Acording to the WHAT-WG the small element does have semantic meaning.
I don't have the link though. They basically said that it was good for
things like 'small print' and such cases. I think small is an unusal
case here and is meanigful and useful.
Alan Trick
Matt Thommes wrote:
Is there any
Alan Trick wrote:
Acording to the WHAT-WG the small element does have semantic meaning.
I don't have the link though. They basically said that it was good for
things like 'small print' and such cases. I think small is an unusal
case here and is meanigful and useful.
Alan Trick
I think
Is there any reason at all to ever use small, and big?
I know they are visual elements, but I thought I heard somewhere
that small represents a tonal adjustment, for screen readers - such
as *lowering* the tone of voice.
em and strong provide levels of emphasis - but is there an
opposite to