- From: Sander Tekelenburg <st@isoc.nl>
- Date: Fri, 5 Oct 2007 03:19:42 +0200
- To: public-html@w3.org, wai-xtech@w3.org
At 06:27 -0400 UTC, on 2007-10-01, Matthew Raymond wrote: > Sander Tekelenburg wrote: >> At 21:50 -0400 UTC, on 2007-09-27, Matthew Raymond wrote: [...] >>> The |role| attribute is an elegant solution to a problem that doesn't >>> exist. [...] >> >> What about the problem Maciej raised in >> <http://www.w3.org/mid/B2750F31-8ACF-4B46-8D02-44371AEE4C9F@apple.com>, for >> which @role would appear to be a solution? Does that problem not exist? > > I'm not sure what you're referring to. There is no apparent use of > |role| in the message you cite. Forget it. It looks like I misunderstood what you were saying. (I merely meant to say that the problem Maciej noted is real, and that @role might be able to provide a solution.) > Personally, I think a combination of > <link> elements and |id| attributes would serve just fine if you want > auto-assigned or user-assigned keys Your example, <link rel="rolename" href="#myid"> [...] <div id="myid></div>, looks interesting, yes. I have some doubts about it requiring authors to specifiy their intention in two places though. <div meaning="value"> would be easier to author, no? Your example "<div namespace-rolename></div>" doesn't have that problem. But it seems to me that it would be much easier for authors to have a a spec that provides a single attribute with a list of possible values. Perhaps this doesn't have to be a problem if the spec would list all namespace-rolenames clearly together in one section though. [...] > Yes, the |role| attribute could be used, but the point is not whether > you can invent uses for |role|. Agreed. That wasn't my take in <http://www.w3.org/mid/p06240609c31a3f8f5333@%5B192.168.0.101%5D>. Quite the contrary. To use your terminology, Maciej's proposal "invented a use" for @accesskey. My response was essentially that we should look better at the actual problem and that *something* that allows authors to markup the meaning of content would probably allow for much better key-combo's in UAs (because not author-defined). I don't care whether the solution is @role or something else -- just that it is a good solution. [...] -- Sander Tekelenburg The Web Repair Initiative: <http://webrepair.org/>
Received on Friday, 5 October 2007 01:33:29 UTC