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Posted by Alan J. Flavell on 05/09/06 22:49
On Tue, 9 May 2006, Michael Hedinger wrote:
> Fons Rave schrieb:
> > How can I force the browsers to keep words together. E.g. "abc def
> > ghi" must always be on one line. So no break between "abc" and
> > "def". It should move to a new line as one part. I found out I can
> > force using #255 instead of SPACE (#32). But I don't really like
> > that.
What on Earth was stopping you from looking at the HTML spec, and
finding the no-break space?
> I don't know if it is still supported,
Herrschaftszeiten...
> but there was meant to be a <nobr></nobr> tag.
Was there? Citation, please. In what way is this supposed to be an
improvement, for the questioner's purpose, on the defined semantics
for - or, for that matter, on the relevant CSS proposal (but
CSS proposals are optional, by design) ?
Just occasionally, you might find a proprietary extension which works
when it works, does not duplicate a function defined in the
interworking specifications, and does no real harm on client agents
which implement just the interworking specifications. But that
doesn't look like one of them.
> during the text you can use <wbr> as a not-have-to-be-a-breaking
> row.
Now that's *quite* a different matter. Previous discussion refers.
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