- From: Kristof Zelechovski <giecrilj@stegny.2a.pl>
- Date: Wed, 30 Jul 2008 10:29:35 +0200
The element you are describing is effectively a progress bar control. It is still not present in HTML; however, it can be emulated using an OUTPUT control with layout or with invisible text and a custom background: <SPAN STYLE="COLOR: RED; BACKGROUND: RED; BORDER: THIN SOLID BLACK" >***********</SPAN > Alternatively, if you scorn at the number of asterisks, you can use <INPUT TYPE=TEXT SIZE=13 DISABLED>. This has the disadvantage of being irrelevant to screen readers. HTH, Chris -----Original Message----- From: whatwg-bounces@lists.whatwg.org [mailto:whatwg-bounces at lists.whatwg.org] On Behalf Of Ian Hickson Sent: Wednesday, July 30, 2008 5:08 AM To: Matthew Paul Thomas Cc: WHATWG Subject: Re: [whatwg] <img> element comments On Sun, 14 Oct 2007, Matthew Paul Thomas wrote: > On Oct 14, 2007, at 2:03 AM, Henri Sivonen wrote: > > > > I don't think "If both attributes are specified, then the ratio of the > > specified width to the specified height must be the same as the ratio > > of the logical width to the logical height in the image file." solves > > any real problem given what browsers already have to implement, so I'd > > remove that sentence. > > As a real-world example, Launchpad currently stretches the width of > static images to produce simple bar charts of how much particular > software packages have been localized. > <https://translations.launchpad.net/ubuntu> > > We have to specify both width= and height= for the images, because > specifying width= alone causes w3m to stretch the images vertically to > maintain their aspect ratio. Meanwhile, elsewhere we're using <canvas>, > so we should really be declaring our pages to be HTML 5 site-wide. > > The sentence Henri quoted would require us to choose between server-side > generation of every chart image, incompatibility with w3m, or > non-conformance with any HTML specification. I know w3m isn't exactly a > major browser, but I don't see any good reason for having to make that > choice. As far as I'm aware, the behaviour you describe for w3m matches what all the UAs do. I'm not sure that this usage of <img> is one that the spec today considers valid. Wouldn't <canvas> be the better way to do this?
Received on Wednesday, 30 July 2008 01:29:35 UTC