Thanks, it works now. Should follow the specs. Wasn't <a name="foo"> valid
in HTML 4.0, though? Id is better anyway, it's more generic.

-Tuomo

On Tue, 29 Oct 2002, Kjetil Kjernsmo wrote:

> On Tuesday 29 October 2002 17:26, Tuomo L wrote:
>
> > <a name="foo">
>
> Whooa, that would be a spec violation, IIRC... :-)
>
> > Called with:
> >
> > <a href="#foo">link to foo</a>
> >
> > This doesn't work with IE:
> >
> > <a name="foo"></a>
> >
> > Ideas anyone?
>
> Use the id-attribute. All elements have an id-attribute which is
> intended for this purpose. Presumably, you can use the id-attribute
> with some other element, e.g. a header
> <h2 id="foo">This is the Foo Subsection</a>
> or, if there is no natural anchor there, you need one of the generic
> elements, span for inline and div for block, e.g.:
> There's a <span id="foo">Foo</span> in the Bar!
>
> See http://www.w3.org/TR/html401/struct/global.html#adef-id
>
> Note that id is a relatively new attribute, and not all older browsers
> support it, lynx was the first, AFAIK! :-)
>
> Best,
>
> Kjetil
> --
> Kjetil Kjernsmo
> Astrophysicist/IT Consultant/Skeptic/Ski-orienteer/Orienteer/Mountaineer
> [EMAIL PROTECTED]  [EMAIL PROTECTED]  [EMAIL PROTECTED]
> Homepage: http://www.kjetil.kjernsmo.net/
>


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