Jonathan Worent wrote:

The argument that no-one would use it is pointless. There are plenty of 
elements in the spec right
now that aren't likely to be used often, but they're still in the spec because they have merit.

No, the argument that no one would use it is important. More elements => more complex spec which is harder to implement /and to use/. Making HTML harder to use is a real cost (compare HTML to e.g. Docbook) which needs to be outweighed by a benefit. As far as I can see, no-one has presented a convincing use case for a deemphasis element - certianly the most common argument has been "well we have emphasis so obviously we need deemphasis" which is a lousy justification. Unless there is some UA feature that would be enabled by such an element, and some evidence that people would use the element in the correct way in sufficient numbers to make the feature useful, the element should not exist. It is true that several existing HTML elements do not meet this criteria; that is IMHO an unfortunate piece of history that we need not replicate.

--
"Eternity's a terrible thought. I mean, where's it all going to end?"
 -- Tom Stoppard, Rosencrantz and Guildenstern are Dead

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