Tee G.Peng wrote:
Philip,
On Jul 13, 2006, at 6:37 PM, Nikita The Spider wrote:
Tee,
There is no such thing as a .li element; I assume you mean li.
That was for people who read email in HTML mode :)
That's not how HTML mail works. Just let the mail clients handle
encoding the messages
On Jul 16, 2006, at 5:55 PM, Lachlan Hunt wrote:
Tee G.Peng wrote:
Philip,
On Jul 13, 2006, at 6:37 PM, Nikita The Spider wrote:
Tee,
There is no such thing as a .li element; I assume you mean li.
That was for people who read email in HTML mode :)
That's not how HTML mail works. Just
Tee G.Peng:
Is it legal to place a div in .li?
You'll find the answers to such questions here:
http://htmlhelp.com/reference/html40/
http://htmlhelp.com/reference/html40/lists/li.html
If you learn to read DTD:s the same information is in them.
Here:
Was I not told by Mike from green-beast don't blindly rely on
automated validator the other day! :)
I believe that was in regard to accessibility? Unless I wasn't
reading closely enough.
The HTML validator has a few bugs, but I think you are safe in this
situation.
Unless I am
Hi,
Is it legal to place a div in .li?
Something like this
.lix
div it does validate/div
/li
I am using XHTML 1.0 strict doctype and it doesn't show validate
error, also, the WAI validation from content quality site doesn't
give me warning or error, but I feel so uncertain about it.
From: Tee G.Peng [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Is it legal to place a div in .li?
Something like this
.lix
div it does validate/div
/li
I am using XHTML 1.0 strict doctype and it doesn't show validate
error, also, the WAI validation from content quality site doesn't
give me warning or error, but I
On 7/13/06, Tee G.Peng [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Hi,
Is it legal to place a div in .li?
Something like this
.lix
div it does validate/div
/li
Tee,
There is no such thing as a .li element; I assume you mean li. If
that's the case, then yes, it is OK to put a div inside li.
Besides, if the
On Jul 13, 2006, at 6:33 PM, Al Sparber wrote:
We're legal, Tee :-)
Ah, sorry, I should have trust in you :)
tee
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See http://webstandardsgroup.org/mail/guidelines.cfm
for some
On 7/13/06, Tee G.Peng [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
OK, perhaps I should rephrase my question.
Is there no semantical reason that it's not quite legal to do so? You
must forgive me asking this seemingly stupid question; the heated
Alphabetical Listing Buttons thread did make me think twice how to