On 10/20/06, Emiliano Martinez Luque <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
That example in particular might not be a problem but consider the following: <span class="currency" title="USD">$1,000</span> In the US that will mean one dollar, in Argentina (where I'm from) it will mean a thousand dollars. And tying this to the currency identification (even though the first 2 letters represent a country) will not solve the issue, since I should be able to markup values in different currencies within a single web page. I do agree though that there should be some sort of optimization.
Actually it's 1000 in America too ;-) There are plenty of other countries where your assertion is true, though. However I'm not convinced that the problem of number-parsing needs to be solved in a microformat. The @lang attribute already exists in HTML and should indicate which locale numeric values are being written in. This would then hopefully also cover more complex cases like figures written in Japanese etc. -Ciaran McNulty _______________________________________________ microformats-discuss mailing list microformats-discuss@microformats.org http://microformats.org/mailman/listinfo/microformats-discuss