Hi MorningZ,
I just did some quick Googling on the matter, and turned up this
useful link:
http://www.456bereastreet.com/archive/200711/use_the_label_element_to_make_your_html_forms_accessible/
Each label element can only be associated with a single form control,
while a form control may have
On Jan 25, 4:24 am, Dave Stewart [EMAIL PROTECTED]
wrote:
Hi MorningZ,
I just did some quick Googling on the matter, and turned up this
useful link:
http://www.456bereastreet.com/archive/200711/use_the_label_element_to...
I just had to laugh at this line in that link:
I always use and
CODE?
And why have you posted this twice?
On Jan 24, 10:00 am, Dave Stewart [EMAIL PROTECTED]
wrote:
Hello,
I'd rather not use label tags for my error messages, as I think
divs are less semantically ambiguous.
Is there any way I can change the default functionality?
At the moment I'm
SORRY - the word [jQuery Validation Plugin] was supposed to appear in
the title, but didn't.
Hello Diego,
Sorry, it's a separate question, actually. I've re-stated the first
post question to clarify things, so sorry for the ambiguity.
To restate the problem:
Using the jQuery Validation
But you brought up semantics, to which the label makes way more
sense in that way in this situation
The error message is a label for the control (and clicking on it
because of the for parameter) sets focus on said control
Personally i think your premise of screen readers getting confused is
not
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