- From: Lachlan Hunt <lachlan.hunt@iinet.net.au>
- Date: Wed, 30 Jun 2004 15:12:36 +1000
voracity wrote: > Better. Popup is a little generic, though; you can't infer that it's a > list of data from the name. It could be a popup form, or a list of > actions. Perhaps <datalist>? ... > OTOH, if you want generic lists, you could of course define a <list> > tag, We already have a generic list element. I'm sure you've heard of it ? it's called <ul>. Why reinvent the wheel, when it rolls out a list just fine? > and then have a 'type' attribute to specialise it for whatever > purpose you want (since there is no <list> tag atm). I don't like the idea of overloading the type attribute any more than it currently is in HTML 4. XHTML 2 is fixing that by making type only represent the content type of an external resource, and (currently) in some situations the content type of the content within the element (as in <style> and <script>). Ideally, the type attribute should only represent the content type of an external resource, but we'll have to wait and see if that small inconsistency can be fixed or not. OTOH, HTML 4 uses the type attribute for 10 different reasons on different elements (some presentationally), so please don't overload it any more. -- Lachlan Hunt lachlan.hunt at lachy.id.au http://www.lachy.id.au/
Received on Tuesday, 29 June 2004 22:12:36 UTC