- From: Charles McCathieNevile <charlesn@sunrise.srl.rmit.edu.au>
- Date: Tue, 21 Apr 1998 19:32:44 +1000 (EST)
- To: Suzan Dolloff <averil@concentric.net>
- cc: WAI <w3c-wai-ig@w3.org>
In response to the question at the bottom: LONGDESC seems to be a formalisation within HTML of the D-link convention. Unfortuantely as far as I know there are no browsers which implement it. So using it exclusively is probably much stupider than relying on D-links - at least they are accessible at the moment. My preference for using both is based on the real-world situation that there will be people relying on older browsers for at least the next year or so, and probably longer. (Remember that some blind users, for example, have decided to use IE3 in preference to IE4 for accessibilty reasons.) The neatest way of including a D-link, which I saw at WWW7 presented by some ATRC folks from Toronto, was an image of the same height as the one being described, of minimal width ( 1 pixel for example ) with ALT="D-link". Where images are not spaced (this can be specified) it would provide clean pages for design-oriented authors who are loath to leave little "D"s all over their pages, and a neat linking system that could be understood by all browsers and folks. I am not sure if this is a slight extension to the convention, or if it is currently common to use image-based D-links. Charles McCathieNevile On Tue, 21 Apr 1998, Suzan Dolloff wrote: > Hello. > [snip] > I'm wondering if you could elaborate on your reason for preferring D links > in addition to, or in conjunction with, LONGDESC? From responses I received > the last time I mentioned liking D links, I take it most view that option > as an interim solution. Personally, I'd hate to see a good idea go by the > wayside, and I'm afraid D links will. > > Just curious. > > Ree' Dolloff > designs by dolloff - http://dbdweb.com/ > Avenue Averil - http://www.concentric.net/~Averil/ > Fade to Black - http://www.geocities.com/Wellesley/7757/
Received on Tuesday, 21 April 1998 05:51:55 UTC