On Wed, 13 Nov 2019, Chris F.A. Johnson wrote:
On Wed, 13 Nov 2019, Matias Fonzo wrote:
El 2019-11-13 22:17, Chris F.A. Johnson escribi?:
On Wed, 13 Nov 2019, Matias Fonzo wrote:
...
If we're going to use underlining, I suppose we could do something to be in
the middle (so underlined links aren't redundant and tiring).  It could be:

- Split (I don't know how it will be in CSS) the external links with the
internal links.

  That's easy enough to do (though it's been a while since I've used
  it; I'll have to look it up).

- For external links, use underlining by default.

  But rather than underlining external links, I prefer to use a
  symbol after the link, just as Wikipedia does.

   I've tried it with both a different color and a symbol (either can
   be modified). Both is, of course, too much, but it shows some of
   the possibilities. I can add any effect you like to external links.

- For both cases, use :hover (underlined and maybe with background, as the w3
site has it).

 Right.

--
   Chris F.A. Johnson                         <http://cfajohnson.com/>
   =========================== Author: ===============================
   Shell Scripting Recipes: A Problem-Solution Approach (2005, Apress)
   Pro Bash Programming: Scripting the GNU/Linux shell (2009, Apress)

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