On Jan 10, 2007, at 13:26, Matthew Paul Thomas wrote:
The message "please use <b> and <i> unless you really know what you're doing, and generate <b> and <i> unless your users really know what they're doing" is *not* well-known.
What's the expected payoff if the message is made well-known?
It has not yet consumed much time, effort, money, blog posts, spec examples or discussion threads. In the absence of other evidence, I think it is worth trying.
In that case, I suggest making the content models for <b> and <i> equally versatile as the content models for <strong> and <em>. Otherwise, authors and tool vendors will go with the elements with the more versatile content models just in case the versatility is ever needed.
-- Henri Sivonen [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://hsivonen.iki.fi/
