Tag Archives: Xhtml

XHTML vs HTML: Round 2

April 5, 2007 by aaron
When XHTML was first released nearly everyone, myself included, rushed headlong into it. Countless websites were shredded, old HTML code was stripped out and rebuilt using XHTML syntax under the watchful eye of the W3 validators. When it was over, the dust settled and, for a time, everyone tried to pretend HTML no longer existed — scorning those who had the audacity to still use HTML. Time passed. People began realizing that XHTML wasn’t the save all and be all that it was supposed to be: some popular browsers (cough: IE) couldn’t even properly render its content type of application/xhtml+xml, so developers were stuck calling it XHTML and pretending that it was truly XHTML+XML, but they were really just dishing out HTML that was properly formatted.
Read More ⟶

Generating Semantic Comment Lists with XHTML

April 22, 2007 by aaron
XHTML specifications provide three types of lists ordered lists , unordered lists and definition lists . Ordered lists are meant for content that must be arranged in a specific order — things like instructions, or lines of code. Unordered lists are meant to be used for content that can reasonably be displayed in any order such as navigation menus or shopping lists. The rarely used definition lists is meant to be used where one list item is logically defined by a subsequent item (a definition term followed by a definition description ) it functions the same way as a FAQ or glossary.
Read More ⟶

Tiddlywiki is both good and bad.

April 10, 2007 by aaron
If you haven’t heard of it, Tiddlywiki is a single file, off-line, single user “wiki” that you can use to store notes and information in an easy-to-retrieve format. I found it and decided I loved it…for about 6 hours. Now I’m looking at the source code and trying to understand it so I can rip out all the stuff I don’t like and replace it. Tiddlywiki doesn’t allow any sort of XHTML and requires all code to be done in textile.
Read More ⟶

XHTML vs HTML: Round 2

April 5, 2007 by aaron
When XHTML was first released nearly everyone, myself included, rushed headlong into it. Countless websites were shredded, old HTML code was stripped out and rebuilt using XHTML syntax under the watchful eye of the W3 validators. When it was over, the dust settled and, for a time, everyone tried to pretend HTML no longer existed — scorning those who had the audacity to still use HTML. Time passed. People began realizing that XHTML wasn’t the save all and be all that it was supposed to be: some popular browsers (cough: IE) couldn’t even properly render its content type of application/xhtml+xml, so developers were stuck calling it XHTML and pretending that it was truly XHTML+XML, but they were really just dishing out HTML that was properly formatted.
Read More ⟶

Generating Semantic Comment Lists with XHTML

April 22, 2007 by aaron
XHTML specifications provide three types of lists ordered lists , unordered lists and definition lists . Ordered lists are meant for content that must be arranged in a specific order — things like instructions, or lines of code. Unordered lists are meant to be used for content that can reasonably be displayed in any order such as navigation menus or shopping lists. The rarely used definition lists is meant to be used where one list item is logically defined by a subsequent item (a definition term followed by a definition description ) it functions the same way as a FAQ or glossary.
Read More ⟶

Tiddlywiki is both good and bad.

April 10, 2007 by aaron
If you haven’t heard of it, Tiddlywiki is a single file, off-line, single user “wiki” that you can use to store notes and information in an easy-to-retrieve format. I found it and decided I loved it…for about 6 hours. Now I’m looking at the source code and trying to understand it so I can rip out all the stuff I don’t like and replace it. Tiddlywiki doesn’t allow any sort of XHTML and requires all code to be done in textile.
Read More ⟶