Re: HTML3 and FIG

Ian S. Graham (igraham@alchemy.chem.utoronto.ca)
Wed, 26 Apr 1995 18:23:56 +0500



FIG and IMG both seem sensible to me, particularly in the different
contexts that you've mentioned below. But -- I am a bit wary of
arguments like:

" Paragraphs can't currently enclose a FIG element, but even if they could
I still feel that breaking text lines across an image is bad practice"

as it seems more judgement than guiding principle..... ;-)

I've also expressed an interest in centred FIG (and/or IMG) elements,
with attributes to control text flow around the object, etc. Clearly
I don't see it necessarily as bad practice -- centre-aligned images are
common as page decorations, and would be more effective with
surrounding textflow. Obviously there are many implementation problems
to consider, and clearly much of the details of image placement should
be left to a stylesheet, but I don't think the idea should be rejected
out of hand.

Any other thoughts?

Ian

> > [Dave Raggett]
>
> > But <IMG> can't have captions. Shouldn't <IMG> be phased out in favour
> > of the more general <FIG>? I think letting <IMG> have functionality
> > <FIG> lacks is a "design bug".
>
> IMG occurs within paragraphs, while FIG is a peer of paragraphs.
> This choice should be a matter for debate though. Regardless of the
> outcome, I believe that IMG still has a useful role for small graphics
> that blend into the enclosing textline.
> ........
>
> Paragraphs can't currently enclose a FIG element, but even if they could
> I still feel that breaking text lines across an image is bad practice.
>
> The current specification seems a reasonable compromise between flexibility
> for authors and the degree of complexity for browser developers.