- From: Matthew Raymond <mattraymond@earthlink.net>
- Date: Sun, 04 Jul 2004 21:58:04 -0400
=== Elements === 1) The <datalist> element. This element is a container for <option> elements, and is used in the creation of drop-down lists via the use of the |list| attribute. (See the Attributes section.) Similar to the <select> element in most user agents, all children of the <datalist> element that are not <option> elements will be ignored by a WF2-compliant user agent. Example: <input type="text" name="combo" list="myList"> <datalist id="myList"> <label> or select from the list:</label> <select name="combo"> <option>Item 1</option> <option>Item 2</option> <option>Item 3</option> </select> </datalist> I disapprove of this tag for two reasons. The first is that it depends on abusive markup for it to properly degrade in a legacy UA. The second reason is that you can accomplish the same thing using the ignore attribute without introducing a new element. === Attributes === 1) The |data| attribute. I think we've all agreed about this one. I don't recall hearing an objection to it. This attribute is used to load list items into a <select> or <datalist>. Example: <select id="myList" name="combo" data="dropdown.xml"> 2) The |ignore| attribute. The |ignore| attribute is an idea I came up with but haven't gotten any replies on. A tag with this attribute set to "true" will not be rendered and any associated scripting will not run. The same is true for all children of the tag. As a result, the attribute turns its respective element and all its children into something similar to a comment, except that all the elements affected remain in the DOM. Changing this attribute to "false" (the default value) will effectively "uncomment" the element and all its children. Example: <script language="ECMAScript" src="nonWF2.js" ignore="true"></script> 3) The |list| attribute. I think we've all agreed about this one as well. Generally, this is an attribute for the <input> element that contains the ID of a list of options that will be used as a drop-down menu associated with the <input>. Example: <input type="text" name="combo" list="myList"> <label ignore="true" > or select from the list: <select id="myList" name="combo"> <option>Item 1</option> <option>Item 2</option> <option>Item 3</option> </select> </label>
Received on Sunday, 4 July 2004 18:58:04 UTC