Hello,
Isn't that stroken word a stylistic effect ? To me, the semantic
content, here, is "it is specified".
If you want to keep the semantic perfect, the stroken "not" should be
added as css :
<p>It is <span class="toggled-attribute">specified</span></p>
.toggled-attribute:before { content: 'not'; text-decoration:
line-through; display: inline-block; margin: 0 3px; }
On 26/03/2015 12:02, Cyril wrote:
Dear Sirs,
I am writing you because I am worry that style information may
occasionally alter semantic part of an HTML document. What I find not
allowable.
Particularly it is a CSS rule «text-decoration: line-through».
E. g., when user switches-off an alternative style sheet containing an
above mentioned rule, the text
“it is n̶o̶t̶ specified”
is altered to the text
“it is not specified”.
May be to return some former HTML properties influencing on the
semantic part, such as 〈font strike〉?
Best regards,
Cyril.