL PROTECTED] )
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