Hi Patrick,

FYI, Blogger does use templates which will update earlier posts as well as current posts when you make a change to them. I'm not a programmer, so I can't say how (thinking javascript), but I just made a change to my navigation thoughout my site. Then I made it separately to my Blogger blog template and checked to see if it's showing on older pages, and it is. I also opened an older HTML page in the archives and the change has been made there as well.

I don't disagree with you, but wanted to keep the record straight (US expression).

Best regards,

Marilyn Langfeld
Langfeldesigns
http://www.langfeldesigns.com



On Sep 19, 2005, at 6:39 AM, Patrick Lauke wrote:

Marco van Hylckama Vlieg



One can either
manipulate the way
output looks by dynamically changing the CSS or by
dynamically changing
the HTML output. I prefer the latter to be honest.


But the question is: why do you prefer it? Just gut feeling,
or any valuable/measurable reason?
Also: of course, if you have dynamically generated pages,
template driven CMSs etc, it's easy to change the HTML output.
However, for those still publishing sites "by hand", without
an automated system behind it, a change in the markup on all
pages would require a complete re-upload of the entire site.
Thinking about systems like Blogger where (from what I
gather...not using it myself) individual blog entries are
actually written out as complete HTML files, a change to
the markup on all pages would require a complete rebuild of
the site as well.

Patrick
__________________________________________________________
Patrick H. Lauke
Webmaster / University of Salford
http://www.salford.ac.uk
__________________________________________________________
Web Standards Project (WaSP) Accessibility Task Force
http://webstandards.org/
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