- From: Lachlan Hunt <lachlan.hunt@lachy.id.au>
- Date: Thu, 08 Feb 2007 09:20:09 +1100
Leons, you forgot to CC the list. Leons Petrazickis wrote: > Lachlan Hunt wrote: >> <m> is for highlighting text that is of some interest to the reader, but >> it does not alter the meaning of the text itself. > > Would you say that <em> is semantic and <m> is presentational, with > the difference from <span> is in default formatting? Or is "meaning" > not quite the right word - is <m> like a highlighter in revision > change tracking, meant to be seen and then discarded? No, <m> does have semantics. It marks a specific point of interest, as you might do with a highlighter, it just doesn't alter the meaning of the text itself. <m> isn't really needed for revision tracking, we have <ins> and <del> for that. Though, another use case is that it could be used to mark a section that needs to be reviewed and/or edited later. That could be particularly useful collaborative editing, like in a wiki. That's often what I use the highlighter tool for in MS Word. -- Lachlan Hunt http://lachy.id.au/
Received on Wednesday, 7 February 2007 14:20:09 UTC