::shrug:: It's only one letter per paragraph.
Moot now, I guess.
'Our Mrs. Reynolds'
Do you have problems, concerns or recommendations about the technical side of the Phoenix? Air them here. Compliments also welcome.
::shrug:: It's only one letter per paragraph.
Moot now, I guess.
I just edited a post in natter to stop the runaway whitefont, and here's what I found there:
the original post had the tags incorrectly nested, viz:
<font color="white">
blah blah </font>blah.
And the whitefont ran away with the spoon (in Safari, anyway). Moving the opening font tag inside the > fixed things (as, I'm guessing, would moving the closing tag to the next line), but my question is, have we always enforced incorrectly-nested tags that strictly? And should we? (the latter as a practical question and not an "if I were the queen of the universe everyone's HTML would have to validate" kinda thing.) Or was it a Safari being a hardass thing all along?
have we always enforced incorrectly-nested tags that strictly? And should we?
I'm not sure I understand the question. It's not us that's enforcing anything. It's the browser.
Or was it a Safari being a hardass thing all along?
That would be my guess.
It's not us that's enforcing anything. It's the browser.
Thanks. I hadn't noticed this before, and I switched browsers at about the same time we started on making code changes, so I wasn't sure if it was Safari or some markup-fixing widget run amok.
That's the same thing I ended up fixing in the spoilers thread, btw.
I'm wondering, as a variant on DCJ's suggestion a way back -- is two character quickedit going against principle? I'm thinking of a specific set of cases -- those following >, to be precise.
Which'd mean that >i >s >b, would give you quotes italicised, spoiler fonted and bold, respectively.
I think that's a great idea.
Doesn't go against principle for me.
What would happen if you hit >>?
Sounds good to me. I have no general principles about two-character quick-edits.
I would use those two character quick-edits a lot. I would love them and squeeze them and call them George. I would feed them and take them for walks and eat all my broccoli.
And when -t was busy? I'd do it for her.