On 7/13/06, Sho Kuwamoto [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Exactly my point. There are two competing schema living in the same
document: the world of HTML (semantically poor and unextensible), and
the world of microformats. While this works out OK usually, I believe
there are cases where the two worlds
On Jul 12, 2006, at 5:49 PM, John Allsopp wrote:
Tantek (and others)
As I have too much time on my hands :-) Another draft response to
some /. comments
[SDC=Slashdot comment, MFR=Micrformats response]
SDC: Mixing presentation and data - good... bad... good. But it
gets better a little,
While I agree that the use of the class attribute in microformats is
consistent with the intended use (i.e., to embed semantic information
into HTML), I think there are some subtle gotchas to consider.
My recollection is that when span and class were introduced, there
were a lot of people who
Michael Leikam wrote:
spans and h4s are not structurally equivalent. span
and div tags are general structural markup, while heading
tags are specifically defined in relation to other heading
tags. Collectively they define an outline for the page,
while the set of spans on a page defines
On Jul 13, 2006, at 3:17 PM, Sho Kuwamoto wrote:
Depending on the look I wanted to achieve, I might find myself needing
to surround, say, the first three divs by another div (let's call it
leftColumn because there is no semantic relationship between these
three sections).
Why isn't leftColumn