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Re: p in address tag?

From: Asbjørn Ulsberg <asbjorn@tigerstaden.no>
Date: Tue, 08 Nov 2005 13:31:00 +0100
To: David Dorward <david@us-lot.org>, www-html@w3.org
Message-id: <op.szw81yjt16f2qb@quark.hv1alan>

On Mon, 07 Nov 2005 15:51:39 +0100, David Dorward <david@us-lot.org> wrote:

> <address>
>   Page Author's Name <br>
>   Page Author's Street Address <br>
>   Page Author's Town <br>
>   Page Author's Post Code
> </address>

I'm sorry to say it, but this [expletive deleted], structurally at least. With XHTML  
2.0's <l> element it gets better, but not allowing block level elements  
inside <address> is neither intuitive nor useful. Even <address>'s meaning  
baffles me. The HTML 4.01 spec says:

# The ADDRESS element may be used by authors to supply contact information
# for a document or a major part of a document such as a form. This element
# often appears at the beginning or end of a document.

How often have you seen <address> inside a <form>? And why can't you use  
it for contact information to a whole website? And shouldn't the contents  
of <address> be specified a bit more detailed? Wouldn't it be useful to be  
able to mark up a list (UL or OL) of people to contact for a given HTML  
document or website?

To me, the <address> element seems under-specified and not suited for the  
kind of information you'd actually like to put on a web page. And I know  
I'm not alone with that opinion.

-- 
Asbjørn Ulsberg     -=|=-    http://virtuelvis.com/quark/ 
«He's a loathsome offensive brute, yet I can't look away»
Received on Tuesday, 8 November 2005 12:31:20 GMT
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