Nelson Menezes wrote:
2009/10/18 Ian Hickson i...@hixie.ch:
On Sat, 17 Oct 2009, Schuyler Duveen wrote:
One of the big issues we found using it on some other sites is that
javascript listeners (rather than onclick= attributes), and other DOM
pointers in the system became stale. Thus, only
Tab Atkins Jr. wrote:
On Sun, Oct 18, 2009 at 11:20 AM, Schuyler Duveen
wha...@graffitiweb.org wrote:
Nelson Menezes wrote:
My point (which feeds on Marcus Ernst's point) is that we need some kind
of load event. Maybe something like:
document.addEventListener('replaceonly')
with the event
Tab Atkins Jr. wrote:
On Sun, Oct 18, 2009 at 11:50 AM, Schuyler Duveen
wha...@graffitiweb.org wrote:
The problem is that people will make links that refresh different parts
of a document, to the point that the current document is no longer
addressable. Use cases for this happen often enough
Tab Atkins Jr. wrote:
On Sun, Oct 18, 2009 at 9:42 PM, Schuyler Duveen wha...@graffitiweb.org
wrote:
Tab Atkins Jr. wrote:
On Sun, Oct 18, 2009 at 11:50 AM, Schuyler Duveen
wha...@graffitiweb.org wrote:
The problem is that people will make links that refresh different parts
of a document
If you'd like to see what this looks like in Javascript, I implemented
this technique several years ago. One place you can see it publicly is
the swapFromHttp() function at:
http://havel.columbia.edu/media_panels/js/MochiPlus.js
You can see it in action on some pages like:
indented p-tags
/p
/p !-- ad hoc solution! comment: id=something-here --
MORE ELEGANT ALTERNATIVE:
p id=something-here
/p id=something-here
If it was noted as specifically conformant, this could possibly help
parsers in some cases, including the human variety.
cheers,
Schuyler Duveen
[1
There is a use case for hierarchical progress elements: e.g. multiple
file uploads (or multiple phases). Consider the following example:
progress id=p max=17 value=5 data-units=MB
progress id=current-file-progress max=21/progress
/progress
could be displayed something like this:
style div
I'm one of the lurking web application developers. This discussion has
gone mostly how I was hoping, but since 'offline apps' has come up
again, I might bootstrap that a bit. Below are some use cases, but I'll
summarize my perspective briefly.
1. To run Doom requiring 500M of localStorage
Aryeh Gregor wrote:
On Thu, Aug 27, 2009 at 11:14 AM, Schuyler Duveenwha...@graffitiweb.org
wrote:
1. To run Doom requiring 500M of localStorage sounds like an
'application'--both users and developers currently have the expectation
that users have to approve something like that before being
There should also be a way to ask for more quota (from the user) without
losing user data.
The API via a form element is a little odd--generally forms are for
submitting information to the site. Historically, all of these kinds of
things are done via javascript:
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