- From: Rachid Finge <rachid@rachid.nl>
- Date: Tue, 02 Oct 2007 18:38:29 +0200
The term 'lede' is more commonly spelled as 'lead' by journalists throughout the world. It seems like a sensible idea, although I'm wondering why you added the P element in your example. Best regards, Rachid Finge Devi Web Development wrote: > This is just an idea for what I consider to be a solidly semantic > element. It isn't necessary nor does it add any new functionality. > However, it removes one more need for additional span elements. > > The lede element is an inline element useful for signifying the lede > in a document. It is commonly used term in journalism for the opening > sentence or two which introduces the article. > More detailed description can be found at > http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/News_style#Terms_and_structure > > > Usage Case: > > <h1>Burmese monks 'to be sent away'</h1> > <p><lede>Thousands of monks detained in Burma's main city of Rangoon > will be sent to prisons in the far north of the country, sources have > told the BBC.</lede> About 4,000 monks have been rounded up in the > past week as the military government has tried to stamp out > pro-democracy protests. They are being held at a disused race course > and a technical college. Sources from a government-sponsored militia > said they would soon be moved away from Rangoon... > > A common styling (in CSS) would be > lede{font-weight:bold} > however, I would not imagine that to be default > > > ------------------------------------------- > Daniel Brumbaugh Keeney > Devi Web Development > Devi.WebMaster at gMail.com <mailto:Devi.WebMaster at gMail.com> > ------------------------------------------- > > -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: <http://lists.whatwg.org/pipermail/whatwg-whatwg.org/attachments/20071002/4de8809a/attachment.htm>
Received on Tuesday, 2 October 2007 09:38:29 UTC