Gareth Hay wrote:
If i'm not mistaken, the idea of separation of content and style means you can use your own css, or even none at all, and still have the ability to view the content.

If a page is dependent on the css, then, although in a separate file, it is fundamentally not separate at all, and we might as well just shove the css into the same html file anyway.

Gareth

On 16 Mar 2007, at 20:27, Benjamin West wrote:

On 3/16/07, Dean Edridge <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
Firstly, the chance of someone not being able to access the CSS for a web
page is I'm guessing, pretty slim.

<img style="height: 50px; width: 50px;" /> Why is accessing CSS a problem?

-Ben West




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I never proposed that a web page should be dependant on CSS, nor did I say that there shouldn't be a separation of content and style. Quite the opposite. I said that if there is no CSS available for an <img> tag, the browser should just display the image the best it can(and they do this quite well already, in my experience). And that this very rare occasion of CSS failure does not warrant the mandatory requirement of in-line styling of the <img> tag.

Dean Edridge

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