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Posted by dorayme on 10/29/06 19:31
In article
<1162119719.346662.196320@m7g2000cwm.googlegroups.com>,
kosanovic@gmail.com wrote:
> I would like to thank everybody for comments. I've managed to make a
> version that validates in the meantime, but I've learned more from your
> comments - thanks.
> Logicaly I would never figure out because to me it makes a perfect
> sense that in your paragraph you might have a list. And the w3c
> Validator has given me the misleading error message (I could say it is
> a bug, usually they even say fine suggestions in the error message).
>
CSS is often counter-intuitive but on this particular point, are
you sure? Look at some books and mags and you will, of course,
see many paragraphs. In some, there will be lists, graphs and
pics. But - unless you count an inline list that flows along with
the text, even comma separated, you won't see many paras with
"down the page" lists inside them. For the reason, I suppose,
that when the list stops and the text begins after the list, that
text counts as a new para. Yes, I can see if the "after the list"
text is not indented and the text before form a whole "thought",
the issue is then blurred and you might call the whole a para.
But this is rare. And you case seemed not of this type.
> By the way, no, I didn't put the list because of the bullet sign I
> actually removed the bullet sign in CSS. I just wanted to list some
> things and I thought it would be best to describe it as a list.
It was hard to know especially because you had just one item in
your example. Don't be coy about explaining and putting in more
context when posting!
--
dorayme
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