- From: Benjamin Hawkes-Lewis <bhawkeslewis@googlemail.com>
- Date: Wed, 20 Dec 2006 15:52:09 +0000
Henri Sivonen wrote: > I think eschewing presentational features as a matter of principle > misses the point. The goal behind the principle is independence of > one client device or presentation media. A presentational feature can > be sufficiently independent of particular devices and media if it has > a reasonable presentations on all realistically relevant media. But IMHO "independence of one client device or presentation media" is not /the/ goal of eschewing presentational markup, but rather only one such goal. It's trivial for a screen reader to report presentational information such as <i/>. Disambiguation and ease of restyling are just as important. The same presentation can mean multiple things. Semantic markup disambiguates between <cite/>, <em/>, <dfn/>, and so on. This helps with machine processing and human understanding. And if you want to change italic citations to bold citations, then you don't have to distinguish the citations from the non-citations by hand. You just put a different rule into your stylesheet. -- Benjamin Hawkes-Lewis
Received on Wednesday, 20 December 2006 07:52:09 UTC