On Sun, Nov 12, 2000 at 08:22:54PM +0100, Debian WWW CVS wrote: > Changes by: peterk 00/11/12 20:22:54 > > Modified files: > english/MailingLists: HOWTO_start_list.wml > > Log message: > Fixed broken HTML (<ol> cannot contain <p>, only <li>)
There you go again, picking strict standard compliance instead of page looking good. I'd rather have HTML that makes all the checkers go bezerk than to have pages that simply don't look good in most browsers. The way how we convey the information to users matters, not what W3C or whoever else thinks the code should look like. The <p>s were there because otherwise there's lack of spacing between items. I tested it in three console browsers and two X browsers before making those changes -- it was most definitely an intentional change. Can you make it look correctly _and_ be standards compliant? -- Digital Electronic Being Intended for Assassination and Nullification