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Re: Table footnotes <tfoot>, <figure> or <section> ?

for

From: Chagnon | PubCom
Date: May 17, 2013 10:25AM


Steve wrote: "from wikipedia:"

Seriously?
Wikipedia?

Steve wrote: "as far as name clashes go, the horse has left the stable."

I just spent 3 weeks at our family's horse farm.
Seriously.
When you do something stupid like leaving the barn door open, you go out and
bring the horse back.

-Bevi Chagnon
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www.PubCom.com - Trainers, Consultants, Designers, Developers.
Print, Web, Acrobat, XML, eBooks, and U.S. Federal Section 508
Accessibility.
New schedule for classes and workshops coming in 2013.

-----Original Message-----
From: <EMAIL REMOVED>
[mailto: <EMAIL REMOVED> ] On Behalf Of Steve Faulkner

Hi bevi,
from wikipedia:
"a figure in writing is a type of floating block (text, table, or graphic
separate from the main text)"
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Figure#Writing
as far as name clashes go, the horse has left the stable.
--
Regards
SteveF

HTML 5.1 <http://www.w3.org/html/wg/drafts/html/master/>;

On 17 May 2013 16:45, Chagnon | PubCom < <EMAIL REMOVED> > wrote:

> Thanks, Steve.
> You wrote: "Unclear what your issue is with figure/figcaption, the
> semantics of the figure element is that its a grouping element."
>
> My issue is the choice of the word "figure" for this tag. I can't find
> any English dictionary reference that defines "figure" as a "group of
items."
>
> The word figure has quite a few definitions and most of them involve:
> - Something to do with a numerical symbol or value amount;
> - Something to do with a person, such as their appearance or standing
> in society;
> - A symbol of something.
>
> There's no "group" concept in any of the definitions.
>
> If you want a tag that groups things, why not call it <GROUP>?
> Otherwise you might as well randomly choose any word in the dictionary
> to represent this "grouping element."
>
> <CHOCOLATE> would be just as accurate as <FIGURE>.
>
> The second issue I have is that the computer industry, especially
> programmers, takes common words and flips them upside down, using them
> in ways never intended. This doesn't help the industry. As a former
> college instructor of several programming languages and technologies,
> I've watched this confuse the heck out of my students, semester after
semester.
>
> Example:
>
> HTML defined all graphics in a webpage to use the <IMG> tag. I wish a
> better word had been chosen because "image" is defined as a likeness
> of something.
> But it is broad enough that I'm willing to shoehorn every graphic on a
> webpage into the figure tag.
>
> A few years later Adobe created tagged PDFs and instead of
> coordinating their code with existing HTML tags, they decide to
> reinvent the wheel and tag every graphic in a PDF as <FIGURE>. Bad
decision for 2 reasons:
> 1. It doesn't coordinate with the existing tag used by HTML.
> 2. There are many types of graphics that don't fit the definition of a
> "figure," such as a photograph of a landscape vista.
>
> W.T.F. Didn't anyone at Adobe have access to a list of HTML tags or
> have basic training in HTLM 101?
>
> And now you're telling us to use <FIGURE> as a grouping tag.
> W.T.F. Doesn't anyone on the HTML team have access to a dictionary or
> thesaurus?
>
> Visit the Oxford English Dictionary at http://www.oed.com/
> Merriam-Webster is a good all-purpose dictionary at
> http://www.merriam-webster.com/ And if you're desperate for funds,
> www.dictionary.com is quite sufficient and free.
>
> As I said before: "Never in my editorial mind would I ever call a
> table a figure, nor the extracted poem in an HTML5 example on the W3C's
website.
> Jeeze Louise, are there any professional editors at the W3C who can
> step in and say 'that's not the best word for that item'?"
>
> Now, if you decide to call this "grouping element" <CHOCOLATE>, you
> won't get any complaints out of me! <grin> But don't call it <FIGURE>.
> That's just so wrong on so many levels.
>
> -Bevi Chagnon
> (Programmer, developer, designer, writer, & editor)
> - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
> - - -
> - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
> www.PubCom.com - Trainers, Consultants, Designers, Developers.
> Print, Web, Acrobat, XML, eBooks, and U.S. Federal Section 508
> Accessibility.
> New schedule for classes and workshops coming in 2013.
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: <EMAIL REMOVED>
> [mailto: <EMAIL REMOVED> ] On Behalf Of Steve
> Faulkner
> Sent: Friday, May 17, 2013 8:49 AM
> To: WebAIM Discussion List
> Subject: Re: [WebAIM] Table footnotes <tfoot>, <figure> or <section> ?
>
> Hi Bevi,
> I am one of the editors of the HTML spec [1]
>
> Anybody can file a bug [2] against the HTML spec or send an email to
> the public html comments list [3] if they have constructive input.
>
> Unclear what your issue is with figure/figcaption, the semantics of
> the figure element is that its a grouping element. figcaption allows a
> programmatically associated caption to be added. images are the
> obvious use case but others are also covered. If you don't like the
> idea of using for content other than images then don't.
>
> [1] HTML 5.1 <http://www.w3.org/html/wg/drafts/html/master/>;
> [2]
>
> https://www.w3.org/Bugs/Public/enter_bug.cgi?product=HTML%20WG&compone
> nt=HTM
> L5%20spec&priority=P3
> [3] http://lists.w3.org/Archives/Public/public-html-comments/
> --
> Regards
> SteveF
>
> On 16 May 2013 17:30, Chagnon | PubCom < <EMAIL REMOVED> > wrote:
>
> > Rabab wrote: "...- HTML 5 example specifies <figure> to code table
> > footnotes. However, we prefer not to use <figure> for data tables. ...
> > http://www.w3.org/TR/html5/common-idioms.html#footnotes."
> >
> > Can't answer your question Rabab, but it brings up another related
issue:
> > the use of one term <FIGURE> in 2 different ways.
> >
> > In PDFs, all graphical images are tagged with <FIGURE>.
> >
> > But in HTML 5, it's used for any content, not just graphics, that
> > are related to the main story content.
> > http://www.w3.org/TR/html5/grouping-content.html#the-figure-element
> > "some flow content, optionally with a caption, that is
> > self-contained and is typically referenced as a single unit from the
> > main flow of the
> document."
> >
> > The specific reference above for tables reads: "A figure element is
> > used to give a single legend to the combination of the table and its
> footnotes."
> >
> > Never in my editorial mind would I ever call a table a figure, nor
> > the extracted poem in an HTML5 example on the W3C's website. Jeeze
> > Louise, are there any professional editors at the W3C who can step
> > in and say "that's not the best word for that item"?
> >
> > It would be so helpful to all communities, web developers and
> > document specialists, if the power players with the W3C could
> > coordinate their use of the same tag.
> >
> > -Bevi Chagnon
> > - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - - -
> > -
>
> > > list messages to <EMAIL REMOVED>
>
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