- From: Nick Barreto <nick@canelo.co>
- Date: Wed, 27 Apr 2016 08:14:27 +0100
- To: Florian Rivoal <florian@rivoal.net>
- Cc: ishida@w3.org, W3C Digital Publishing IG <public-digipub-ig@w3.org>, www International <www-international@w3.org>
- Message-ID: <CAMsQQ_xo8vmrkyd6NA=DP2kQeJZBOBa5XQHm-+Rrie5XmjOO1g@mail.gmail.com>
> > Unlike sentence ending periods, quotation marks do change based on the > styling of the document (more so for blockquote than for q, but still). How semantically different are <q> and <blockquote>, apart from <q> clearly being inline? Or have I just described the entire difference? Nick Barreto *Co-founder & Technology Director**CANELO *| www.canelo.co @canelo_co <https://twitter.com/canelo_co> | @nickbarreto <http://www.twitter.com/nickbarreto> On 27 April 2016 at 02:28, Florian Rivoal <florian@rivoal.net> wrote: > > > On Apr 27, 2016, at 01:20, ishida@w3.org wrote: > > > > I figured it would be good to start a thread where we can address the > wider questions that kept popping up on the other thread that was focused > on the styling in the HTML5 rendering section. > > > > Here we get to put pros and cons for the existence of the q element, > suggestions for improving it, advice about when to not use it, ideas about > what's needed above and beyond it, etc. I think CSS styling of quotes is > probably in scope too, since it's hard to talk about the markup without the > styling support. > > > > It may help to limit the scope, however, just to *actual quotations*, > rather than all the other things people stick 'quote marks' around, just in > order to prevent a situation of herding cats. > > > > So please reply to this. It's likely to be a long thread with diverse > opinions. That's ok, but please try not to make unsubstantiated > assertions. Please use examples where you can, to help people get your > point. And please be kind to other thread participants. > > > > I'll contribute some ideas later when i can carve out some time. I do > have some concerns. At some point, i'll try to summarise the pros, cons > and suggestions. > > > Needing to style something is not necessarily a proof that some semantic > element is needed, but it is at least strong evidence. > > Quotes are often italicized or made to stand out in one way or another. If > rendered to a speech medium this is a good place to change voice, or to do > something like "@media speech { q::before { content: "quote" } }". If we > didn't have a q element, we'd often see <span class=quote> in markup. > > This makes it different from a hypothetical sentence element. Just like > quotes, sentence are semantically meaningful pieces of content. However, > even though we don't have a sentence element, and we hardly ever see <span > class=sentence> in markup. > > In addition to styling, this is also reinforced by the fact that switching > language for a quote isn't that rare, while switching language for a > sentence that isn't a quote or in a separate paragraph or some other > containing element doesn't happen all that much. > > So since we're mostly going to mark up quotes anyway, we might as well > have a standard element for it rather than everybody using their span soup. > And going through a document programmatically to extract quotes is also not > a crazy thing to do, so here as well, dedicated markup helps. > > The question of punctuation is more tricky. > > Like quotes, one could imagine generating the punctuation for a > hypothetical sentence element. > > sentence::after {content: ". "} > sentence:lang(ja)::after {content: "。"} > > But nobody does this. Maybe generating the punctuation for quote is just > as silly, and we don't see it because we're all too used to the q element. > However, I don't think so. Unlike sentence ending periods, quotation marks > do change based on the styling of the document (more so for blockquote than > for q, but still). > > All in all it is pretty clear to me that there should be an element for > quotes, and that it should be possible to change what the quotation marks > with css. I think this leaves basically two possibilities: > > (1) What we have today: > Markup: > <q>something someone said</q> > UA stylysheet: > q::before {content: open-quote} > q::after {content: close-quote} > > (2) Some other elements where quotes are in the markup, but identified so > that you can replace them. > Markup: > <quote><oq>“</oq>something someone said<cq>”</cq></quote> > UA stylesheet: nothing > > In both cases, you can in css remove the quotation marks or replace them. > I think the meaningful differences are: > > (a) Is it important to have quotation marks if the markup is rendered > without any styling at all? If yes, and if we assume that such a > css-incapable UA would know enough about HTML to tell apart block level > elements from inline elements (otherwise the whole thing is mostly > unusable), but not enough to know that the q element needs quotation marks, > (2) is the way to go. > > (b) If it is not practical to write css rules that will generate the right > type of quotation marks most of the time, authors will need to turn off > (q::before, q::after {content:none} ) the automatic quotation mark > generation and write the punctuation in the markup instead, in which case > they might as well use (2). > > If (a) and (b) aren't issues, (1) is as capable as (2), and much less > verbose. > > I am somewhat sympathetical to (a), but not to (b), as I believe it is > perfectly practical to write in the UA stylesheet rules that will generate > appropriate quotation marks in most situations (see the other thread for > what these rules should be). > > We could provide some backward compatible hybrid solution that lets > authors mix and match as they feel is appropriate: > > Markup: > <quote><oq>“</oq><q>something someone said</q><cq>”</cq></quote> > <q>something someone said</q> > UA stylesheet: > q::before {content: open-quote} > q::after {content: close-quote} > quote > q::before, quote > q::after { content: none } > > However, I doubt many people care about (a) in practice, or that many > people have issues with the quotes provided by the browser on the q > element, so I suspect this markup pattern would not see much usage. I could > be wrong though. > > - Florian >
Received on Wednesday, 27 April 2016 07:15:36 UTC