Re: [css-d] [OT] how hard would it be...

2012-04-10 Thread Michael Adams
On Wednesday 11 April 2012 00:23, Christian Hanvey wrote:
[snip]
 I could not find anything in the spec referring as to why we only 
use the American spelling rather than International spelling. Cheers!

Completely OT for this list IIUC. The W3C has mailing lists too.

The original authors of HTML were American. First in. first served.

-- 
Michael
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Re: [css-d] [OT] how hard would it be...

2012-04-10 Thread Eric A. Meyer

At 01:42 +1200 4/11/12, Michael Adams wrote:

On Wednesday 11 April 2012 00:23, Christian Hanvey wrote:
[snip]

 I could not find anything in the spec referring as to why we only

use the American spelling rather than International spelling. Cheers!

Completely OT for this list IIUC. The W3C has mailing lists too.


   Yes, it really is, although I'd be interested to see a thread on 
how to adapt LESS, Sass, or similar systems to handle non-American 
spellings up front.  Or even just a list of plugins for such systems, 
if the plugins already exist. Either way, it could make use of CSS 
more practical (as in simpler) for those not used to American 
spellings of things like 'color', and who are willing to take on the 
extra cognitive load of switching between their localized spelling 
and all the other CSS they'll come across on the web.  Otherwise the 
thread should end.



The original authors of HTML were American. First in. first served.


   Interestingly, the original authors of HTML and CSS actually 
weren't American.  Tim Berners-Lee is English and Robert Cailliau is 
Belgian, whereas HÃ¥kon Lie is Norwegian and Bert Bos is Dutch, but 
they were most likely used to working in American due to their fields 
of study and the fact that most programming languages were (still 
are) basically American in language.  Not that there's anything there 
that can help us with practical uses of CSS, but it's an interesting 
bit of context, no?


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Eric A. Meyer (http://meyerweb.com/eric/), List Chaperone
CSS is much too interesting and elegant to be not taken seriously.
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