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Goodbye Antville, hello Blogspot Its
time to move! Antville is a symatic community but I'm...
by rolandk (11/8/08, 4:00 PM)
SOA at Deutsche Post Deutsche
Post is THE company which implemented SOA the first time,...
by rolandk (11/4/08, 2:59 PM)
The model and the architecture
Hypothesis: Since infrastucture code is not part of the domain...
by rolandk (10/17/08, 1:24 PM)
Hope joost does it right
this time It's the content, stupid http://www.joost.com/home?playNow=33l83ke#id=33l83ke
by rolandk (10/14/08, 1:00 PM)
Siri Bringing AI to the
interface. I'm sceptical http://news.cnet.com/8301-17939_109-10065136-2.html
by rolandk (10/14/08, 9:47 AM)
Generative Sequencing is what MDSD
gives to the Pattern Movement Look what I've found: A...
by rolandk (10/12/08, 12:48 PM)
A thought on MDSD Christoper
Alexander—The pattern language that we began creating in the 1970s...
by rolandk (10/10/08, 6:09 PM)
Fresh and inspiring as a
hill in the morning mist. Nasim Taleb explains the...
by rolandk (9/30/08, 9:23 PM)
Roland Kofler's Blog on Software Engineering on |
Monday, 2. June 2008
Håkon Wium Lie invented CSS Monday, June 2, 2008 at 7:50:05 AM Central European Summer Time
I never had the need to learn CSS; but I like it :-P Håkon Wium Lie - The topic of this thesis is style sheet languages for structured documents on the web. Due to characteristics of the web – including a screen-centric publishing model, a multitude of output devices, uncertain delivery, strong user preferences, and the possibility for later binding between content and style – the hypothesis is that the web calls for different style sheet languages than does traditional electronic publishing. Style sheet languages that were developed and used prior to the web are analyzed and compared with style sheet proposals for the web between 1993-1996. The dissertation describes the design of a web-centric style sheet language known as Cascading Style Sheets (CSS). CSS has several notable features including: cascading, pseudo-classes and pseudo-elements, forward-compatible parsing rules, support for different media types, and a strong emphasis on selectors. Problems in CSS are analyzed, and recommended future research is described. |