Rather than multiple <dd>s per <dt>, perhaps:
<dl> <dt>Main Office</dt> <dd> <ul> <li>123 Fake Street</li> <li>Somewhere, SomeCountry, SomeZip</li> </ul> </dd> </dl> may be more semantically sorrect. On Sat, August 11, 2007 8:52 am, Diego La Monica wrote: > Ryan Moore: >> >> Looking for best practice markup for addresses. >> >> is it correct to use >> >> <dl> >> <dt>Main Office</dt> >> <dd>123 Fake Street</dd> >> <dd>Somewhere, SomeCountry, SomeZip</dd> >> </dl> >> >> or is there a better practice for this? > > > Diego La Monica: > Ryan, I don't think is the correct use for dl+dt/dd because dt is a term > while dd is a definition for the term, and in a dictionary it would be the > best method (IMHO) because a term could have more than one definition, but > in an address, each definition (in your example) is right, but any of them > must be omitted. > > I suppose that the correct way to represent an address is by microformats. > > Bye. > > -- > Diego La Monica > Web: programmazione, standards, accessibilità e 2.0 > Brainbench certified (transcript ID # 6653550) for: RDBMS Concepts; HTML > 4.0 > W3C HTML WG IWA/HWG Member > Responsabile liste IWA Italy ( [EMAIL PROTECTED] ) > Web Skill Profiles WG Member ( http://skillprofiles.eu ) > phone +390571464992 - mobile +393337235382 > MSN Messenger: [EMAIL PROTECTED] > Email: [EMAIL PROTECTED] > Skype: diego.la.monica - ICQ #: 249-460-264 > Web: http://diegolamonica.info > > > ******************************************************************* > List Guidelines: http://webstandardsgroup.org/mail/guidelines.cfm > Unsubscribe: http://webstandardsgroup.org/join/unsubscribe.cfm > Help: [EMAIL PROTECTED] > ******************************************************************* > ******************************************************************* List Guidelines: http://webstandardsgroup.org/mail/guidelines.cfm Unsubscribe: http://webstandardsgroup.org/join/unsubscribe.cfm Help: [EMAIL PROTECTED] *******************************************************************