Thanks for all the tips.
You asked the same question about the same site around a year ago, and
received an appropriate answer from Georg Sortun on how to make
corresponding paragraphs begin on the same line. Check the list archives.
Ow! I had completely lost track of that. Thanks.
I
bruce.som...@web.de wrote:
Thanks for all the tips.
You asked the same question about the same site around a year ago, and
received an appropriate answer from Georg Sortun on how to make
corresponding paragraphs begin on the same line. Check the list archives.
Ow! I had
Hello,
At http://www.maireadnesbitt.com/press/press8a.html I have an article in French
and my English translation, in adjacent columns.
Corresponding paragraphs of the original and the translation begin on the same
line, although the paragraphs are usually of different lengths. This was done
On Mon, 1 Feb 2010, bruce.som...@web.de wrote:
Hello,
At http://www.maireadnesbitt.com/press/press8a.html I have an article in
French and my English translation, in adjacent columns.
Corresponding paragraphs of the original and the translation begin on the
same line, although the
In this case, using a table is justified. There is a relationship between
the English paragraph and it's French translation, therefore putting them in
a table row is semantically correct.
On Mon, Feb 1, 2010 at 8:33 PM, Chris F.A. Johnson ch...@cfajohnson.comwrote:
On Mon, 1 Feb 2010,
I hope that someone will have a suggestion for me.
Brace yourself...
I actually think that this could be argued to be a legitimate use of tables to
display tabular data. It's certainly not tabular data in the tradition
spreadsheet sense, but it is data that corresponds to other data arranged
Climis, Tim wrote:
I hope that someone will have a suggestion for me.
Brace yourself...
I actually think that this could be argued to be a legitimate use of tables
to display tabular data. It's certainly not tabular data in the tradition
spreadsheet sense, but it is data that
Von: Climis, Tim tcli...@indiana.edu
I hope that someone will have a suggestion for me.
Brace yourself...
I actually think that this could be argued to be a legitimate use of tables
to display tabular data. It's certainly not tabular data in the tradition
spreadsheet sense, but it
bruce.som...@web.de wrote:
And ditch the rivers.
~d
Sorry. I don't understand rivers.
Bruce
re: http://www.maireadnesbitt.com/press/press8a.html
Typography: rivers and lakes are the gaps that run down the
text-block. If you do not see them, view your entire page from
Von: Climis, Tim tcli...@indiana.edu
I hope that someone will have a suggestion for me.
Brace yourself...
I actually think that this could be argued to be a legitimate use
of tables to display tabular data. It's certainly not tabular data
in the tradition spreadsheet sense, but it
bruce.som...@web.de wrote:
Von: Climis, Tim tcli...@indiana.edu
I hope that someone will have a suggestion for me.
Brace yourself...
I actually think that this could be argued to be a legitimate use of tables
to display tabular data. It's certainly not tabular data in
This may be a crazy suggestion, but in my mind a definition list (dl,
dt, dd) wouldn't be out of the question
You'd either have to avoid paragraph tags, etc, or damn the standards.
I had the same thought, but decided not to damn the standards. So I suggested
the paragraph solution instead.
12 matches
Mail list logo