I think JS has it's place on the web, but we don't see too many examples of it's correct use.
One that readily springs to mind is in pre-parsing submission forms - make sure that the data entered has some semblance of validity. It saves the annoying practice of submitting a form and then having the rejection come back for re-submission. On Thu, 10 Jan 2002, Terry Collins wrote: > Howard Lowndes wrote: > > > > Except that you can't get a version that will run on W311 _and_ do JS and > > all the rest of the crap (at least as far as I know). You could also use > > lynx, but with the same caveats > > Why would you want to do JS? or Java for that matter? These are the sign > of a poor WWW site. -- Howard. LANNet Computing Associates - Your Linux people Contact detail at http://www.lannetlinux.com "We are either doing something, or we are not. 'Talking about' is a subset of 'not'." -- SLUG - Sydney Linux User Group Mailing List - http://slug.org.au/ More Info: http://lists.slug.org.au/listinfo/slug
