- From: Murray Maloney <murray@muzmo.com>
- Date: Sun, 06 May 2007 10:49:41 -0400
- To: Terje Bless <link@pobox.com>
- Cc: public-html@w3.org,www-html@w3.org
At 03:46 AM 5/6/2007 +0200, Terje Bless wrote: >murray@muzmo.com (Murray Maloney) wrote: > >>At 05:26 PM 5/5/2007 +0100, Philip & Le Khanh wrote: >>>Forgive my na\"\i vety, but which authority are you citing when >>>you make this statement ? >> >>The authority of someone with 30+ years as a technical writer, >>20+ years in SGML, HTML, XML and so on, and an original member >>of the earliest HTML Working Groups. > >Ah, good old argumentum ad verecundiam. Somehow I suspect this was not the >meaning of the word “authority†Philip intended in his query. >Although, with that weight of expertise I can understand how you might get >them confused. Ah well, then feel free to dismiss my contribution. Do you need a citation that somewhat supports my position? How about the June 1993 Internet Draft for HTML: http://www.w3.org/MarkUp/draft-ietf-iiir-html-01.txt [[ EM Emphasis, typically italic. STRONG Stronger emphasis, typically bold. B Boldface, where available, otherwise alternative mapping allowed. I Italic font (or slanted if italic unavailable). ]] I reordered the list to suit my purposes. In 1993 Tim and Dan realized that B and I might be mapped to other typefaces. Since the evolution of CSS, everyone has understood how easy it is to re-map <b> and <i>. So you see, <b> and <i> do not force the use of bold or italic typefaces -- they merely suggest as much by falling back to bold and italic in most graphical UIs. Regards, Murray
Received on Sunday, 6 May 2007 14:50:41 UTC