- From: Jim Jewett <jimjjewett@gmail.com>
- Date: Wed, 16 Sep 2009 13:45:41 -0400
In http://lists.whatwg.org/pipermail/whatwg-whatwg.org/2009-September/023005.html, Ian quoted Erik Vorhes as writing: >> Put another way, if you had no prior knowledge of the current HTML5 >> definition of <cite> (and perhaps any other specification's definition >> of the element), what would seem to be logical and appropriate uses of >> the element? Ian: > You mean based on just the element name? I wouldn't use it without reading > the spec first. Most people seem to think it means "italics", though, for > what that's worth. I think that gets at the root of the problem with cite. Most people don't read the spec, or even know where to find it. cite isn't common enough to just copy by example, and it turns out to be ambiguous as the name of an element or attribute. Do you wrap the actual excerpt (the precise thing you're citing), or the name of the source? If you wrap the name/title of the source, is there a way to show the scope of what you're attributing? The HTML 4 definition ("CITE: Contains a citation or a reference to other sources.") didn't help much, but I'm not sure it can be fixed by a spec change. If you have to look it up, then only careful people will use it properly. (On the other hand, if there is any HTML element whose users are likely to be extra careful, cite is a strong candidate.) My own interpretation of (a fraction of) http://philip.html5.org/data/cite.txt did not support narrowing the definition only to titles. For example (1) Examples of citing a person, arguably the creator. (1a) http://www.hiddenmickeys.org/Movies/MaryPoppins.html The cite element is used to give credit to the person who found/verified each "Hidden Mickey": <CITE>REPORTED: <A HREF="mailto:...">Beverly O'Dell</A> 12 MAR 98</CITE> <CITE>UPDATE: Greg Bevier 29 JUL 98</CITE> (1b) http://www.webporter.com -- they give the author of the article. But it looks like they (at least sometimes) include the title as well, which fits under full citation. (1c) http://www.thesentencegame.com/ -- a link to the snipped author. (1d) http://drotner.com/squirtboating/ -- the phototographer and subject <cite class="subject">Paddler: Kelly McCauley</cite> <cite class="attribution">Photo: April McCauley, 2001</cite> These do seem useful; if you wanted more information, it might well be "How do I contact this photographer or that model to get something similar?" (2) Several uses -- and several *non-uses* for titles from http://www.growndodo.com/wordplay/oulipo/ The page begins with carefully attributed blockquotes. These are *not* done with cite, presumably because it didn't seem flexible enough. Instead, it was marked up as <p class="quote">... <p class="citation"> <span class="citationauthor">François Le Lionnais</span>, <span class="citationsource">Lipo: First Manifesto</span></p> Within the text, <cite> was used to point to source materials, but there didn't seem to be anything qouted; in most cases the texts were used as example objects of study; if they actually need a title markup, then so does the specific Viking ship in Leif's example. Sample usage: <cite>S + 7</cite> (substrata ("novelette" + 7) does appear to be a title. At the end of the page, there is a further readings section. <dt>author<cite>title</cite>publisher</dt> is used for printed reference books but <p class="linklist"><a href ...> is used for equivalent references on the web, and cite is also used to name the professor of a course <cite>4-5 units, <a href="http://www.centerforbookculture.org/dalkey/bio_gsorrentino.html">Sorrentino</a></cite> (3) Example of usage as per HTML5 http://www.pacifier.com/~tpope/ (4) Example of italics -- though they may be going for the "commendation" meaning of cite: http://www.patriagrande.net/guatemala/otto.htm (5) Clearly just for italics -- http://www.truck-town.com/ (6) http://www.winthrop.dk/hender.html -- Using it to wrap the portion of your own text that was "cited" as opposed to original. That said, I can't rule out that it was just a way to get italics; later on the page, there was cites for "shot heard round the world" (title of event?) and "revolutionaries" (describing the original settlers). -jJ
Received on Wednesday, 16 September 2009 10:45:41 UTC