- From: Schuyler Duveen <whatwg@graffitiweb.org>
- Date: Sat, 29 Aug 2009 11:22:20 -0400
There is a use case for hierarchical progress elements: e.g. multiple file uploads (or multiple phases). Consider the following example: <progress id="p" max="17" value="5" data-units="MB"> <progress id="current-file-progress" max="2">1</progress> </progress> could be displayed something like this: <style> div {margin:0;padding:0;height:20px;float:left;} </style> <div id="p" style="width:170px;background-color:red;"> <div id="p-prog" style="width:50px;background-color:green;"></div> <div id="current-file-progress" style="width:20px;background-color:yellow"> <div id="f-prog" style="width:10px;background-color:#00FF00"></div> </div> </div> Ian Hickson wrote: > On Sun, 26 Nov 2006, Anne van Kesteren wrote: >> Some element content model explicitly mention that they can't contain >> themself. This probably makes sense for the following elements as well: >> >> * <meter> >> * <progress> >> * <time> >> * <t> >> * <m> >> * <abbr>? >> * <cite>? >> >> There might be more. > > Done for <meter>, <progress>, and <time>. Left the others. >
Received on Saturday, 29 August 2009 08:22:20 UTC