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It must be said, HTML 5 and the Web Forms 2.0 working drafts both intrigue me. Particularly the latter (which, when they're both mature enough, will be merged into the former), as it has stuff in it which would make my life so much easier.
It caters for proper combo boxes, for a start.
HTML 5 looks neat because it deals with a bunch of problems that most end users should never need to know about, but that will be rather handy for designers, developers and the small segments of the population that will need them.
Even if it does have the font tag in it. They have at least added explanitory text to that bit now... saying that it's only there so that HTML5 supporting browsers have a clear definition on how it should be handled if found, along with a quite strongly worded "don't use these" message.
It caters for proper combo boxes, for a start.
HTML 5 looks neat because it deals with a bunch of problems that most end users should never need to know about, but that will be rather handy for designers, developers and the small segments of the population that will need them.
Even if it does have the font tag in it. They have at least added explanitory text to that bit now... saying that it's only there so that HTML5 supporting browsers have a clear definition on how it should be handled if found, along with a quite strongly worded "don't use these" message.