Hello List.

Allow me to summarize this thread so far, as I see it:

1. There is no guide that gives recommendations on how a Hebrew page should look like. At least not a well-known one.
2. We don't seem to agree among ourselves how that should be done. (And some of us are supposed to know something about computers and web)


Now, let's assume that I'm well-meaning person, who knows HTML so-so, and I want to write a page in Hebrew. What I'll probably do, is copy from some other page I saw, and test it against the browser I have. Which may not be the browser that we like (whatever it is).

So we're back on topic again. How can we expect people to write HTML pages that comply with Mozilla, if there is no guide telling anyone how to do that?

Ah, and I could expand this question: Is there any do and don't guide for general web pages? We keep blaming sites for being non-standard, but is there any simple guide anywhere that tells the web author what to do? It's easy to say that a site should be W3C compliant, but what is W3C exactly? Is there any simple text (defenitely not the standard itself) that the non-genius web author can read, and say, "I'll do this"?

Otherwise, we can't blame anyone.

Eli

--
Web: http://www.billauer.co.il



--------------------------------------------------------------------------
Haifa Linux Club Mailing List (http://www.haifux.org)
To unsub send an empty message to [EMAIL PROTECTED]




Reply via email to