lto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On
Behalf Of Robin Berjon
Sent: 07 June 2005 16:22
To: wsg@webstandardsgroup.org
Subject: Re: [WSG] Valid characters in ID attribute
Chris Taylor wrote:
> Great, thanks. I'm very pleased that I can use periods and colons,
> that makes it much easier.
Not sure this
Chris Taylor wrote:
Great, thanks. I'm very pleased that I can use periods and colons, that
makes it much easier.
Not sure this applies to your case but note that colons are fine in HTML
but forbidden in XHTML.
--
Robin Berjon
Senior Research Scientist
Expway, http://expway.com/
**
e
future.
Many thanks.
Chris
-Original Message-
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On
Behalf Of Nick Gleitzman
Sent: 07 June 2005 14:02
To: wsg@webstandardsgroup.org
Subject: Re: [WSG] Valid characters in ID attribute
On 7 Jun 2005, at 9:35 PM, Ricci Angela wrote:
> B
On 7 Jun 2005, at 9:35 PM, Ricci Angela wrote:
But I'd avoid using underscore for id/class names... I've already had
intermitent bugs with IE6 because of it (specially for links).
Ditto for Safari... earlier versions, anyway. More recent versions may
have been fixed, but I avoid them (unders
juin 2005 12:12
À : wsg@webstandardsgroup.org
Objet : [WSG] Valid characters in ID attribute
Hi,
I'm writing a function to do all manner of clever stuff and need to
create very complex ID attributes for links. As far as I know the only
valid characters you can use in an ID (and as a class name, t
Hi,
I'm writing a function to do all manner of clever stuff and need to
create very complex ID attributes for links. As far as I know the only
valid characters you can use in an ID (and as a class name, too) are:
A-Z, a-z, 0-9, _, -
Is that true? Are there any other valid characters that I can u