- From: Andy Forbes <andy@inlet.com>
- Date: Tue, 15 Dec 1998 17:22:11 -0600
- To: <MWhisman@aol.com>, <www-style@w3.org>
Perhaps this will answer this question across the board for people looking for CSS/HTML help. I highly recommend checking out the following URL. If you subscribe to the MonkeyJunkies mailing list there, you can get some excellent help, especially with CSS/JavaScript etc. http://www.webmonkey.com Worst navigation to finding how to subscribe to the mailing list, so here's the URL: http://www.hotwired.com/webmonkey/mail/mail.html This message will never be posted again, and no I don't work for hotwired or webmonkey. Good luck, Andrew -----Original Message----- From: www-style-request@w3.org [mailto:www-style-request@w3.org]On Behalf Of MWhisman@aol.com Sent: Tuesday, December 15, 1998 5:01 PM To: www-style@w3.org Subject: Seeing Q&A > BTW, this forum is not a question-and-answer stylesheet support mailing > list. It is designed for discussion of the CSS3 specification. Please > reread the documentation that came with your subscription for more > details. Pardon my ignorance, but where would one go for Q&A on HTML & CSS? Perhaps the W3C website should point out sites, newsgroups, mailing list listservs, books where users could get and give help on HTML, CSS, and other issues overseen by W3C. IMHO, this would further the W3C's goal of making the web accessible to all users. Also, don't users' questions (*especially* new users) point out useability issues, e.g. what is/isn't clear about HTML and CSS? Web advances move so quickly that even the newest printed matter is mostly on CSS1. What better way for new users to learn than to benefit from the most experienced, even the inventors? I'm not saying this list should be for Q&A, rather that places offering stylesheet Q&A, teaching, and support should be publicized (pointed out, linked to) by the W3C and by this list. // end rant Climbing off my soapbox now, Ben Whisman
Received on Tuesday, 15 December 1998 18:26:00 UTC