- From: Neil St.Laurent <neil@bigpic.com>
- Date: Fri, 15 Aug 1997 10:00:40 -0600
- To: Peter Flynn <pflynn@imbolc.ucc.ie>
- CC: www-html@w3.org, www-style@w3.org
> You're barking up the wrong tree. HTML wan't designed to do any kind > of layout. That's a matter for browser and stylesheets. Nothing in > HTML prohibits or encourages either portrait or landscape designs.. MAybe HTML 4.0 doesn't, nor does HTML in theory, but ALIGN=LEFT, ALIGN=right, are both portrait oriented. Almost any place that has the ALIGN attribute was strictly for portrait, very few things have/support VALIGN to any usefulness. Consider even: <BR CLEAR="LEFT|RIGHT|ALL">. <HR>, where's <VR>? But it is true the pure SGML (not as implemented by HTML) doesn't prohibit a model that would allow for horizontal representation. Style sheets, particularily CSS, gives virtually no possibility of doing any useful layout for landscape displays. Float, clear, properties should have TOP,BOTTOM as attributes rather than just LEFT,RIGHT. A lack of orphan control actually prevents CSS from being useful in any non-continuous vertical scrolling medium (such as print or horizontal display). __ | Mortar: Advanced Web Development <http://bigpic.com/mortar/> | Neil St.Laurent neil@bigpic.com | Big Picture Multimedia
Received on Friday, 15 August 1997 11:57:39 UTC