Re: [WSG] Definition lists for testimonials

2008-05-13 Thread Jason Ray
The W3C has an example of the use of the cite and quote elements here:
http://www.w3.org/People/mimasa/test/xhtml2/spec-examples/mod-text/cite-ex01.xhtml

Or you can read all about quotations here:
http://www.w3.org/TR/html401/struct/text.html#h-9.2.2

You could avoid the blockquote and use a paragraph depending on the length
of the quoted text. Only use the q element if it is an inline quote (i.e., a
short quote). If you want a lengthy quote, use the blockquote.

An inline quote example:



http://www.comany-url.com";>Company XYZ says You are the best!



A block level quote example (as Mike indicated above):




I have a lot of things to say about this guy. He's done a really great
job! http://www.company-url.com";>--- Company XYZ




You can also add an anchor around the company name if you want to link to
their website. I don't believe the cite *attribute* (as opposed to
*element*or 'tag') is compulsory if you're not referring to an online
source, but I'm
not entirely certain.

Jason

On Wed, May 14, 2008 at 5:14 AM, Rick Lecoat <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
wrote:

> On 13 May 2008, at 19:48, Mike at Green-Beast.com wrote:
>
>  Don't forget the cite element too. If a source isn't online you wouldn't
> > use the cite attribute, but the element will still help with proper
> > attribution.
> >
>
> Mike, you're bang on the money: I had indeed completely forgotten about
> the cite element, and it's just the tool for the job here. And thanks for
> confirming what I already suspected -- that the list was over-egging the
> pudding.
>
> Peculiarly, I immediately (in shame) went to O'Reilly's 'HTML & XHTML -
> The Definitive Guide' to refresh my memory about the cite element and
> discovered that it appears to not be listed in the index at all. Attribute:
> yes, element: no. Weird.
>
> Thanks again, and to everyone else who responded.
>
>
> --
> Rick Lecoat
>
>
>
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Re: [WSG] Definition lists for testimonials

2008-05-13 Thread Rick Lecoat

On 13 May 2008, at 19:48, Mike at Green-Beast.com wrote:

Don't forget the cite element too. If a source isn't online you  
wouldn't use the cite attribute, but the element will still help  
with proper attribution.


Mike, you're bang on the money: I had indeed completely forgotten  
about the cite element, and it's just the tool for the job here. And  
thanks for confirming what I already suspected -- that the list was  
over-egging the pudding.


Peculiarly, I immediately (in shame) went to O'Reilly's 'HTML & XHTML  
- The Definitive Guide' to refresh my memory about the cite element  
and discovered that it appears to not be listed in the index at all.  
Attribute: yes, element: no. Weird.


Thanks again, and to everyone else who responded.

--
Rick Lecoat



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Re: [WSG] Definition lists for testimonials

2008-05-13 Thread Mike at Green-Beast.com

Hi Rick,

Don't forget the cite element too. If a source isn't online you wouldn't use 
the cite attribute, but the element will still help with proper attribution. 
You can also link the element to allow the appropriate access to all.


Testimonials

With full linkage.

http://source.com";>
This is the quoted text --- http://source.com";>Who said 
it



With no linkage.


This is the quoted text --- Who said it


Personally, I wouldn't use a list at all -- any kind of list. In the name of 
semantics, web standards, accessibility, usability, and even presentational 
flexibility, the minimum markup shown above is really all you need, without 
any added complexity.


Respectfully,
Mike Cherim
http://green-beast.com




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Re: [WSG] Definition lists for testimonials

2008-05-13 Thread Rick Lecoat

On 13 May 2008, at 17:56, Joseph Ortenzi wrote:


how about using the  blockquote  "cite" attribute?

http://brainstormsandraves.com/articles/semantics/structure/

They mention using cite for a url (or email link) and title for the  
details.


seems to be compliant to me...


Hi Joseph;

Thanks for your reply. Maybe I'm mis-reading your post but it sounds  
as if you are suggesting that I use cite and title to replace the  
p.clientName and p.clientCompany tags. The problem with that, as I see  
it, is that the cite attribute is supposed to point to an online  
source URL, and only one or two of these testimonials have a relevant  
URL to link to. Secondly, even if the title attribute is appropriate  
for the client's name and company, then by embedding that information  
in the title attribute it is effectively hidden apart from on mouse- 
over -- not much use to keyboard using visitors.


I think that if I'm reading a testimonial I expect to see the  
originator's name and credentials clearly at the bottom, rather than  
hidden inside the code waiting for a mouse over.


On the other hand, if I misinterpreted your post and you were  
suggesting using the attributes *in addition* to the structure that I  
already had, then I agree completely, with the caveat that some of the  
blockquotes would have to have (null) cite attributes. Bear in mind  
that the markup I jotted down was a highly simplified version of the  
actual code.


Lastly, when you said "seems to be compliant to me" were you referring  
to the brainstormsandraves example you gave me, or where you referring  
to my markup? And if so, which version (ie. with the ul or without)?


Thanks again;
--
Rick Lecoat



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Re: [WSG] Definition lists for testimonials

2008-05-13 Thread Joseph Ortenzi

how about using the  blockquote  "cite" attribute?

http://brainstormsandraves.com/articles/semantics/structure/

They mention using cite for a url (or email link) and title for the  
details.


seems to be compliant to me...




On May 13, 2008, at 16:31, Rick Lecoat wrote:


On 5 May 2008, at 19:04, Thierry Koblentz wrote:


-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
] On

Behalf Of Rick Lecoat
Sent: Monday, May 05, 2008 8:26 AM
To: wsg@webstandardsgroup.org
Subject: [WSG] Definition lists for testimonials

Hi, I need to mark up a list of client testimonials. At first I was
going to do it with a UL but then I thought about the multi-part
nature of each 'item' (Client's quote, client's name, client's
company) and figured that a definition list might be a better  
option.

My only reservation about that is the fact that by using the
established structure:


 client's quote 
 client's name 
 client's company 



I think you're missing an important element: blockquote
but then it won't be allowed in a DT


Hi, just returning to this issue. Thierry, I had actually com to the  
same blockquote conclusion, and my solution last week to a list of  
testimonials was this:


div#testimonials
  ul
 li
blockquote
   p
   p.clientName
   p.clientCompany
/blockquote
 /li
 li
blockquote
   p
   p.clientName
   p.clientCompany
/blockquote
 /li
  /ul
/div

(that's simplified, obviously).

I'm going back over my markup to see if I can streamline it, and I'm  
wondering if the ul/li structure is needed. On the one hand it *is*  
semantically a list -- it's a list of testimonials after all. On the  
other hand a series of blockquotes wrapped in a div is much neater  
and less busy.


My question to the panel is: do you think that the unordered list  
markup is required semantically?


Cheers;
--
Rick Lecoat



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==
Joe Ortenzi
[EMAIL PROTECTED]




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Re: [WSG] Definition lists for testimonials

2008-05-13 Thread Rick Lecoat

On 5 May 2008, at 19:04, Thierry Koblentz wrote:


-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]  
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On

Behalf Of Rick Lecoat
Sent: Monday, May 05, 2008 8:26 AM
To: wsg@webstandardsgroup.org
Subject: [WSG] Definition lists for testimonials

Hi, I need to mark up a list of client testimonials. At first I was
going to do it with a UL but then I thought about the multi-part
nature of each 'item' (Client's quote, client's name, client's
company) and figured that a definition list might be a better option.
My only reservation about that is the fact that by using the
established structure:


 client's quote 
 client's name 
 client's company 



I think you're missing an important element: blockquote
but then it won't be allowed in a DT


Hi, just returning to this issue. Thierry, I had actually com to the  
same blockquote conclusion, and my solution last week to a list of  
testimonials was this:


div#testimonials
   ul
  li
 blockquote
p
p.clientName
p.clientCompany
 /blockquote
  /li
  li
 blockquote
p
p.clientName
p.clientCompany
 /blockquote
  /li
   /ul
/div

(that's simplified, obviously).

I'm going back over my markup to see if I can streamline it, and I'm  
wondering if the ul/li structure is needed. On the one hand it *is*  
semantically a list -- it's a list of testimonials after all. On the  
other hand a series of blockquotes wrapped in a div is much neater and  
less busy.


My question to the panel is: do you think that the unordered list  
markup is required semantically?


Cheers;
--
Rick Lecoat



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RE: [WSG] Definition lists for testimonials

2008-05-05 Thread Thierry Koblentz
> -Original Message-
> From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On
> Behalf Of Rick Lecoat
> Sent: Monday, May 05, 2008 8:26 AM
> To: wsg@webstandardsgroup.org
> Subject: [WSG] Definition lists for testimonials
> 
> Hi, I need to mark up a list of client testimonials. At first I was
> going to do it with a UL but then I thought about the multi-part
> nature of each 'item' (Client's quote, client's name, client's
> company) and figured that a definition list might be a better option.
> My only reservation about that is the fact that by using the
> established structure:
> 
> 
>  client's quote 
>  client's name 
>  client's company 
> 

I think you're missing an important element: blockquote
but then it won't be allowed in a DT


-- 
Regards,
Thierry | http://www.TJKDesign.com






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Re: [WSG] Definition lists for testimonials

2008-05-05 Thread Joseph Taylor
Definition Lists are wonderful markup tools.  They do create a nice 
relationship between element pairs and I find myself sometimes using 
them for lists of real estate properties for sale:


Something like:


   
   address, city st zip
   price
   beds / baths


You can style them well in a wide range of ways and without any styling, 
additionally the raw  display natural indentation also explains the 
relationship.


Browsing properties

The  photo/address (what I would say we humans consider the property's 
"definition term")


Then, descriptive features like bedrooms, baths etc (which are to be 
considered the "definition description").


At the same time, microformats could be used...


   ...Testimonial Text
   Name of Client's Company


Or even something like:

"I want to take the time to let you know that 
both of

our websites get many compliments daily. You did a great
job. Thanks." Client Name//

Joseph R. B. Taylor
/Designer / Developer/
--
Sites by Joe, LLC
/"Clean, Simple and Elegant Web Design"/
Phone: (609) 335-3076
Fax: (866) 301-8045
Web: http://sitesbyjoe.com
Email: [EMAIL PROTECTED]



Rick Lecoat wrote:
Hi, I need to mark up a list of client testimonials. At first I was 
going to do it with a UL but then I thought about the multi-part 
nature of each 'item' (Client's quote, client's name, client's 
company) and figured that a definition list might be a better option. 
My only reservation about that is the fact that by using the 
established structure:



 client's quote 
 client's name 
 client's company 


...the 'term' will be way longer than the two 'definitions'. But 
clearly the client name and company name should come after the quotation.


Is this actually un-semantic or is it just slightly counter-intuitive? 
Can a DT be 10 times the length of its DDs?
Alternatively, should I be looking at a blockquote/paragraph 
combination instead? (that doesn't feel as elegant because it lacks 
the self-contained nature of a DT/DD set).


Suggestions welcome.
--
Rick Lecoat



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***begin:vcard
fn:Joseph Taylor
n:Taylor;Joseph
org:Sites by Joe, LLC
adr:;;408 Route 47 South;Cape May Court House;NJ;08210;USA
email;internet:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
title:Designer / Developer
tel;work:609-335-3076
tel;fax:886-301-8045
tel;home:609-886-9660
tel;cell:609-335-3076
x-mozilla-html:TRUE
url:http://sitesbyjoe.com
version:2.1
end:vcard




[WSG] Definition lists for testimonials

2008-05-05 Thread Rick Lecoat
Hi, I need to mark up a list of client testimonials. At first I was  
going to do it with a UL but then I thought about the multi-part  
nature of each 'item' (Client's quote, client's name, client's  
company) and figured that a definition list might be a better option.  
My only reservation about that is the fact that by using the  
established structure:



 client's quote 
 client's name 
 client's company 


...the 'term' will be way longer than the two 'definitions'. But  
clearly the client name and company name should come after the  
quotation.


Is this actually un-semantic or is it just slightly counter-intuitive?  
Can a DT be 10 times the length of its DDs?
Alternatively, should I be looking at a blockquote/paragraph  
combination instead? (that doesn't feel as elegant because it lacks  
the self-contained nature of a DT/DD set).


Suggestions welcome.
--
Rick Lecoat



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