On Sun, 2009-01-11 at 18:14 +0000, Nathan Rixham wrote:
> Robert Cummings wrote:
> >
> >> the above means that moving back to the original <h1> example(s) I'd simply
> >>
> >> <h1>whatever</h1>
> >>
> >
> > I'd probably do:
> >
> > <project:title>Whatever</project:title>
> >
> > Which would expand to:
> >
> > <h1 class="mainTitle">Whatever<jinn:accFlush
> > name="contentTitle"/><jinn:accFlush name="contentTitle"
> > dyanmic="true"/></h1>
> >
> > Which would expand to a bunch of intermixed HTML/PHP code directly in
> > the requested document.
> >
> > The reason for the accumulator flush is to add content to the title in
> > an unrelated area of the templates as is occasionally necessary. The
> > first inserts accumulated content during the build process, the second
> > allows insertion at run-time. Run-time is probably used more often since
> > it may be when editing a user profile or something and the name is
> > inserted into the title from the form controller. The compile time
> > version is used less often but has no run-time hit since it's pre-built.
> >
> I do like you're interjinn.. it's like a good coldfusion (no offense
> intented)
I've got to go do some crying... actually I've never used coldfusion, I
just wanted something that allowed embodying larger content
functionality in shorter syntax.
> >
> >> css:
> >> h1 {
> >> color: rgb(255,0,0);
> >> font-size: 1.2em;
> >> }
> >>
> >> seeing as you can only have one h1 tag on a single document.
> >>
> >
> > Says who?
> >
>
> well it's logical good practise I guess - not a hard and fast rule
> (although should probably be thought of as a rule..?)
> H* tags are used to describe the semantic structure of a document, the
> H1 tag being used to describe what the entire document / page is about,
> then h2-h6 being used to split it into sub sections / sub headings. Thus
> two H1 tags indicates that the document is two different documents. The
> W3C site itself is normally a good indication for things like this, I'm
> 100% sure if you check the source for every page you'll not find a
> single case where there are two H1 tags.
>
> example:
> http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/
>
> from the source:
>
> <h1><a name="title" id="title"></a> XHTML™ 1.0 The Extensible HyperText
> Markup Language (Second Edition)</h1>
>
> because the document is the "XHTML™ 1.0 The Extensible HyperText Markup
> Language (Second Edition) "; if there was a Third Edition it'd be in a
> different document
That link you provided just above... open it up in the source viewer...
now do a search for "<h1" ... you'll be very surprised. H1 is merely a
level of heading... h1 being the most important on down to h6.
Cheers,
Rob.
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Application and Templating Framework for PHP
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