- From: Bjartur Thorlacius <svartman95@gmail.com>
- Date: Tue, 25 Jan 2011 16:28:50 +0000
On 1/24/11, Ian Hickson <ian at hixie.ch> wrote: > On Mon, 24 Jan 2011, Bjartur Thorlacius wrote: >> >> But then, when should hyperlinks be created with <link>s? > > More or less never. <link> links don't show on most Web browsers. > IMO browsers should implement <link>. <link> should be implementable cross-browser in CSS. > >> And what happened to @rel=related being the default relation? > > Not sure to what you are referring. > Sorry, my memory failed me. There is no default relation in HTML 4. > >> Navigation links are clearly metadata, belonging to <head>. > > How do you distinguish what is data vs what is metadata? > Generally, I categorize everything which isn't mentioned in the <title> or Content-Description (or would be, as there's usually none). No document would be described as " My actual concern regard navigation links not forming a part of the linear body of the document, but still being in <body>. Navigation links will most likely be rendered "out of band," potentially only on demand and paged/scrolled seperately from the body, or at the end of the document in one dimensional renderings (such as audio and text streams). They might even be triggered without being rendered at all, such as by scrolling out of range of the current document. >> For the record links and links2 render all hyperlinks (including ones >> with unrecognized values of @rel). > > Noted.
Received on Tuesday, 25 January 2011 08:28:50 UTC