> It's not really a question of whether article makes sense. The question
> is whether it makes *enough* sense. There are arguments for it, but
> they're very weak. I do not see a community crying out for this. I
> don't
> think it's going to help anybody all that much, and I'm afraid it's
> going to end up like address: a poorly understood, rarely used element
> that's misused more often than it's used properly.

One way this could be used quite powerfully is for inline editing. This would 
only work if there were a globally unique ID for the article included (an URL 
to that specific article would make most sense). It would then be fairly 
trivial to provide an edit mechanism (via JavaScript or built into the 
user-agent) that opened an editor specifically for that article and could send 
it back to the server with the appropriate unique ID so the server knew which 
article to update.

Such behaviour is already present in a lot of scenarios - blogs tend to provide 
an Edit link for users with edit permissions for specific posts or comments, 
wikis do similar things and more and more CMS systems are investigating or 
adding in-place editing.

It's possible to use the section element for this but its description doesn't 
seem as well suited - it focuses more on specific areas of the rendered page 
rather than different sources of content that have been combined.

> Elliotte Rusty Harold

Regards,

Adrian Sutton.

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