- From: Steven Grimm <koreth@hyperion.com>
- Date: Sun, 9 Jul 1995 12:59:44 -0700
- To: www-style@www10.w3.org
There needs to be a way to tell the browser, "only apply attribute X if you can apply attribute Y too." Otherwise we'll run into situations where documents will be unreadable because a particular browser (perhaps due to platform limitations) can only present half the style hints, and the half that *are* presented don't make sense without the others. For example, I was playing around with style sheets in Arena 0.97 and tried to put a background image in my document as described in the draft spec. "back.image" doesn't seem to be implemented yet. Unfortunately, font.color is, and my colors assumed that the background image would be loaded. I'm not sure what the best syntax for this would be. Maybe something like: hasred := em.lightred: font.color = #FF0000 hasred -> em.darkred: font.color = #800000 hasred -> (a(em.lightred, (em.lightred(a: font.color = #00FF00 Where we allow an additional name to be assigned to a style element, and allow other style elements to depend on the success of the first one. Sort of a dependency tree, if you will, which I think is an appropriate way to think about this problem. The above example would cause <em class=darkred> to produce dark red text, and <em class=lightred><a> to produce green text, only if the browser is able to render <em class=lightred> as requested. A slight extension of this would also allow fallback behavior to be specified. For instance, if you want a black background on machines that can't display your dark background image, you might do: didbg := *: back.image = "http://www.xyz.com/mygif.gif" !didbg -> didbg := *: back.color = #000000 didbg -> *: font.color = #FFFF00 I'm sure someone else can come up with a better syntax! Does anyone agree that this is something that needs to be addressed? An aside: when URLs are specified in a style sheet, what should they look like? Just the raw address? The angle-bracketed URL: format? Can they be relative, and if so, are they relative to the URL of the original document or the style sheet's URL? That should all probably be addressed in the spec. -Steve
Received on Sunday, 9 July 1995 16:00:09 UTC