Re: [WSG] Semantic Breadcrumbs

2004-12-07 Thread Kay Smoljak
On Wed, 8 Dec 2004 10:54:54 +1300, Andy Kirkwood | MOTIVE <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > Been following the breadcrumb (BC) discussion, and think it may come > down to defining the *purpose* of the BC. Through a process of > distillation I've arrived at the following conclusions; > > The ('correct')

Re: [WSG] Semantic Breadcrumbs

2004-12-07 Thread Andy Kirkwood | MOTIVE
Been following the breadcrumb (BC) discussion, and think it may come down to defining the *purpose* of the BC. Through a process of distillation I've arrived at the following conclusions; The ('correct') semantic markup of a BC should be based on what the BC primarily 'means'. There is the dis

RE: [WSG] Semantic Breadcrumbs

2004-12-07 Thread Peter Tilbrook
Breadcrumbs can be difficult, especially in a "dynamic" or "database driven site, to apply correctly. Of course other issues crop up when using dynamic sites also (search engine safe URL's for example). I've been using ColdFusion for over 9 years and standards - while not specific to CF - are in

Re: [WSG] Semantic Breadcrumbs

2004-12-07 Thread Jeroen Visser [ vizi ]
Paul Farrell wrote: Gday, Am I correct in understanding that an ordered list is the best way of marking up a breadcrumb system that shows where a user has been ? And that an unordered list is appropriate for a breadcrumb (for the lack of a more appropriate term) system that shows a users' position

Re: [WSG] Semantic Breadcrumbs - slightly tangential

2004-12-07 Thread JonathanC
Mordechai Peller wrote on 06/12/2004 09:41:20 PM: > Patrick Lauke wrote: > > >...and discussing the finer points of semantics in a markup > language as coarse and unsuitable as HTML ends up being a tad futile > > > Futile? Perhaps sometimes. Though I must admit, when there is a good > reason to

Re: [WSG] Semantic Breadcrumbs

2004-12-07 Thread JonathanC
At the risk of getting this started up again... (I tend to read my WSG emails in a batch every day or so.) Mordechai Peller wrote on 06/12/2004 09:31:41 PM: > If breadcrumbs show where you are in the site you get: > Level 1 > Level 2 > Level 3 > Level 4 > Level 5 > > If, on the other had, they

RE: [WSG] Semantic Breadcrumbs

2004-12-06 Thread Herrod, Lisa
mbers. all the best, Lisa -Original Message- From: Kevin Futter [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Sent: Tuesday, December 07, 2004 8:44 AM To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Subject: Re: [WSG] Semantic Breadcrumbs On 6/12/04 9:31 PM, "Mordechai Peller" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: >

Re: [WSG] Semantic Breadcrumbs

2004-12-06 Thread Kevin Futter
On 6/12/04 9:31 PM, "Mordechai Peller" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > >> Time to call a truce? >> > I am unwilling to change my view as I've seen no reason to do so; in > fact, I believe even more strongly now in what I'm saying that I did > when this discussion began. If you want to leave it at

Re: [WSG] Semantic Breadcrumbs

2004-12-06 Thread Marilyn Langfeld
Well, I thought it was over, so I didn't send this link. But, since it's not quite, here's a link to several others that might interest some... http://user-experience.org/uefiles/breadcrumbs/ Best regards, Marilyn Langfeld http://www.langfeldesigns.com [EMAIL PROTECTED] +1.301.598.3300 business

re: [WSG] Semantic Breadcrumbs

2004-12-06 Thread Ben Curtis
Mordechai, I too enjoy splitting hairs. I hope no one objects to my chiming in. Breadcrumbs are a construct without a solid definition, from which I think much disagreement arises. Typically, they reflect the notional path to a page (the "path" according to where the user believes themselves t

Re: [WSG] Semantic Breadcrumbs

2004-12-06 Thread Mordechai Peller
Patrick Lauke wrote: ...and discussing the finer points of semantics in a markup language as coarse and unsuitable as HTML ends up being a tad futile Futile? Perhaps sometimes. Though I must admit, when there is a good reason to do so (what's a "good reason" is admittedly subjective) I find spli

Re: [WSG] Semantic Breadcrumbs

2004-12-06 Thread Mordechai Peller
Kevin Futter wrote: "Less important" doesn't mean "not important." Exactly, which is why I didn't say "not important" ... ...which is a reason why it is unlike a sentence. The words of a sentence need their organization within the sentence to be useful. You can slice it and dice it however y

RE: [WSG] Semantic Breadcrumbs

2004-12-06 Thread Patrick Lauke
> From: Natalie Buxton > This discussion has finally convinced me that breadcrumb trails should > not be marked up as lists. > > Without the entire path, it doesn't matter where the actual href goes. > > For instance: I tell a user that the file they want is in the folder > "widgets". They go l

Re: [WSG] Semantic Breadcrumbs

2004-12-05 Thread Kevin Futter
On 6/12/04 4:04 PM, "Mordechai Peller" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > Kevin Futter wrote: > "Less important" doesn't mean "not important." Exactly, which is why I didn't say "not important" ... > >> And therein lies the rub: lists are one-dimensional, as you yourself point >> out >> elsewhere; b

Re: [WSG] Semantic Breadcrumbs

2004-12-05 Thread Mordechai Peller
Kevin Futter wrote: I see breadcrumbs as a complete unit - just as a file path is a complete unit; take out a component and you render it useless. Breadcrumbs and sentences are both whole units, but units of what? Since their component parts are of a different nature, the resulting mark-up shoul

RE: [WSG] Semantic Breadcrumbs

2004-12-05 Thread Andreas Boehmer [Addictive Media]
> -Original Message- > From: Kevin Futter [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] > Sent: Monday, 6 December 2004 3:29 PM > To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] > Subject: Re: [WSG] Semantic Breadcrumbs > And therein > lies the rub: lists are one-dimensional, as you yourself point out > elsewh

Re: [WSG] Semantic Breadcrumbs

2004-12-05 Thread Natalie Buxton
This discussion has finally convinced me that breadcrumb trails should not be marked up as lists. Without the entire path, it doesn't matter where the actual href goes. For instance: I tell a user that the file they want is in the folder "widgets". They go looking for their file in c:/widgets. B

RE: [WSG] Semantic Breadcrumbs

2004-12-05 Thread Paul Farrell
I now need the semantic markup for the can of worms I've opened. ;) > Rick Faaberg wrote: > > >If you leave any "nodes" out, you've lost your way. > > > That's because your missing information; however, each > individual link is unchanged. > > Again, a word isn't very useful outside the context

Re: [WSG] Semantic Breadcrumbs

2004-12-05 Thread Mordechai Peller
Rick Faaberg wrote: If you leave any "nodes" out, you've lost your way. That's because your missing information; however, each individual link is unchanged. Again, a word isn't very useful outside the context of a sentence, however a link is just as useful. -- No virus found in this outgoing me

Re: [WSG] Semantic Breadcrumbs

2004-12-05 Thread Kevin Futter
On 6/12/04 2:23 PM, "Mordechai Peller" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > Kevin Futter wrote: > >> Yes, breadcrumb elements are strongly related in exactly the same way that >> sentence elements (i.e. words) are; and sentences can be rendered with >> precise meaning even if some words are omitted (prep

Re: [WSG] Semantic Breadcrumbs

2004-12-05 Thread Rick Faaberg
On 12/5/04 7:53 PM "Mordechai Peller" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> sent this out: > List aren't two-dimensional, they're one-dimensional, but bent through > two dimensions. Just as the surface of a ball is only two-dimensional, > yet it's bent into three dimensions. Home -> News -> Today's News -> Summary

Re: [WSG] Semantic Breadcrumbs

2004-12-05 Thread Mordechai Peller
Andreas Boehmer [Addictive Media] wrote: Mordechai, according to your explanation a breadcrumb is not a list, as you cannot simply take any of the items out of a breadcrumb. Each item in a breadcrumb is closely related to the preceeding item. Except I also said "the order of an ordered list imparts

Re: [WSG] Semantic Breadcrumbs

2004-12-05 Thread Mordechai Peller
Kevin Futter wrote: Yes, breadcrumb elements are strongly related in exactly the same way that sentence elements (i.e. words) are; and sentences can be rendered with precise meaning even if some words are omitted (prepositions, conjunctions, most adverbs, many adjectives). Not at all in the same wa

Re: [WSG] Semantic Breadcrumbs

2004-12-05 Thread Kevin Futter
On 6/12/04 11:09 AM, "Mordechai Peller" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > Kevin Futter wrote: > >> I don't buy the argument that breadcrumbs *have to be* structured as lists. >> Why? Because they're not a collection of loosely-related list items, like a >> shopping list or such; rather, a unit of brea

Re: [WSG] Semantic Breadcrumbs

2004-12-05 Thread Natalie Buxton
t; > -Original Message- > > From: Mordechai Peller [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] > > Sent: Monday, 6 December 2004 11:10 AM > > To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] > > Subject: Re: [WSG] Semantic Breadcrumbs > > > > A sentence isn't a collection of related item because eac

RE: [WSG] Semantic Breadcrumbs

2004-12-05 Thread Andreas Boehmer [Addictive Media]
> -Original Message- > From: Mordechai Peller [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] > Sent: Monday, 6 December 2004 11:10 AM > To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] > Subject: Re: [WSG] Semantic Breadcrumbs > > A sentence isn't a collection of related item because each word is > dependen

Re: [WSG] Semantic Breadcrumbs

2004-12-05 Thread Mordechai Peller
Kevin Futter wrote: I don't buy the argument that breadcrumbs *have to be* structured as lists. Why? Because they're not a collection of loosely-related list items, like a shopping list or such; rather, a unit of breadcrumbs collectively delineates a *path* to a resource (without resorting to conve

Re: [WSG] Semantic Breadcrumbs

2004-12-05 Thread Kevin Futter
On 6/12/04 10:12 AM, "Jonathan T. Sage" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > I think for this argument, I would go towards the analogy of driving > directions. > > 1.) Go to the Home page > 2.) go the the sub-section etc. > > Just my thought. > > As for your comment about sentences as lists, ever

Re: [WSG] Semantic Breadcrumbs

2004-12-05 Thread Jonathan T. Sage
I think for this argument, I would go towards the analogy of driving directions. 1.) Go to the Home page 2.) go the the sub-section etc. Just my thought. As for your comment about sentences as lists, everybody knows that a sentence isn't a list. It needs to be a graphic since it's reall

Re: [WSG] Semantic Breadcrumbs

2004-12-05 Thread Kevin Futter
On 6/12/04 5:32 AM, "Mordechai Peller" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > Richard Spence wrote: > >> In my opinion a simple string of would work just fine. The >> information that you are trying to display is not really a list. > > I strongly disagree. Breadcrumbs are most definitely a list of links

Re: [WSG] Semantic Breadcrumbs

2004-12-05 Thread Gavin Cooney
I asked this question on WSG before and there was some interesting options. http://www.mail-archive.com/wsg@webstandardsgroup.org/msg08838.html Regards Gavin ** The discussion list for http://webstandardsgroup.org/ See http://webstandardsgro

Re: [WSG] Semantic Breadcrumbs

2004-12-05 Thread Mordechai Peller
Richard Spence wrote: In my opinion a simple string of would work just fine. The information that you are trying to display is not really a list. I strongly disagree. Breadcrumbs are most definitely a list of links; they're even normally represented as a horizontal list. A list, according to "

Re: [WSG] Semantic Breadcrumbs

2004-12-04 Thread Jixor - Stephen I
Patrick Lauke wrote: From: Paul Farrell Am I correct in understanding that an ordered list is the best way of marking up a breadcrumb system that shows where a user has been ? For my own part, I'd say yes (as the steps are in order, and the order is important)...but other people may ha

Re: [WSG] Semantic Breadcrumbs

2004-12-03 Thread Paul Novitski
At 04:17 PM 12/3/04, Richard Spence wrote: In my opinion a simple string of would work just fine. The information that you are trying to display is not really a list. So a string of anchor links in a paragraph or span would work the best. 1) Homey thatched cottage with warm hearth 2) Known fr

Re: [WSG] Semantic Breadcrumbs

2004-12-03 Thread Lea de Groot
On Fri, 03 Dec 2004 17:17:19 -0700, Richard Spence wrote: > In my opinion a simple string of would work just fine. The > information that you are trying to display is not really a list. So > a string of anchor links in a paragraph or span would work the best. One of the reasons people don't u

RE: [WSG] Semantic Breadcrumbs

2004-12-03 Thread Paul Farrell
Yeah, I think I am leaning that way. In my case I will be using a breadcrumb as 'Where You Are' rather than 'How You Got Here'. I maybe thinking along the wrong lines... But unstyled markup would appear more intuitive (to me) as a string of links separated, for example, by a '>' symbol. I guess i

Re: [WSG] Semantic Breadcrumbs

2004-12-03 Thread Richard Spence
Paul Farrell wrote: Gday, Am I correct in understanding that an ordered list is the best way of marking up a breadcrumb system that shows where a user has been ? And that an unordered list is appropriate for a breadcrumb (for the lack of a more appropriate term) system that shows a users' position

RE: [WSG] Semantic Breadcrumbs

2004-12-03 Thread Patrick Lauke
> From: Paul Farrell > Am I correct in understanding that an ordered list is the best way of > marking up a breadcrumb system that shows where a user has been ? For my own part, I'd say yes (as the steps are in order, and the order is important)...but other people may have other ideas of what is

[WSG] Semantic Breadcrumbs

2004-12-03 Thread Paul Farrell
Gday, Am I correct in understanding that an ordered list is the best way of marking up a breadcrumb system that shows where a user has been ? And that an unordered list is appropriate for a breadcrumb (for the lack of a more appropriate term) system that shows a users' position in relation to sit