You seem to have lost me. Can you elaborate?
Take the full example:
http://developer.yahoo.com/yui/examples/menu/leftnavfromjs.html
Sure. Here is an example that shows exactly what I meant:
http://www.projectseven.com/csslab/testing/yahoomenu/yahoo.html
> http://www.udm4.com/
Those are the ones I was referring to that might benefit from a
little
user guide for the site visitor :-)
Again, please elaborate, what do you mean by user guide?
The basic UDM menu is OK. When you opt for the full complement of
keyboard browsing features, it becomes bloated and less intuitive.
While you have your ideas on web UIs, I have mine and mine tell me
that ordinary people, surfing the web, are in mouse mode or, at best,
Tab key/Alt key mode. They are not going to have the foggiest idea
that arrow keys are enabled. It is very cool, but over the top - in my
opinion :-)
If browsers were meant to have multi level menus, there'd be a W3C
standard interface element for it - oh wait, there is:
http://www.w3.org/TR/html4/interact/forms.html#h-17.6
http://www.w3.org/TR/html4/images/optgroup_exmpl.gif
Funny it never got implemented that way in browsers...
Tantek actually did implement that in IE5 Mac. But that's a whole
other story. I truly believe you make much more of this than there
needs to be.
--
Al
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