Benjamin Hawkes-Lewis wrote:
Garrett Smith wrote:
|placeholder| sounds a little like |alt|. Alt is a property and an
attribute on INPUT.
How is placeholder content for a form field alternative text?
The alt text is for situations where the input can not be displayed at
all. For example an
On Tue, Sep 30, 2008 at 10:33 PM, Michal Zalewski [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Tue, 30 Sep 2008, Robert O'Callahan wrote:
If I understand correctly, with Michal's option 3, those sites would also
stop working as soon as the user scrolled down in the framed page (so that
the top-left of the
On Wed, 1 Oct 2008, Robert O'Callahan wrote:
I don't think that's secure. The outer page can set the IFRAME's URL to
contain a #xyz fragment identifier
That's really covered in the original proposal. Honest :P In a kludgy
manner, of course (permitting fragments, but not permitting onload
Sep 24, 2008, в 10:38 PM, Aaron Boodman написал(а):
interface DedicatedWorker : Worker {
I've been trying to understand the difference between SharedWorker and
DedicatedWorker interfaces. Besides the ability to pick an existing
worker by name, are there any other semantic differences? I
On Tue, Sep 30, 2008 at 4:10 AM, Andy Lyttle [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I do not like this idea at all. That is what LABEL is for, and
disappearing
it's so kewl text is as annoying as BLINK and BGSOUND.
Chris
The label tag is great for labels that are displayed outside the input
box (in
On Tue, Sep 30, 2008 at 12:37 AM, Benjamin Hawkes-Lewis
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Garrett Smith wrote:
|placeholder| sounds a little like |alt|. Alt is a property and an
attribute on INPUT.
How is placeholder content for a form field alternative text?
If and until user enters text, the
Kristof Zelechovski wrote:
If you set up a mirror with the same host name as the content provider has,
you will probably get sued for identity theft, cybersquatting, forgery or
whatever.
No, only the content provider (really the domain name owner) can set up
these mirrors. This is nothing
I am afraid we are going in circles here. You suggested that the embedded
content should be stored on the server that provides the interface. Now you
explain how it can be stored on the media provider's server. That is
nothing new - except that it has nothing to do with your original position.
Am Dienstag, den 30.09.2008, 08:25 -0700 schrieb Garrett Smith:
(Nils, did you mean to put this on the list, or is this personal mail?)
I meant to put it on the list - didn't it go there ?
If and until user enters text, the alternate text is displayed.
The confusing part is that
Sep 30, 2008, в 7:19 PM, Aaron Boodman написал(а):
I'm of the opinion that there should be as little difference as
possible, to lower the amount of API to learn. Therefore in my
preferred proposal, the only difference between SharedWorker and
DedicatedWorker is that the latter has a close()
On Sep 30, 2008, at 8:33 AM, Nils Dagsson Moskopp wrote:
No, I meant to abolish the placeholder attribute alltogether and
render
the title attribute as greyed-sut inside the search box instead,
because
* semantically, the title attribute conveys the same
information.
* it is
On Sep 29, 2008, at 23:52, Adam Barth wrote:
On Mon, Sep 29, 2008 at 1:40 PM, Anne van Kesteren
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I thought the issue with Referer
was that it exposed path information, but I guess the problem with
Origin is
that it reveals the intranet server name?
The query
On Sep 30, 2008, at 7:57 AM, Garrett Smith wrote:
If and until user enters text, the alternate text is displayed.
The confusing part is that successfully rendered inputs would be
rendered and still use the alt.
The good part is that it would be (or should be) accessible for
screen readers.
Elliotte Harold writes:
Smylers wrote:
That's a sometimes convenient feature for site developers, but
there's nothing you can do with content loaded from two sites you
can't do with content loaded from one.
Here's some I can think of:
* Many sites are funded by displaying
Elliotte Harold writes:
Large content providers already move their content closer to the end
user. They do this by physically locating boxes with the same host
name and fancy DNS and router tricks.
Yup. But those are _large_ content providers. We shouldn't design HTML
5 such that smaller
2008/9/30 Alexey Proskuryakov [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
I'm not sure it's so good in the case of dedicated workers either, as they
can be used from other contexts via additional message ports. The close()
method could just close the default port.
Sure, but in order for that to have happened, whoever
On Tue, Sep 30, 2008 at 9:31 AM, Henri Sivonen [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
This could be addressed by sending a cryptographic hash of the origin (using
an algorithm that is commonly available in libraries used by server-side
programmers).
Interesting idea. So you're suggesting something like:
Sep 30, 2008, в 8:46 PM, Aaron Boodman написал(а):
close() was added so that you could forcibly kill a worker. For
example, if you are searching a large set with many workers, you may
want to kill them once one finds a match.
...
So I think it is useful to have a conceptual difference
On Sep 30, 2008, at 7:18 AM, Kristof Zelechovski wrote:
How can the Web designer know how many recent search terms the user
would
like to keep handy at the search box?
The same way the web designer knows anything else: taking an
educated guess at what would be most appropriate for their
On Tue, Sep 30, 2008 at 11:36 AM, Andy Lyttle [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Sep 30, 2008, at 7:57 AM, Garrett Smith wrote:
If and until user enters text, the alternate text is displayed.
The confusing part is that successfully rendered inputs would be
rendered and still use the alt.
The
On Tue, 30 Sep 2008, Adam Barth wrote:
This could be addressed by sending a cryptographic hash of the origin (using
an algorithm that is commonly available in libraries used by server-side
programmers).
Interesting idea. So you're suggesting something like:
Origin-SHA1:
2008/9/30 Alexey Proskuryakov [EMAIL PROTECTED]:
Hmm... So this is more about how you use the interface, not what the object
behind it is. If one chooses to never call close() on a shared worker (or,
say, sets myWorker.close to null right after invoking constructor), it
becomes
On Sep 30, 2008, at 7:40 AM, Nils Dagsson Moskopp wrote:
I assume that this should be based on the search elements ID
attribute,
am I right ? Because common UA behaviour already is to cache entries
(based on ID) ... so what unsolved problem is solved there ?
If I have a form on my site,
Michal Zalewski wrote:
More importantly, since the dictionary of possible inputs is rather
limited, it would be pretty trivial to build a dictionary of site -
hash pairs and crack the values. May protect
xyzzy2984.eur.int.example.com, but would still reveal to me you are
coming from
On Tue, 30 Sep 2008, Edward Z. Yang wrote:
More importantly, since the dictionary of possible inputs is rather
limited, it would be pretty trivial to build a dictionary of site -
hash pairs and crack the values. May protect
xyzzy2984.eur.int.example.com, but would still reveal to me you are
I am not against INPUT[type=search]; I am against INPUT[results=10] because
I cannot see how it can be reasonably preset.
Is this control for simple search only or is it designed to be used in an
advanced search interface? Should it be unique within a form?
Chris
-Original Message-
Tab Atkins Jr. wrote:
2) @alt
Pro: Presumably accessible to people with screen readers.
Presumptions are risky.
Is there any evidence (by which I mean a test case and a description of
how to reproduce behavior with real user agents) that demonstrates that
this would be true for INPUT
Sep 30, 2008, в 9:11 PM, Aaron Boodman написал(а):
Do you have any thoughts on the extra API on dedicated workers
proposed by Jonas (DedicatedWorker::sendMessage,
DedicatedWorkerGlobalScope::onmessage)?
Not really - it seems to me that they could work for shared workers as
well, but I
Michal Zalewski wrote:
Not really? I just need to rebuild my dictionary for that salt, but to
check against say a million or ten million of common domains, it
wouldn't be very expensive. And it's not very expensive to build such a
list of domains, too.
In that case, you are certainly correct;
On Sep 30, 2008, at 7:00 AM, Tab Atkins Jr. wrote:
Hm. I have a problem with your example. Get local weather
forecast isn't a semantic label for the field - it doesn't
describe what the field is for. It describes what the *form* is
for, and so should be a legend or hn. City, State
Benjamin Hawkes-Lewis wrote:
Garrett Smith wrote:
|placeholder| sounds a little like |alt|. Alt is a property and an
attribute on INPUT.
How is placeholder content for a form field alternative text?
The alt text is for situations where the input can not be displayed at
all. For example an
blarg forward to list.
-- Forwarded message --
From: Tab Atkins Jr. [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Date: Tue, Sep 30, 2008 at 12:39 PM
Subject: Re: [whatwg] Placeholder option for text input boxes
To: Benjamin Hawkes-Lewis [EMAIL PROTECTED]
On Tue, Sep 30, 2008 at 12:25 PM, Benjamin
On Tue, 30 Sep 2008, Edward Z. Yang wrote:
In that case, you are certainly correct; adding a salt only hinders an
attacker. But if we're worried about Origin giving away a secret
intranet website, I think things should be reasonable. Of course, they
can still dictionary brute-force it...
I
On Tue, Sep 30, 2008 at 12:37 PM, Andy Lyttle [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Sep 30, 2008, at 7:00 AM, Tab Atkins Jr. wrote:
Hm. I have a problem with your example. Get local weather forecast
isn't a semantic label for the field - it doesn't describe what the field
is for. It describes what
Am Dienstag, den 30.09.2008, 12:04 -0500 schrieb Tab Atkins Jr.:
4) label (moving label textual content into input as placeholder
text; currently with Javascript to mutate the DOM, in the future with
CSS to present the desired appearance while keeping the DOM stable)
Pro: Most semantic. Can
-- Forwarded message --
From: Garrett Smith [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Date: Tue, Sep 30, 2008 at 11:49 AM
Subject: Re: [whatwg] Placeholder option for text input boxes
To: Tab Atkins Jr. [EMAIL PROTECTED]
On Tue, Sep 30, 2008 at 10:04 AM, Tab Atkins Jr. [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Tue,
On Sep 30, 2008, at 10:23 AM, Kristof Zelechovski wrote:
I am not against INPUT[type=search]; I am against INPUT[results=10]
because
I cannot see how it can be reasonably preset.
Yeah, that's weird. I think if I designed it myself, I would have
made the presence of autosave (instead of
Pros/cons for a |placeholder| property and attribute on TEXTAREA?
As I understand it, it was sort of an accident that Safari supports
placeholder on anything other than search fields, but there's no
reason it shouldn't apply to all text input fields including textarea.
I've just filed
On Tue, Sep 30, 2008 at 1:46 PM, Andy Lyttle [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
On Sep 30, 2008, at 10:54 AM, Tab Atkins Jr. wrote:
Of course, the aesthetics of splitting the description between the label
and the placeholder text can't always be denied. Semantically, though,
you're still using your
Am Dienstag, den 30.09.2008, 11:49 -0700 schrieb Garrett Smith:
Are there any arguments against a |placeholder| property on INPUT?
Missing semantics ? It is a purely presentational attribute.
Cheers,
Nils
On Sep 30, 2008, at 12:14 PM, Nils Dagsson Moskopp wrote:
Am Dienstag, den 30.09.2008, 11:49 -0700 schrieb Garrett Smith:
Are there any arguments against a |placeholder| property on INPUT?
Missing semantics ? It is a purely presentational attribute.
It provides a hint to the user about what
On Tue, Sep 30, 2008 at 12:14 PM, Nils Dagsson Moskopp
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Am Dienstag, den 30.09.2008, 11:49 -0700 schrieb Garrett Smith:
Are there any arguments against a |placeholder| property on INPUT?
Missing semantics ? It is a purely presentational attribute.
The semantics would
On Tue, 30 Sep 2008 12:40:23 +0100, Andy Lyttle [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I would like Apple's input type=search adopted as an official
standard, maintaining Safari compatibility.
Comments?
I like type=search.
Special search box style is used throughout Mac OS X and Mac-centric sites
Andy Lyttle:
results - if present, shows a little magnifying glass icon, which
helps to visually identify the field as a search box
The magnifying glass was a particularly poor choice by Apple[1],
because icons featuring one usually represent zooming (in).
Binoculars are (for some
Tab Atkins Jr.:
1) @placeholder
Con: Duplicates semantics already present in label, (...)
That could be circumvented by combining the two:
labelFoo input type=text placeholder/label
yielded
[Foo ]
whereas
labelFoo input type=text placeholder=Bar/label
resulted in
[Bar
On Sep 30, 2008, at 2:55 PM, Christoph Päper wrote:
The magnifying glass was a particularly poor choice by Apple[1],
because icons featuring one usually represent zooming (in).
Binoculars are (for some reason) more common as symbols for
searches. Eyes and spectacles OTOH most often
On Sep 30, 2008, at 7:57 AM, Elliotte Harold wrote:
Maciej Stachowiak wrote:
More generally, I am on Apple's internal incoming security bug
list, and I see Java applet security bugs all the time, so I think
whatever the strength of the model may be, it does not lead to Java
applets
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