Choan C. Gálvez schreef:
> On 10/18/06, John Resig <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
>
>> Well, I don't doubt that people use the lang attribute as intended
>> (considering that I've never made a non-english site) - however,
>> there's certainly never been a need for the ~= selector - which is
>> only
On 10/18/06, John Resig <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Well, I don't doubt that people use the lang attribute as intended
> (considering that I've never made a non-english site) - however,
> there's certainly never been a need for the ~= selector - which is
> only remotely useful with lang-related a
> I've used the lang attribute of the html tag to extract the right
> language for the links in a multilingual top level navigation. This is
> the code i use
>
> var currentLang = $("html").eq(0).attr("lang");
>
> I change the lang attribute with php. by doing that the site is also
> semantically
On 10/18/06, John Resig <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hi Choan -
Hi John, thanks for answering.
> > * Attribute selector [EMAIL PROTECTED] doesn't work (returns any
> > element with a class name)
> > * Attribute selector [EMAIL PROTECTED]|=en] doesn't work (returns any
> > element
> > with a href
David Duymelinck schrieb:
> John Resig schreef:
>> Honestly, I've never seen anyone use
>> the lang attribute - let alone have a need to select it using a CSS
>> selector. Hence the reason for removing it.
>>
> I've used the lang attribute of the html tag to extract the right
> language for th
John Resig schreef:
> Honestly, I've never seen anyone use
> the lang attribute - let alone have a need to select it using a CSS
> selector. Hence the reason for removing it.
>
I've used the lang attribute of the html tag to extract the right
language for the links in a multilingual top level
Ok... I recognized ^= , $= and that was plenty for me! |= seemed
weird, and I thought ~= was for a regex.
On 10/17/06, John Resig <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> > when I saw hreflang, I assumed you supported any attr... what
> > atttibutes do you support?
>
> Ah, you misunderstand me. Any attribut
> when I saw hreflang, I assumed you supported any attr... what
> atttibutes do you support?
Ah, you misunderstand me. Any attribute is supported - that's not the
problem. The |= and ~= operators are not supported. For example ~=
(which is used with hreflang and lang attributes) parses some stran
John,
when I saw hreflang, I assumed you supported any attr... what
atttibutes do you support?
is this another place where you should throw an exception?
On 10/17/06, John Resig <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> Hi Choan -
>
> > * Attribute selector [EMAIL PROTECTED] doesn't work (returns any
> > el
Hi Choan -
> * Attribute selector [EMAIL PROTECTED] doesn't work (returns any
> element with a class name)
> * Attribute selector [EMAIL PROTECTED]|=en] doesn't work (returns any element
> with a hreflang attribute)
>
> Has the support for these selectors been removed?
Yes, I removed support for
Have you tried putting quotes around the values (ie en, es, fill-0)?BlairOn 10/18/06, Choan C. Gálvez <
[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:Hi all.While playing with CSS selectors, I've found some strange things (I'm
using the SVN version, rev 445):* Attribute selector [EMAIL PROTECTED] doesn't work (returns
Hi all.
While playing with CSS selectors, I've found some strange things (I'm
using the SVN version, rev 445):
* Attribute selector [EMAIL PROTECTED] doesn't work (returns any
element with a class name)
* Attribute selector [EMAIL PROTECTED]|=en] doesn't work (returns any element
with a hreflang
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