Simon -
Are you trying to provoke? I think you should sit back and give your head a shake.
We're all here, more or less, because this technology allows us to call things what they *are*.
A 'margin note' is a margin note not 'linked content'. A person's needs are a person's needs. Let it be.
...edN
-----Original Message-----
From: Simon St.Laurent [SMTP:simonstl@xxxxxxxxxxxx]
Sent: Thursday, February 11, 1999 7:00 PM
To: xsl-list@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
Subject: Re: Venting
At 05:09 PM 2/11/99 -0500, you wrote:
>
>
>On Thu, 11 Feb 1999, Simon St.Laurent wrote:
>
>> And honestly, why are footnotes and margin notes really the domain of the
>> W3C? What do these ancient forms have to do with the Web?
>>
>
>I for one very much need to be able to use one document with different
>style sheets to produce both a printed book and a Web site, preferably
>automatically. XML isn't just for the Web. Neither is XSL. Nor should
>they be.
But come on, really. Is it the job of the W3C to recreate every creative
formatting that was ever used in a book, when both margin notes and
footnotes are really just plain old linked content? Pagination, fine. But
marginalia?
Gack.
Simon St.Laurent
XML: A Primer / Building XML Applications (April)
Sharing Bandwidth / Cookies
http://www.simonstl.com
XSL-List info and archive: http://www.mulberrytech.com/xsl/xsl-list
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uche . ogbuji - Sat, 13 Feb 1999 11:32:24 -0700
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