Hi,
As usual, all the replies to my post have been valuable, providing
much to think about. Does a JS/DOM script exist for
checking CSS3 support across user-agents?
C
On Aug 9, 2009, at 3:22 PM, Keryx Web wrote:
On 2009-08-09 12:48, Stuart Foulstone wrote:
The hr element represents a paragraph-level thematic break, e.g. a
scene change in a story, or a transition to another topic within a
section of a reference book.
Correct, but rarely useful. The only indication given to users is
visual. I do not think AT-technologies picks it up.
So the decision is circumstantial, sometime you use hr, and
sometimes use CSS 3 border background property.
I've not seen a case in a really long while where an hr would be
useful, except for debugging.
<hr /> deprecated in XHTML and the correct mark-up is to use a
header
which helps to help define that relationship.
No, it is not. But it is better avoided, as said by many in this
thread.
--
Keryx Web (Lars Gunther)
http://keryx.se/
http://twitter.com/itpastorn/
http://itpastorn.blogspot.com/
*******************************************************************
List Guidelines: http://webstandardsgroup.org/mail/guidelines.cfm
Unsubscribe: http://webstandardsgroup.org/join/unsubscribe.cfm
Help: memberh...@webstandardsgroup.org
*******************************************************************
*******************************************************************
List Guidelines: http://webstandardsgroup.org/mail/guidelines.cfm
Unsubscribe: http://webstandardsgroup.org/join/unsubscribe.cfm
Help: memberh...@webstandardsgroup.org
*******************************************************************