- From: Steve Dennis <admin@subcide.com>
- Date: Wed, 5 May 2010 21:39:35 +0100
On 5/05/2010, at 9:09 PM, Christoph P?per wrote: > Eitan Adler: >> >> A type="username" is added to the input element. type="username" would MUST only be used for the name that is used to log in to the site. It MUST NOT be used for registration forms or anything else that requires a username. A form MAY have up to one (but not more) type="username" input field. > > I agree with whomever mentioned that > > <form role=login> > > seems more appropriate. Anyhow, I wondered whether it makes sense to apply microformats to such forms, perhaps reusing ?hcard?: > > <form class=vcard role=login method=post action="./"> > <input type=text name=username class=nickname> > <input type=password name=password> > <input type=submit> > </form> > > Nick and user name are probably not the same all that often and differ by site, so this probably doesn?t make sense at all. Still, form field semantics (?name?/?id? and ?class? or ?role?) may improve through some kind of standardization, although names shouldn?t be as clumsy as in RFC 3106 (ECML: Field Specifications for E-Commerce) when applied to HTML forms. > > <form action="http://ecom.example.com" method=post class=Ecom> > <fieldset class=Payment-Card> > <legend>Please enter card information</legend> > <label class=Name>Your name on the card > <input type=text name="Ecom_Payment_Card_Name" size=40> > </label> > <label class=Number>The card number > <input type=text name="Ecom_Payment_Card_Number" size=19> > </label> > <label class=ExpDate>Expiration date (MM YY) > <input type=month class=Month name="Ecom_Payment_Card_ExpDate_Month" size=2> > <input type=year class=Year name="Ecom_Payment_Card_ExpDate_Year" size=4> > </label> > <input type=hidden class=Protocol name="Ecom_Payment_Card_Protocol"> > </fieldset> > <input type=hidden class=SchemaVersion name="Ecom_SchemaVersion" value="http://www.ecml.org/version/1.1"> > <input type=submit> <input type=reset> > </form> I don't know if it's relevant, but if we're thinking backwards compatibility, keep in mind earlier versions of ASP.NET only allow one form per page, so wrapping a login in a form tag isn't really an option. Someone tell me if I'm wrong on that though, I'm just a designer :) -- Steve Dennis www.subcide.com
Received on Wednesday, 5 May 2010 13:39:35 UTC