Hi Maciej,
On Nov 14, 2008, at 5:19 PM, Maciej Stachowiak wrote:
On Nov 14, 2008, at 3:14 PM, Rob Burns wrote:
Hi Maciej,
On Nov 14, 2008, at 5:07 PM, Maciej Stachowiak wrote:
On Nov 14, 2008, at 2:48 PM, Rob Burns wrote:
On Nov 14, 2008, at 4:01 PM, Maciej Stachowiak wrote:
One particularly wrong aspect of the original assumption is that
in practice, a single <map> and all its <area>s can be used by
multiple <img> elements. So representing focus of individual
image map active areas by making the <area> node focused won't
really work - it doesn't fit into the single focus ring model,
since just focus on the <area> node doesn't tell you which image
map is active.
Let me add that image maps also apply to input elements of type
image and object elements when they embed a still image (content-
type image/*).
This is a completely unrelated issue, and your claim of what image
maps apply to is inconsistent with the current HTML5 draft. I know
you have a longstanding disagreement with this aspect of the HTML5
spec, but this is probably not a point where the WebKit project
would want to diverge from the spec.
I just want to remind you that the HTML5 spec is only a draft. The
editor predicts a final version in over a decade. So I don't think
we need to treat it as authoritative. Also in the future when
citing violations of a spec, it would be best to provide a specific
reference so other's can follow your reading of that spec. As for
this issue of AREA element's I'm not sure how you're reading what I
proposed as a violation of any spec.
In HTML5, image maps do not apply to input elements of type image.
You have in the past filed bug reports against WebKit requesting
support for this, or smuggled it into other requests, without citing
the current state of the spec. I think that is disingenuous. WebKit
developers deserve fair warning so they don't accidentally rely on
your representations instead of the spec.
I'm not sure why you're lobbing these hostilities. I was simply trying
to help the original poster understand how they might go about
implementing what they wanted to implement. I mentioned object and
input of type image for completeness sake. I really don't care that
much about that topic (and neither does the original poster
probably). Regardless, HTML5 is following implementors in drafting
the spec, so if WebKit handles image maps on image buttons properly,
I'm sure the editor will add it to a future HTML5 draft.
Take care,
Rob
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