- From: Adrian Sutton <adrian.sutton@ephox.com>
- Date: Tue, 01 May 2007 12:48:23 +1000
On 1/5/07 9:52 AM, "Sander Tekelenburg" <st at isoc.nl> wrote: > At 15:01 -0700 UTC, on 2007-04-30, Maciej Stachowiak wrote: > What's even more weird is the idea to consider content non-/conforming > depending on how it was authored. I can't believe the implications of that > were given serious thought. (Not to mention specifically granting wannabe > 'WYSIWYG' editors special status. WYSIWYG has nothing to do with the Web -- > people wildly disagree over what "WYSIWYG" means in the context of the Web. > So even if there is some sound argument behind allowing <font>, tying it to > some undefined tool is useless -- at best everyone authoring <font> will > bother to claim to be a WYSIWG editor.) The only debate about what a WYSIWYG editor is on the web is between a very strict interpretation (it must look precisely like what you get) and the What You See Is What You Mean editors. The term WYSIWYG really shouldn't be a concern for any reasonable person reading the spec. I've been working in this area for around 6 years now and I've never met anyone even semi-technical that didn't immediately understand the term WYSIWYG and know what it meant in terms of HTML editors. If you outlaw the <font> tag, you'll just get <span style="font-family: ..."> instead which has no more semantic benefit and is far more difficult to work with. That said, in general I recommend configuring the editor so it doesn't have a font menu and use predefined CSS styles instead, but few people ever take that advice. Regards, Adrian Sutton. ______________________ Adrian Sutton, Integrations Product Manager Phone +61 (7) 3858 0118 Mobile +61 (4) 222-36329 Ephox <http://www.ephox.com/> , Ephox Blogs <http://planet.ephox.com/>
Received on Monday, 30 April 2007 19:48:23 UTC