Re: [whatwg] rendering WebSRT cue parts in use for subtitling songs

2010-10-24 Thread Silvia Pfeiffer
On Tue, Oct 19, 2010 at 3:39 AM, Tab Atkins Jr. wrote: > On Sat, Oct 16, 2010 at 4:18 PM, Silvia Pfeiffer > wrote: >> I would expect a style of rendering where all words are first >> displayed in ordinary display and e.g. painted in a different color as >> the time reaches them. Something like: >

Re: [whatwg] rendering WebSRT cue parts in use for subtitling songs

2010-10-18 Thread Tab Atkins Jr.
On Sat, Oct 16, 2010 at 4:18 PM, Silvia Pfeiffer wrote: > I would expect a style of rendering where all words are first > displayed in ordinary display and e.g. painted in a different color as > the time reaches them. Something like: > > ::cue { >  color: black; > } > > // this is in-valid as per

Re: [whatwg] rendering WebSRT cue parts in use for subtitling songs

2010-10-18 Thread Diogo Resende
Maybe the browser could simulate :hover (or :focus) for those words so it would be easy to style it. -- Diogo On Sun, 2010-10-17 at 10:18 +1100, Silvia Pfeiffer wrote: > I've just looked into using WebSRT for subtitling songs where I'm also > using it to provide more detailed timing on the indi

[whatwg] rendering WebSRT cue parts in use for subtitling songs

2010-10-16 Thread Silvia Pfeiffer
I've just looked into using WebSRT for subtitling songs where I'm also using it to provide more detailed timing on the individual words within the cue. This can obviously used for Karaoke-style display, but is also very educational for learning the lyrics to a song or even for a deaf person to foll