- From: Nathan Heagy <nheagy@point2.com>
- Date: Wed, 7 Dec 2005 16:59:09 -0600
> menu n. A list of available options. If the definition of menu is too vague then couldn't we include <ul> and <ol>? Especially since people make dynamic menus with these right now. However, imho ideally the menubar would be powerful enough to turn into something like MS Office 12's ribbon. When I consider how that might look in html I think that ultaflexible menus within menus would work nicely. N -----Original Message----- From: whatwg-bounces@lists.whatwg.org [mailto:whatwg-bounces at lists.whatwg.org] On Behalf Of Ian Hickson Sent: December 7, 2005 4:17 PM To: Matthew Raymond Cc: whatwg at whatwg.org; Lachlan Hunt Subject: Re: [whatwg] Menus, fallback, and backwards compatibility: ideas wanted On Fri, 2 Dec 2005, Matthew Raymond wrote: > > That's not a menu. It's a MENUBAR. What's the difference? I would argue that the following are all the same: * menubars * pull-down menus * drop-down menus * context menus * toolbars They're just different presentations of the same underlying concept: lists of commands or options. menu n. A list of available options. This is why I think it makes sense to use one menu to describe all of them. Now, there is a small difference between context menus and the others in the list above in that context menus are irrelevant until activated on specific items, so we need a way to mark them. There's also a practical difference between <menu> as implemented today and <menu> as we want it to work (with natively implemented dynamic UI), so we need a way to mark those too. This is why I was thinking of an attribute on <menu>. -- Ian Hickson U+1047E )\._.,--....,'``. fL http://ln.hixie.ch/ U+263A /, _.. \ _\ ;`._ ,. Things that are impossible just take longer. `._.-(,_..'--(,_..'`-.;.'
Received on Wednesday, 7 December 2005 14:59:09 UTC