On Sat, 16 Aug 2003 13:29:36 -0400, "Mary Ellen Curtin"
<mecurtin (AT) alumniSPAM (DOT) princetonME.eduNOT> wrote:
Quote:
I've been looking at source code for a lot of web designers' sites, and I
frequently see:
- DOCTYPE spec
- link to a style sheet
- but still plenty of old-fashioned repetitive formatting embedded in the
page body, which
is laid out with tables
Is there any *good* reason to do this, or is it just ceremonial
chicken-waving? |
Probably a number of reasons, which vary from site to site.
- In some cases because it's too big a job to completely rebuild in one
go a site that was originally done a few years ago, so there is a
transition period.
- In some cases because the number of NN4 visitors is still large enough
to make one stick to those bits of CSS which NN4 supports. (I'm still
getting 3%-4% visitors from NN4-era browsers; I don't fuss too much
about cosmetics for them, as long as the site is readable, but I can
understand that some people might).
- In some cases as a result of the tools in use.
- And doubtless in some (many?) cases because the authors actually don't
understand what they're doing.
--
Stephen Poley
http://www.xs4all.nl/~sbpoley/webmatters/