From: Michael Walker <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > <div class="poem"> > <p class="verse"> > Standing by the roadside,<br /> > A tall dark man,<br /> > Wore a long brown coat,<br /> > Stood in the rain. > </p>
I've never been keen with using breaks. A more semantically correct answer is provided with XHTML 2.0 where a line element is defined so that awful breaks aren't required in things like poems. If they were used, then the poem would look like this: <p class="verse"> <l>Standing by the roadside,</l> <l>A tall dark man,</l> <l>Wore a long brown coat,</l> <l>Stood in the rain.</l> </p> Until such code is supported though, a modified form can be used <p class="verse"> <span class="l">Standing by the roadside,</span> <span class="l">A tall dark man,</span> <span class="l">Wore a long brown coat,</span> <span class="l">Stood in the rain.</span> </p> with a style of .l { display: block; } It's bulkier than just having breaks, but it gives warm fuzzies to the the semantic leprechaun within me. -- Paul Wilkins _______________________________________________ microformats-new mailing list microformats-new@microformats.org http://microformats.org/mailman/listinfo/microformats-new