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Device Independence
NOTE: This section was taken from the
Style Guide for Online Hypertext.
The hypertext you write is stored in HTML language, which does not
contain information about the fonts and paragraph shapes and spacing
which should be used for displaying the document.
This gives great advantages in that your document will be rendered
successfully on whatever platform it is viewed,
including a plain text terminal.
You should be aware that different clients do use
different spacing and fonts. You should be careful to use the
structuring elements such as headings and lists in the way in
which they were intended. If you don't like the rendering on your
particular client, don't try to fix it by using inappropriate elements,
or trying for example to force extra spacing with empty elements.
This may well be interpreted differently by other clients and
end up looking very strange. You can in many cases configure how
the client displays each element.
For example:
- Always use heading levels in order,
with one heading level 1 at the top of the document, and if necessary
several level 2 headings, and then if necessary several level 3 headings
under each level 2 heading. If you don't like the way heading level
2 is formatted, fix it using cascading style sheets, don't just skip to heading
level 3.
- Don't put extra spaces or blank lines into your text to pad it out,
except in preformatted (PRE) sections.
- Don't refer in your text to facets of particular browsers. Asking
someone to "click here" won't make sense without a mouse, just as asking
someone to "select a link by number" will betray the fact that you were
using the line mode browser. Just leave a link. The instructions get
boring as the user will normally know how to select a link.
Page author:
Karen Smale
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Last modified: Monday, 19-Jun-2006 11:24:57 EDT
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