But what a mess! Both in design and use.
XHTML is trying to improve the situation
XHTML is a family of XML-based markup languages being designed.
Currently it consists of:
The new member of the XHTML family is in our minds the real XHTML.
Our aims are:
In fact, many of these things are intertwined.
By 'generic XML' we mean: if a facility exists in XML technologies, and it is suitable, use it and not a special-purpose XHTML facility. Try to get missing functionality added to XML. Examples:
Advantages: less variability; more interoperability; much of XHTML 2 works already; opportunity to make a cleaner break.
Remove all presentation-only markup.
Use stylesheets to define presentation.
Advantages: possible to author once, and display on different devices; better presentation possibilities; device presentation not hardwired; CSS has support for devices; more accessibility.
The power of CSS is currently seriously underappreciated.
(Note: doesn't require CSS to be implemented; just uses its model)
Add more semantically-oriented markup to make documents richer.
Examples: <l> element instead of <br>. <section> and <h> elements instead of <h1> <h2> etc
Not
I think that I shall never see<br> A poem lovely as a tree
but
<l>I think that I shall never see</l> <l>A poem lovely as a tree</l>
Advantages: more presentational opportunities (folding,
marquee, numbering)
[More shortly]
What are the features of websites that you go back to regularly, that differentiate them from websites with the same purpose that you don't go back to?
Forrester Research did some research on this:
(the rest is noise: 14% and lower)
More usability for: the author, the surfer
As an example of poor usability, current frames are a disaster! We are currently defining XFrames, a replacement for Frames.
One day we will all be grateful for accessible websites. Maybe even today.
The Kiss of the Spiderbot:
"Google is, for all intents, a blind user. A billionaire blind user with tens of millions of friends, all of whom hang on his every word. I suspect Google will have a stronger impact than [laws] in building accessible websites."
Karsten M. Self
Examples: more structure, navigation lists, better treatment of images
<h2>Chapter 1</h2> ... <h3>Section 1</h3> ...
is now:
<section> <h>Chapter 1</h> .... <section> <h>Section 1</h> ... </section> </section>
More structure gives more accessibility.
In designing XHTML 2 we decided to do away with a separate concept of an image altogether. Now we just say that there is an equivalence between an external resource and an internal one. For instance
<table src="temperatures.png"> <caption>Average monthly temperatures</caption> <tr> <th>Jan</th> <th>Feb</th>.... <tr> <td>0</td> <td>-4</td>... </table>
A browser that can do images will display the image; others will display the table.
Advantages: device independence, accessibility, and even usability (since if the image is unreachable the document is still useful.)
Observe how scripting is currently used.
Identify missing markup/functionality.
Add it where possible; try to cover 80% mark
Examples: menus for navigation; forms data checking; folding presentation.
Advantages: more devices, more presentational variations, better search, better accessibility
Single authoring
The aim of 'less scripting' has already been mentioned: this clearly increases device independence.
Similarly, no hard-wired presentation means that a document can be styled with different stylesheets for different devices (as supported by CSS2)
There are two other areas where device independence is being addressed:
Events and Forms
Current HTML events are a disaster
XML Events addresses these.
<a onClick="...javascript..." ...>
becomes
<a ev:event="activate" ev:handler="#hdlr" ...>
Clearly HTML: Forms have shown their worth.
But after several years of experience, we now know how they can be improved.
XForms is attempting to address those issues.
<input ref="/person/date"> <label>Date of birth</label> <hint>Please enter your date of birth</hint> </input>
A user agent has a default presentation.
If the user agent supports it, a stylesheet can be used to define other presentations.
<select ref="icecream/flavors"> <label>Flavours</label> <item><label>Vanilla</label> <value>v</value></item> <item><label>Strawberry</label> <value>s</value></item> <item><label>Chocolate</label> <value>c</value></item> </select>
This example covers both radio-button style selection, and menu selection: not encoded in the control.
We are close to PR status. Three implementations taking part in interoperability tests. We know of more than 20 implementations currently, and some emerging large user groups.
HTML was originally designed as a structure description language, not a presentational language.
The design of XHTML is truly 'radical': taking HTML back to its roots.
Device independence, accessibility and usability are surprisingly closely related.
Even though website builders may not yet know it, device independence, accessibility and usability have a major economic argument in their favour. Spread the word!
More information: www.w3.org/Markup,www.w3.org/Markup/Forms