|  | Posted by Andy Dingley on 01/02/08 10:46 
On 1 Jan, 16:43, "Jonathan N. Little" <lws4...@centralva.net> wrote:
 > You do know that to use CSS does *not* mean *never* use tables. One
 > could argue that your page contains tabular data that would best be
 > served in a table.
 
 Agreed. I'd strongly suggest <table> for this. The generator language
 should cope perfectly well with either approach. A bit of colspan, if
 you wish.
 
 Richard could also lose the <hr> elements in favour of using a border
 from CSS (top, bottom or both)
 
 Some padding (left and right) would improve readability too. It's hard
 to read text that runs right into a vertical border line.
 
 
 The double curly quote characters are also incorrectly represented by
 the numeric entities “ & ”   They ought to be “ and
 ” instead.
 
 The reason for this is a little obscure. The "keyboard code" to enter
 them is indeed 147 or 148 decimal, and those are valid character
 references in the Windows 1252 codepage. This web page is even being
 served as Windows-1252 (Not something I'd do, but it's perfectly
 correct to do so). However the rule for numeric entities in HTML is
 that the numbers _always_ refer to the Unicode codepoint, no matter
 what the page's encoding. 147 & 148 aren't correct in Unicode, thus
 aren't correct in HTML.
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