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mini-tutorial needed: 'target=""' attribute for 'A'

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tlvp

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Sep 1, 2012, 5:49:44 PM9/1/12
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What I knew, from back in the days of tab-less browsers: an anchor "tag" of
form <A href="WhatHaveYou" target="_blank"> used to open a fresh browser
window to display whatever the URI "WhatHaveYou" had on offer.

In these days of tabbed browsers, though, there must be two attribute value
candidates, one for spawning a new *window*, one for opening a new *tab*,
and I'll be sempiternally grateful to whoever teaches me what they are.

Cheers, and TIA, -- tlvp
--
Avant de repondre, jeter la poubelle, SVP.

dorayme

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Sep 1, 2012, 6:16:44 PM9/1/12
to
In article <1gvfvb0tom0wx.w...@40tude.net>,
tlvp <mPiOsUcB...@att.net> wrote:

> What I knew, from back in the days of tab-less browsers: an anchor "tag" of
> form <A href="WhatHaveYou" target="_blank"> used to open a fresh browser
> window to display whatever the URI "WhatHaveYou" had on offer.
>
> In these days of tabbed browsers, though, there must be two attribute value
> candidates, one for spawning a new *window*, one for opening a new *tab*,
> and I'll be sempiternally grateful to whoever teaches me what they are.

Whether a link with this attribute opens in a new window or a tab is
under the user's control. Firefox (Mac), for example, even has a
preference (option) that is called "Open new windows in a new tab
instead", not or un ticking this will cause such links to open in a
fresh window.

There's no other attribute that will force the alternative so it could
not be the case that there must be one. This is on the principle that
if x is necessary then x is the case and cannot not be the case. Or
something like that, it is first thing on Sunday morning, I will look
into this deep principle later.

--
dorayme

Warren Oates

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Sep 1, 2012, 6:41:03 PM9/1/12
to
In article <dorayme-3294ED...@news.albasani.net>,
Exactly. But it's not Sunday here yet. All my browsers are set to open
"target" in new tabs. If you want a new window, you'll need to do it in
Javascript (essentially a pop-up).
--

... do not cover a warm kettle or your stock may sour. -- Julia Child

dorayme

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Sep 1, 2012, 8:39:27 PM9/1/12
to
In article <50428f08$0$1378$c3e8da3$6901...@news.astraweb.com>,
Yes, and that too faces hurdles from browser settings and add-ons.

From the user's point of view, btw, just talking straight html links
with or without attributes, at least on Macs, you can force a new
window on a tactical basis by Option Command click. There are all
manner of ways of going. Even without the target attribute, you can
force a link to open in a fresh tab with Command click.

That old target=_new was an interesting idea. It reserved a window (or
a tab) and opens other "new"ly attributed links to that same window or
tab. Try it.

Mostly, I reckon, authors have work enough to do without worrying
about how everyone should view their links. If they don't know how to
browse and use their reasonably basic facilities, that's on them.

--
dorayme

tlvp

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Sep 1, 2012, 9:35:56 PM9/1/12
to
On Sun, 02 Sep 2012 08:16:44 +1000, dorayme wrote:

> Whether a link with this attribute opens in a new window or a tab is
> under the user's control.
> ...
> There's no other attribute that will force the alternative so it could
> not be the case that there must be one. ...

OK, thanks. So it's just as it was in the 20th century: the 21st century
HTML author (non-Frames, non-Strict) can try for opening in the same old
window (omit any target attribute) or opening elsewhere (use
target="_blank"), but has no hope of urging whether to use a new tab or a
full-blown new browser window. Pity.

(And I thought it was otherwise, with me just not fishing the Google waters
quite proficiently enough :-) . And no, I don't want any Java[script]-based
solutions -- I'm assuming my viewers have all J-stuff turned off.)

Thanks, dorayme. Sorry to muck up an otherwise pleasant Sunday AM for you.
Carry on as if I hadn't ever intruded :-) .

Cheers, -- tlvp

dorayme

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Sep 1, 2012, 11:51:13 PM9/1/12
to
In article <1xlbf6qgba48s.if2ow1vhn2le$.d...@40tude.net>,
tlvp <mPiOsUcB...@att.net> wrote:

> On Sun, 02 Sep 2012 08:16:44 +1000, dorayme wrote:
>
> > Whether a link with this attribute opens in a new window or a tab is
> > under the user's control.
> > ...
> > There's no other attribute that will force the alternative so it could
> > not be the case that there must be one. ...
>
> OK, thanks. So it's just as it was in the 20th century: the 21st century
> HTML author (non-Frames, non-Strict)

It still works in Strict (just annoys the validator). More
importantly, it has been undeprecated and resurrected formally or
kosherly for HTML5


> can try for opening in the same old
> window (omit any target attribute) or opening elsewhere (use
> target="_blank"), but has no hope of urging whether to use a new tab or a
> full-blown new browser window. Pity.
>
> (And I thought it was otherwise, with me just not fishing the Google waters
> quite proficiently enough :-) . And no, I don't want any Java[script]-based
> solutions -- I'm assuming my viewers have all J-stuff turned off.)
>

Well, unless your visitors are rather unusual, they will not have js
off. Actually, I think js pop windows are not all bad, but my
bodyguards have the day off today and so I better not elaborate.


> Thanks, dorayme. Sorry to muck up an otherwise pleasant Sunday AM for you.
> Carry on as if I hadn't ever intruded :-) .
>

You have not mucked it up. Here the first day of spring and you would
hardly believe how clear are the skies. There could be no better day
to be in love!

--
dorayme

Warren Oates

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Sep 2, 2012, 9:22:09 AM9/2/12
to
In article <dorayme-FB9A2B...@news.albasani.net>,
dorayme <dor...@optusnet.com.au> wrote:

> You have not mucked it up. Here the first day of spring and you would
> hardly believe how clear are the skies. There could be no better day
> to be in love!

I know that the seasons are reversed on your half of the planet (and
that the water goes down the toilet the other way; the Coriolanus
Affectation, I believe it's called; the Bard wrote about it) but surely,
dorayme, your seasons follow the solstices and equinoxes just like ours?

I mean, it's Labo(u)r Day here, and neither fall nor (certainly not)
winter start now. I am, however, sadly packing away all my white sox.
New Yorkers would say I'm putting my saahwcks in a baahwcks.

Or is this some fiat of the Australian Government? "It's first die of
spreeng, cobbah, thets the rule you'll bloody well folla it, I reckin."

Thomas 'PointedEars' Lahn

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Sep 2, 2012, 11:14:08 AM9/2/12
to
Warren Oates wrote:

> dorayme <dor...@optusnet.com.au> wrote:
>> You have not mucked it up. Here the first day of spring and you would
>> hardly believe how clear are the skies. There could be no better day
>> to be in love!
>
> I know that the seasons are reversed on your half of the planet

That much is true, if "reversed" in the southern hemisphere of the Earth is
thought as being relative to its northern hemisphere and "reverse" as
defined as a bijective relation from summer to winter, and autumn to spring.
(Of course, nothing is reversed with regard to the order of the seasons; the
southern hemisphere's spring still comes after the southern hemisphere's
winter and so on.) The reason for that is, of course, that the rotation
axis of the Earth is tilted by ca. 23.4°.

> (and that the water goes down the toilet the other way; the Coriolanus
> Affectation, I believe it's called; the Bard wrote about it)

The _Coriolis effect_ has nothing to do with the direction in how water is
drained (for example, down a toilet); that is a myth.

> but surely, dorayme, your seasons follow the solstices and equinoxes just
> like ours?

Thas is off-topic here, too, but the correct answer to it obviously is yes.

You should do more reading in order to avoid displaying your ignorance about
basic truths of your existence again.


F'up2 poster

PointedEars
--
realism: HTML 4.01 Strict
evangelism: XHTML 1.0 Strict
madness: XHTML 1.1 as application/xhtml+xml
-- Bjoern Hoehrmann

Warren Oates

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Sep 2, 2012, 2:15:01 PM9/2/12
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In article <1654913.t...@PointedEars.de>,
My goodness, you're a humo(u)rless fella, aren't you, Bruce?

We've never had a "toilet," we just spread a little straw around, so
I've never actually seen water go down a toilet one way or another.
Also, it's well known that Shakespeare's play "Coriolis" was a tragedy
about star-crossed lovers whose seasons were reversed and who couldn't
come to terms with the different way the water went down their drains.

"Do you flush your jakes at me?"
"I flush my jakes sir."

Oh, yeah, Bruce, don't request email responses. Y'all can go to hell
with that one.

Helmut Richter

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Sep 2, 2012, 3:14:46 PM9/2/12
to
On Sun, 2 Sep 2012, Warren Oates wrote:

> Also, it's well known that Shakespeare's play "Coriolis" was a tragedy
> about star-crossed lovers whose seasons were reversed and who couldn't
> come to terms with the different way the water went down their drains.
>
> "Do you flush your jakes at me?"

That's Shakespeare? I would have expected:
"Flushest thou thy jakes at me?"

--
Helmut Richter

Thomas 'PointedEars' Lahn

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Sep 2, 2012, 3:18:57 PM9/2/12
to
Warren Oates wrote:

> My goodness, you're a humo(u)rless fella, aren't you, Bruce?

My name is not Bruce, and you should not try to claim that the nonsense you
posted out of ignorance was a joke. It only makes you look all the more
stupid.

BTW, I have a lot of humor, which you would know if you could read, but the
truth needs to be said as well.

> Oh, yeah, Bruce, don't request email responses. Y'all can go to hell
^^^^^
> with that one.

Who are these Bruce people anyway?

BTW, putting it in words that you are able to understand, your Subject and
quoting suck big time.


F'up2 poster

PointedEars
--
When all you know is jQuery, every problem looks $(olvable).

John W Kennedy

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Sep 2, 2012, 5:28:34 PM9/2/12
to
On 2012-09-02 13:22:09 +0000, Warren Oates said:

> In article <dorayme-FB9A2B...@news.albasani.net>,
> dorayme <dor...@optusnet.com.au> wrote:
>
>> You have not mucked it up. Here the first day of spring and you would
>> hardly believe how clear are the skies. There could be no better day
>> to be in love!
>
> I know that the seasons are reversed on your half of the planet (and
> that the water goes down the toilet the other way; the Coriolanus
> Affectation, I believe it's called; the Bard wrote about it) but surely,
> dorayme, your seasons follow the solstices and equinoxes just like ours?

No. The notion that the seasons exactly correspond to the equinoxes and
solstices is a phantasy created for the benefit of American calendar
printers, persuant to the human (and especially American) preference
for answers that are definite over answers that are right. Many parts
of the world are more sensible. See Phil Plait (badastronomy.com) and
others.

--
John W Kennedy
"But now is a new thing which is very old--
that the rich make themselves richer and not poorer,
which is the true Gospel, for the poor's sake."
-- Charles Williams. "Judgement at Chelmsford"

dorayme

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Sep 2, 2012, 5:56:07 PM9/2/12
to
In article
<alpine.LNX.2.00.1...@badwlrz-clhri01.ws.lrz.de>,
Yes, that is much more Shakespearian, more dramatically declarative.

--
dorayme

dorayme

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Sep 2, 2012, 6:11:35 PM9/2/12
to
In article <5043a22f$0$1562$c3e8da3$5d8f...@news.astraweb.com>,
Warren Oates <warren...@gmail.com> wrote:

> In article <1654913.t...@PointedEars.de>,
> Thomas 'PointedEars' Lahn <Point...@web.de> wrote:
>
> > Warren Oates wrote:
> >
...
>
> My goodness, you're a humo(u)rless fella, aren't you, Bruce?
>

Wonder if "Thomas" is the Germanic Monty Python franchise's "Bruce"?

Perhaps this would not work in German with Thomas instead of Bruce in:

<http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_f_p0CgPeyA>

--
dorayme

WaltS

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Sep 2, 2012, 6:30:19 PM9/2/12
to
I learned something new today.

> In South Africa, Australia, and New Zealand, spring begins on 1 September, and has no relation to the vernal equinox.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Spring_%28season%29

Thomas 'PointedEars' Lahn

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Sep 2, 2012, 6:39:52 PM9/2/12
to
John W Kennedy wrote:

> On 2012-09-02 13:22:09 +0000, Warren Oates said:
>> dorayme <dor...@optusnet.com.au> wrote:
>>> You have not mucked it up. Here the first day of spring and you would
>>> hardly believe how clear are the skies. There could be no better day
>>> to be in love!
>> I know that the seasons are reversed on your half of the planet (and
>> that the water goes down the toilet the other way; the Coriolanus
>> Affectation, I believe it's called; the Bard wrote about it) but surely,
>> dorayme, your seasons follow the solstices and equinoxes just like ours?
>
> No. The notion that the seasons exactly correspond to the equinoxes and
> solstices is a phantasy created for the benefit of American calendar
> printers, persuant to the human (and especially American) preference
> for answers that are definite over answers that are right. Many parts
> of the world are more sensible. See Phil Plait (badastronomy.com) and
> others.

No, it depends on whether by season one is referring to the astronomical
(defined by the IAU) or the meteorological seasons (defined by the WMO).
Incidentally, your posting is an example for the human preference for
answers that are simple (and xenophobic) over answers that are correct.


PointedEars
--
Prototype.js was written by people who don't know javascript for people
who don't know javascript. People who don't know javascript are not
the best source of advice on designing systems that use javascript.
-- Richard Cornford, cljs, <f806at$ail$1$8300...@news.demon.co.uk>

John W Kennedy

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Sep 2, 2012, 8:41:56 PM9/2/12
to
On 2012-09-02 22:39:52 +0000, Thomas 'PointedEars' Lahn said:

> John W Kennedy wrote:
>
>> On 2012-09-02 13:22:09 +0000, Warren Oates said:
>>> dorayme <dor...@optusnet.com.au> wrote:
>>>> You have not mucked it up. Here the first day of spring and you would
>>>> hardly believe how clear are the skies. There could be no better day
>>>> to be in love!
>>> I know that the seasons are reversed on your half of the planet (and
>>> that the water goes down the toilet the other way; the Coriolanus
>>> Affectation, I believe it's called; the Bard wrote about it) but surely,
>>> dorayme, your seasons follow the solstices and equinoxes just like ours?
>>
>> No. The notion that the seasons exactly correspond to the equinoxes and
>> solstices is a phantasy created for the benefit of American calendar
>> printers, persuant to the human (and especially American) preference
>> for answers that are definite over answers that are right. Many parts
>> of the world are more sensible. See Phil Plait (badastronomy.com) and
>> others.
>
> No, it depends on whether by season one is referring to the astronomical
> (defined by the IAU) or the meteorological seasons (defined by the WMO).

Wildly false dichotomy. There are a great many places where neither law
nor custom observes either.

> Incidentally, your posting is an example for the human preference for
> answers that are simple (and xenophobic) over answers that are correct.

"Xenophobic", forsooth? I'm afraid you're jumping to conclusions.

--
John W Kennedy
"Those in the seat of power oft forget their failings and seek only the
obeisance of others! Thus is bad government born! Hold in your heart
that you and the people are one, human beings all, and good government
shall arise of its own accord! Such is the path of virtue!"
-- Kazuo Koike. "Lone Wolf and Cub: Thirteen Strings" (tr. Dana Lewis)

tlvp

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Sep 3, 2012, 12:54:09 AM9/3/12
to
On Sun, 02 Sep 2012 13:51:13 +1000, dorayme wrote:

> ...
> It still works in Strict (just annoys the validator). More

Ah, but I don't :-) . (Too much bother editing/rewriting HTML to please the
overly finicky Strict validator.)

> importantly, it has been undeprecated and resurrected formally or
> kosherly for HTML5

Halal now for HTML5? Hallelujah!

> ... Well, unless your visitors are rather unusual, they will not have js
> off. Actually, I think js pop windows are not all bad, but my
> bodyguards have the day off today and so I better not elaborate.

Unusual is probably not they but I. I'd never think of requiring J-anything
of my visitors. Nor frames. Certainly never iFrames. But that's just me.

> ... You have not mucked it up. Here the first day of spring and you would
> hardly believe how clear are the skies. There could be no better day
> to be in love!

Ahh :-) . And, to judge by your X-Face(*), no lovelier person to be in that
enviable state or condition, if I may say so.

Cheers, -- tlvp
----
(*)PS: is it meant as white stippling on a black background? or vice versa?

tlvp

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Sep 3, 2012, 1:05:27 AM9/3/12
to
On Sun, 02 Sep 2012 09:22:09 -0400, Warren Oates wrote:

> In article <dorayme-FB9A2B...@news.albasani.net>,
> dorayme <dor...@optusnet.com.au> wrote:
>
>> You have not mucked it up. Here the first day of spring and you would
>> hardly believe how clear are the skies. There could be no better day
>> to be in love!
>
> I know that the seasons are reversed on your half of the planet (and
> that the water goes down the toilet the other way; the Coriolanus
> Affectation, I believe it's called; the Bard wrote about it) but surely,
> dorayme, your seasons follow the solstices and equinoxes just like ours?
>
> I mean, it's Labo(u)r Day here, and neither fall nor (certainly not)
> winter start now. I am, however, sadly packing away all my white sox.

Oh, so you turn into a Red Sox fan, come Labor Day :-) ?

> New Yorkers would say I'm putting my saahwcks in a baahwcks.
>
> Or is this some fiat of the Australian Government? "It's first die of
> spreeng, cobbah, thets the rule you'll bloody well folla it, I reckin."

Be a little flexible, Warren: the 30th was the saint's day for Lima's Santa
Rosa, and the 2nd was National Day in Vietnam, each of which is tantamount
(in the right Southern Hemisphere culture) to a first day of Spring,
n'est-ce pas :-) ?

tlvp

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Sep 3, 2012, 1:14:32 AM9/3/12
to
On Sun, 2 Sep 2012 21:14:46 +0200, Helmut Richter wrote or quoted:

>> "Do you flush your jakes at me?"
>
> That's Shakespeare? I would have expected:
> "Flushest thou thy jakes at me?"

Or, to preserve the OP's word order, "Dost thou flush thy jakes at me?"

dorayme

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Sep 3, 2012, 2:50:13 AM9/3/12
to
In article <zdhdz4fli2lv$.uzgcjxq1...@40tude.net>,
tlvp <mPiOsUcB...@att.net> wrote:

> On Sun, 02 Sep 2012 13:51:13 +1000, dorayme wrote:
>
> > ...

> > importantly, it has been undeprecated and resurrected formally or
> > kosherly for HTML5
>
> Halal now for HTML5?
>

I overheard a conversation between a local halal butcher and a
customer once in which the butcher was saying that halal meat is
similar in various important religious respects to kosher meat.

> > ... Well, unless your visitors are rather unusual, they will not have js
> > off. Actually, I think js pop windows are not all bad, but my
> > bodyguards have the day off today and so I better not elaborate.
>
> Unusual is probably not they but I. I'd never think of requiring J-anything
> of my visitors. Nor frames. Certainly never iFrames. But that's just me.
>

The way that still gets you into heaven is to use js but not to
*require* it and not to make it so your visitors *has* to have it or
else. In the case of a link that opens a js popup window when js is
on, and there are no other blockers, you have to fashion your links or
otherwise provide for the link to appear in a normal window or tab
when js is off.

> > ... You have not mucked it up. Here the first day of spring and you would
> > hardly believe how clear are the skies. There could be no better day
> > to be in love!
>
> Ahh :-) . And, to judge by your X-Face(*), no lovelier person to be in that
> enviable state or condition, if I may say so.
>

The idea is that you can't tell anything from my x-face, I was ordered
to have one by an English gentleman recently.

--
dorayme

Jukka K. Korpela

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Sep 3, 2012, 3:22:00 AM9/3/12
to
2012-09-03 9:50, dorayme wrote:

>>> importantly, it has been undeprecated and resurrected formally or
>>> kosherly for HTML5
>>
>> Halal now for HTML5?
>
> I overheard a conversation between a local halal butcher and a
> customer once in which the butcher was saying that halal meat is
> similar in various important religious respects to kosher meat.

Maybe similar, but not the same. The rules on supervision of the process
require supervisors of different religious affiliation. I suppose,
however, that many people living by kosher rules can still use halal,
and vice versa.

This has no direct relationship with HTML, though it reminds me of two
cults, or pseudo-religions, around "HTML5", called "W3C HTML5" and
"WHATWG The Living Standard". And both of them seem to have missed the
meaning of "HTML5" that has become popular and dominant among
developers: HTML5 is HTML + CSS + JavaScript used to develop
_applications_. But I digress (even from the digression).

> The way that still gets you into heaven is to use js but not to
> *require* it and not to make it so your visitors *has* to have it or
> else.

This used to be a good design principle, and it seems to have become
more popular, perhaps especially thanks to the kind person(s) who coined
a cool term for it: Unobtrusive JavaScript.

> In the case of a link that opens a js popup window when js is
> on, and there are no other blockers, you have to fashion your links or
> otherwise provide for the link to appear in a normal window or tab
> when js is off.

That part is simple. You simply set up a normal link, possibly with
target="_blank", and then you start adding features without breaking
anything. There's a useful slogan term for this, too: progressive
enhancement. (My attempt at a cool term, "augmentative authoring", just
didn't work. Luckily some people were better practical terminologists.)

The tricky part is to check all the features of opening a window in
JavaScript, paying attention to browser differences in parameters and
default values. But that's off-topic here. The following illustrates
just the basic idea (of one possible approach) as fas as HTML is considered:

<a href="http://icant.co.uk/articles/seven-rules-of-unobtrusive-javascript/"
target="_blank" onclick=
"if(window.open) { window.open(this.href, '',
'width=680,height=700,resizable=1,scrollbars=1'); return false}"
>The seven rules of Unobtrusive JavaScript</a>

(The statement 'return false' aborts normal link processing, so that the
external page won't be opened twice.)

--
Yucca, http://www.cs.tut.fi/~jkorpela/

Thomas 'PointedEars' Lahn

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Sep 3, 2012, 7:00:26 AM9/3/12
to
John W Kennedy wrote:

> Thomas 'PointedEars' Lahn said:
>> John W Kennedy wrote:
>>> On 2012-09-02 13:22:09 +0000, Warren Oates said:
>>>> dorayme <dor...@optusnet.com.au> wrote:
>>>>> You have not mucked it up. Here the first day of spring and you would
>>>>> hardly believe how clear are the skies. There could be no better day
>>>>> to be in love!
>>>> I know that the seasons are reversed on your half of the planet (and
>>>> that the water goes down the toilet the other way; the Coriolanus
>>>> Affectation, I believe it's called; the Bard wrote about it) but
>>>> surely, dorayme, your seasons follow the solstices and equinoxes just
>>>> like ours?
>>> No. The notion that the seasons exactly correspond to the equinoxes and
>>> solstices is a phantasy created for the benefit of American calendar
>>> printers, persuant to the human (and especially American) preference
>>> for answers that are definite over answers that are right. Many parts
>>> of the world are more sensible. See Phil Plait (badastronomy.com) and
>>> others.
>>
>> No, it depends on whether by season one is referring to the astronomical
>> (defined by the IAU) or the meteorological seasons (defined by the WMO).
>
> Wildly false dichotomy. There are a great many places where neither law
> nor custom observes either.

Out of curiosity: Name one.

>> Incidentally, your posting is an example for the human preference for
>> answers that are simple (and xenophobic) over answers that are correct.
>
> "Xenophobic", forsooth? I'm afraid you're jumping to conclusions.

How else should I interpret your emphasis on "Americans" IYHO preferring
"answers that are definitive over answers that are right"? I was not born
and do not live in America (neither on/in one of the continents nor in the
country which many of whose citizens call themselves "Americans") and I
still find that argument at least not sound. Could it be that we are
observing the common "typical $fellow_countrymen" fallacy here? Or is it
something else, perhaps the equally common, xenophobia-driven "screw the
former colonies" fallacy?


PointedEars
--
Use any version of Microsoft Frontpage to create your site.
(This won't prevent people from viewing your source, but no one
will want to steal it.)
-- from <http://www.vortex-webdesign.com/help/hidesource.htm> (404-comp.)

Warren Oates

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Sep 3, 2012, 7:15:27 AM9/3/12
to
In article <p1v51v6mvqu8.1s...@40tude.net>,
tlvp <mPiOsUcB...@att.net> wrote:

> Be a little flexible, Warren: the 30th was the saint's day for Lima's Santa
> Rosa, and the 2nd was National Day in Vietnam, each of which is tantamount
> (in the right Southern Hemisphere culture) to a first day of Spring,
> n'est-ce pas :-) ?

Well, okay, but who moved Vietnam into the southron hemisphere? Today is
Labo(u)r Day in North America except Mexico.

dorayme

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Sep 3, 2012, 7:26:33 AM9/3/12
to
In article <k21lqp$eu0$1...@dont-email.me>,
"Jukka K. Korpela" <jkor...@cs.tut.fi> wrote:

> 2012-09-03 9:50, dorayme wrote:
>
...
> > The way that still gets you into heaven is to use js but not to
> > *require* it and not to make it so your visitors *has* to have it or
> > else.
>
> This used to be a good design principle, and it seems to have become
> more popular, perhaps especially thanks to the kind person(s) who coined
> a cool term for it: Unobtrusive JavaScript.
>
> > In the case of a link that opens a js popup window when js is
> > on, and there are no other blockers, you have to fashion your links or
> > otherwise provide for the link to appear in a normal window or tab
> > when js is off.
>
> That part is simple. You simply set up a normal link, possibly with
> target="_blank", and then you start adding features without breaking
> anything. ...
>
> The tricky part is to check all the features of opening a window in
> JavaScript, paying attention to browser differences in parameters and
> default values. But that's off-topic here. The following illustrates
> just the basic idea (of one possible approach) as fas as HTML is considered:
>
> <a href="http://icant.co.uk/articles/seven-rules-of-unobtrusive-javascript/"
> target="_blank" onclick=
> "if(window.open) { window.open(this.href, '',
> 'width=680,height=700,resizable=1,scrollbars=1'); return false}"
> >The seven rules of Unobtrusive JavaScript</a>
>
> (The statement 'return false' aborts normal link processing, so that the
> external page won't be opened twice.)

Yes, your code is excellent. I now recall having trouble with double
link openings when I first used js windows with suitable graceful
degradation.

After having solved the problem to my satisfaction and providing
pop-up windows, I later decided to make do without them. With php
includes, it was easy to provide the visitor with the regular site
navigational aids (permanent and local menus) with every page,
lessening their chance of getting lost. Life suddenly got a lot easier!

--
dorayme

Warren Oates

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Sep 3, 2012, 7:36:43 AM9/3/12
to
In article <dorayme-DBAE5E...@news.albasani.net>,
I stole it from Romeo and Juliet:

ABRAHAM
Do you bite your thumb at us, sir?
SAMPSON
[Aside to GREGORY] Is the law of our side, if I say
ay?
GREGORY
No.
SAMPSON
No, sir, I do not bite my thumb at you, sir, but I
bite my thumb, sir.
GREGORY

John W Kennedy

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Sep 3, 2012, 12:44:02 PM9/3/12
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Australia has already been mentioned. Sweden, Finland.... But most
obviously you have forgotten that England's "Midsummer Day" falls on
the Solstice.

>>> Incidentally, your posting is an example for the human preference for
>>> answers that are simple (and xenophobic) over answers that are correct.
>>
>> "Xenophobic", forsooth? I'm afraid you're jumping to conclusions.
>
> How else should I interpret your emphasis on "Americans" IYHO preferring
> "answers that are definitive over answers that are right"? I was not born
> and do not live in America (neither on/in one of the continents nor in the
> country which many of whose citizens call themselves "Americans") and I
> still find that argument at least not sound. Could it be that we are
> observing the common "typical $fellow_countrymen" fallacy here? Or is it
> something else, perhaps the equally common, xenophobia-driven "screw the
> former colonies" fallacy?

You are still jumping to the same false conclusion.

Thomas 'PointedEars' Lahn

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Sep 3, 2012, 4:09:57 PM9/3/12
to
No, with regard to your argument it has not.

> Sweden, Finland....

Ahh the Scandinavian and Baltic countries – where Midsummer (sv: Midsommar)
is celebrated around and rooted in the *summer solstice* between June 20 and
June 22?

> But most obviously you have forgotten that England's "Midsummer Day" falls
> on the Solstice.

That would be proving what, exactly? That some holidays – particularly
those rooted in Earth religions – actually do relate to the astronomical
seasons, as I have stated?

>>>> Incidentally, your posting is an example for the human preference for
>>>> answers that are simple (and xenophobic) over answers that are correct.
>>> "Xenophobic", forsooth? I'm afraid you're jumping to conclusions.
>>
>> How else should I interpret your emphasis on "Americans" IYHO preferring
>> "answers that are definitive over answers that are right"? I was not
>> born and do not live in America (neither on/in one of the continents nor
>> in the country which many of whose citizens call themselves "Americans")
>> and I still find that argument at least not sound. Could it be that we
>> are observing the common "typical $fellow_countrymen" fallacy here? Or
>> is it something else, perhaps the equally common, xenophobia-driven
>> "screw the former colonies" fallacy?
>
> You are still jumping to the same false conclusion.

I am not concluding, I am theorizing and asking you. And you have still not
explained why you put emphasis on "Americans" there. However, it is likely
that you are not sufficiently able to; most types of xenophobia are rooted
in the subconscious.


PointedEars
--
var bugRiddenCrashPronePieceOfJunk = (
navigator.userAgent.indexOf('MSIE 5') != -1
&& navigator.userAgent.indexOf('Mac') != -1
) // Plone, register_function.js:16

Warren Oates

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Sep 3, 2012, 5:42:42 PM9/3/12
to
In article <2932435.H...@PointedEars.de>,
Thomas 'PointedEars' Lahn <Point...@web.de> wrote:

> I am not concluding, I am theorizing and asking you. And you have still not
> explained why you put emphasis on "Americans" there. However, it is likely
> that you are not sufficiently able to; most types of xenophobia are rooted
> in the subconscious.

Tell that to the French Canadians. They're the most racist xenophobes on
the planet, and they think "mais, c'est normal, ça."

John W Kennedy

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Sep 3, 2012, 6:16:42 PM9/3/12
to
> That would be proving what, exactly? That some holidays -- particularly
> those rooted in Earth religions -- actually do relate to the astronomical
> seasons, as I have stated?

So you affirm that having the solstice at midsummer and having it as
the first day of summer are equivalent?

>>>>> Incidentally, your posting is an example for the human preference for
>>>>> answers that are simple (and xenophobic) over answers that are correct.

>>>> "Xenophobic", forsooth? I'm afraid you're jumping to conclusions.
>>>
>>> How else should I interpret your emphasis on "Americans" IYHO preferring
>>> "answers that are definitive over answers that are right"? I was not
>>> born and do not live in America (neither on/in one of the continents nor
>>> in the country which many of whose citizens call themselves "Americans")
>>> and I still find that argument at least not sound. Could it be that we
>>> are observing the common "typical $fellow_countrymen" fallacy here? Or
>>> is it something else, perhaps the equally common, xenophobia-driven
>>> "screw the former colonies" fallacy?
>>
>> You are still jumping to the same false conclusion.
>
> I am not concluding, I am theorizing and asking you. And you have still not
> explained why you put emphasis on "Americans" there. However, it is likely
> that you are not sufficiently able to; most types of xenophobia are rooted
> in the subconscious.

And /still/ gleefully leaping....

--
John W Kennedy
"Information is light. Information, in itself, about anything, is light."
-- Tom Stoppard. "Night and Day"

Thomas 'PointedEars' Lahn

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Sep 3, 2012, 6:19:34 PM9/3/12
to
Warren Oates wrote:

> Thomas 'PointedEars' Lahn <Point...@web.de> wrote:
>> I am not concluding, I am theorizing and asking you. And you have still
>> not explained why you put emphasis on "Americans" there. However, it is
>> likely that you are not sufficiently able to; most types of xenophobia
>> are rooted in the subconscious.
>
> Tell that to the French Canadians. They're the most racist xenophobes on
> the planet, and they think "mais, c'est normal, ça."

Incidentally, that in itself is a xenophobical, if not racist, statement.

Never assume that because most or all of the people that *you* have *met*
from a group are representative of that group. Put simply, there are idiots
everywhere. Unfortunately, proof by example is a common fallacy among
humans.


F'up2 poster

PointedEars
--
> If you get a bunch of authors […] that state the same "best practices"
> in any programming language, then you can bet who is wrong or right...
Not with javascript. Nonsense propagates like wildfire in this field.
-- Richard Cornford, comp.lang.javascript, 2011-11-14

Thomas 'PointedEars' Lahn

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Sep 3, 2012, 6:34:27 PM9/3/12
to
John W Kennedy wrote:

> On 2012-09-03 20:09:57 +0000, Thomas 'PointedEars' Lahn said:
>> John W Kennedy wrote:
>>> On 2012-09-03 11:00:26 +0000, Thomas 'PointedEars' Lahn said:
>>>> John W Kennedy wrote:
>>>>> Thomas 'PointedEars' Lahn said:
>>>>>> John W Kennedy wrote:
>>>>>>> No. The notion that the seasons exactly correspond to the equinoxes
>>>>>>> and solstices is a phantasy created for the benefit of American
>>>>>>> calendar printers, persuant to the human (and especially American)
>>>>>>> preference for answers that are definite over answers that are
>>>>>>> right. Many parts of the world are more sensible. See Phil Plait
>>>>>>> (badastronomy.com) and others.
>>>>>> No, it depends on whether by season one is referring to the
>>>>>> astronomical (defined by the IAU) or the meteorological seasons
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
>>>>>> (defined by the WMO).
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
>>>>> Wildly false dichotomy. There are a great many places where neither
^^^^^^^^^^^^^
>>>>> law nor custom observes either.
^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
>>>> Out of curiosity: Name one.
>>> […] Sweden, Finland....
>>
>> Ahh the Scandinavian and Baltic countries – where Midsummer (sv:
>> Midsommar) is celebrated around and rooted in the *summer solstice*
>> between June 20 and June 22?
>>
>>> But most obviously you have forgotten that England's "Midsummer Day"
>>> falls on the Solstice.
>>
>> That would be proving what, exactly? That some holidays -- particularly
>> those rooted in Earth religions -- actually do relate to the astronomical
>> seasons, as I have stated?
>
> So you affirm that having the solstice at midsummer and having it as
> the first day of summer are equivalent?

Of course not. As the term midsummer (the *middle* of the summer) already
suggests, the first day of astronomical summer on the northern hemisphere of
the Earth lies halfway between the vernal equinox and the summer solstice.
Which *again* disproves your argument, BTW.

>> I am not concluding, I am theorizing and asking you. And you have still
>> not explained why you put emphasis on "Americans" there. However, it is
>> likely that you are not sufficiently able to; most types of xenophobia
>> are rooted in the subconscious.
>
> And /still/ gleefully leaping....

So explain it then or stop your musings about "Americans". This is an
international newsgroup and there is no need to create a hostile climate.

Dr J R Stockton

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Sep 3, 2012, 2:25:44 PM9/3/12
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In comp.infosystems.www.authoring.html message <50435d8b$0$1544$c3e8da3$
92d0...@news.astraweb.com>, Sun, 2 Sep 2012 09:22:09, Warren Oates
<warren...@gmail.com> posted:

>I know that the seasons are reversed on your half of the planet (and
>that the water goes down the toilet the other way; the Coriolanus
>Affectation, I believe it's called; the Bard wrote about it) but surely,
>dorayme, your seasons follow the solstices and equinoxes just like ours?

One needs to be careful about that. If the equinoxes and solstices are
named in English, Spring Summer Autumn Winter, then they refer to the
local seasons, and so are opposite on different sides of the Tropics.
Within the Tropics, one relies on mere convention.

But if the equinoxes are named in Latin, particularly the Vernal
Equinox, they occur world-wide in the month of the corresponding event
in Rome.

Thus Easter can be said to be controlled by a nominal version of the
Vernal Equinox, even in the upside-down countries.

In a similar manner, the First Point of Aries (which is no longer in
Aries) is in the same place worldwide, even though to upside-downers the
crossing is apparently the other way.

--
(c) John Stockton, nr London, UK. ?@merlyn.demon.co.uk Turnpike v6.05.
Website <http://www.merlyn.demon.co.uk/> - w. FAQish topics, links, acronyms
PAS EXE etc. : <http://www.merlyn.demon.co.uk/programs/> - see in 00index.htm
Dates - miscdate.htm estrdate.htm js-dates.htm pas-time.htm critdate.htm etc.

Warren Oates

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Sep 3, 2012, 7:21:10 PM9/3/12
to
In article <2051492.U...@PointedEars.de>,
Thomas 'PointedEars' Lahn <Point...@web.de> wrote:

>
> Incidentally, that in itself is a xenophobical, if not racist, statement.

French Canadians aren't a race. They're French-speaking white people
(eurotrash, if you like).

Warren Oates

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Sep 3, 2012, 7:22:16 PM9/3/12
to
In article <43447107....@PointedEars.de>,
Thomas 'PointedEars' Lahn <Point...@web.de> wrote:

> So explain it then or stop your musings about "Americans". This is an
> international newsgroup and there is no need to create a hostile climate.

I'm Welsh. My great grandfather stole sheep.

tlvp

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Sep 3, 2012, 8:09:13 PM9/3/12
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On Mon, 03 Sep 2012 07:15:27 -0400, Warren Oates wrote:

> Well, okay, but who moved Vietnam into the southron hemisphere?

Not me, surely :-) . But I'm confident there's a Vietnamese enclave or two
in Australia, somewhere -- Sydney, perhaps? or Brisbane? or Melbourne? Or
Perth, Broome, Adelaide, or Darwin? Or Cairns, perchance? Anyway, if not in
Australia, then in New Zealand, or in ... .

(Maybe dorayme can tell us :-) .)

> ... Today is
> Labo(u)r Day in North America except Mexico.

'Tis indeed. Cheers, -- tlvp

tlvp

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Sep 3, 2012, 8:35:12 PM9/3/12
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On Mon, 03 Sep 2012 16:50:13 +1000, dorayme wrote:

> In article <zdhdz4fli2lv$.uzgcjxq1...@40tude.net>,
> tlvp <mPiOsUcB...@att.net> wrote:
>
>> On Sun, 02 Sep 2012 13:51:13 +1000, dorayme wrote:
>>
>>> ...
>
>>> importantly, it has been undeprecated and resurrected formally or
>>> kosherly for HTML5
>>
>> Halal now for HTML5?
>>
>
> I overheard a conversation between a local halal butcher and a
> customer once in which the butcher was saying that halal meat is
> similar in various important religious respects to kosher meat.

Quite so -- enough that even the most strictly observant Jewish Israelis
are quite content to consider Halal meats as perfectly Kosher.

>>> ... Well, unless your visitors are rather unusual, they will not have js
>>> off. Actually, I think js pop windows are not all bad, but my
>>> bodyguards have the day off today and so I better not elaborate.
>>
>> Unusual is probably not they but I. I'd never think of requiring J-anything
>> of my visitors. Nor frames. Certainly never iFrames. But that's just me.
>>
>
> The way that still gets you into heaven is to use js but not to
> *require* it and not to make it so your visitors *has* to have it or
> else. In the case of a link that opens a js popup window when js is
> on, and there are no other blockers, you have to fashion your links or
> otherwise provide for the link to appear in a normal window or tab
> when js is off.

Hell for me would be learning how to use js in the first place :-) .

>>> ... You have not mucked it up. Here the first day of spring and you would
>>> hardly believe how clear are the skies. There could be no better day
>>> to be in love!
>>
>> Ahh :-) . And, to judge by your X-Face(*), no lovelier person to be in that
>> enviable state or condition, if I may say so.
>>
>
> The idea is that you can't tell anything from my x-face, I was ordered
> to have one by an English gentleman recently.

I guess I'm seeing things that aren't there, then. Having visions, is that
called? Or hallucinating, perhaps? No matter, we're so far OT now ... :-) .

Cheers, -- tlvp

dorayme

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Sep 3, 2012, 8:46:36 PM9/3/12
to
In article <1kqbbmtpn4kwr.g...@40tude.net>,
tlvp <mPiOsUcB...@att.net> wrote:

> But I'm confident there's a Vietnamese enclave or two
> in Australia, somewhere -- Sydney, perhaps? or Brisbane? or Melbourne? Or
> Perth, Broome, Adelaide, or Darwin? Or Cairns, perchance? Anyway, if not in
> Australia, then in New Zealand, or in ... .
>
> (Maybe dorayme can tell us :-)

I can tell you there are parts of Sydney that have large particular
ethnic concentrations and I love going to the various ones for the
food and the stores. There are many suburbs, especially inner city
ones, with great mixes. But if you go to the ethnically concentrated
areas, you can find cheaper and even more authentic family cooking.

In Marrackville, an inner city Sydney suburb, there is a large number
of Viet restaurants, many in one very long street. All are cheap.
There is one that is *really* good. Naturally, I won't say which,
because it will lessen the chances of my being able to get a table.

To tell you the truth, I am even reluctant to tell a partner, I insist
on them blindfolded while walking and eating and leaving there. Not
anyway kinky, the truth is simply that it is a practical precaution.

--
dorayme

Thomas 'PointedEars' Lahn

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Sep 3, 2012, 9:25:14 PM9/3/12
to
Warren Oates wrote:

> Thomas 'PointedEars' Lahn <Point...@web.de> wrote:
>> So explain it then or stop your musings about "Americans". This is an
>> international newsgroup and there is no need to create a hostile climate.
>
> I'm Welsh. My great grandfather stole sheep.

That is a statement, but not an explanation, and you are the wrong person to
give it in this case anyway.


PointedEars
--
realism: HTML 4.01 Strict
evangelism: XHTML 1.0 Strict
madness: XHTML 1.1 as application/xhtml+xml
-- Bjoern Hoehrmann

Thomas 'PointedEars' Lahn

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Sep 3, 2012, 9:23:09 PM9/3/12
to
Warren Oates wrote:

> Thomas 'PointedEars' Lahn <Point...@web.de> wrote:
>> Incidentally, that in itself is a xenophobical, if not racist, statement.
>
> French Canadians aren't a race. They're French-speaking white people
> (eurotrash, if you like).

"Eurotrash" is another of those words I would rather not read, in particular
here. If "xenophobical" or "racist" does not apply to that then, I am sure
that you can use a dictionary to find a more proper term in English for the
distasteful disdain of *all* people of an ethnic group because of a few bad
examples, which you are displaying here.


Score adjusted

F'up2 PointedEars

Warren Oates

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Sep 4, 2012, 6:51:53 AM9/4/12
to
In article <6448465.x...@PointedEars.de>,
Thomas 'PointedEars' Lahn <Point...@web.de> wrote:

> Score adjusted

Aren't you going to add injury minutes? Insult to injury minutes?

I'm still not gonna send you email.

FU to poster.

Dr J R Stockton

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Sep 4, 2012, 3:38:57 PM9/4/12
to
In comp.infosystems.www.authoring.html message <50449158$0$1463$c3e8da3$
12bc...@news.astraweb.com>, Mon, 3 Sep 2012 07:15:27, Warren Oates
<warren...@gmail.com> posted:

>In article <p1v51v6mvqu8.1s...@40tude.net>,
> tlvp <mPiOsUcB...@att.net> wrote:
>
>> Be a little flexible, Warren: the 30th was the saint's day for Lima's Santa
>> Rosa, and the 2nd was National Day in Vietnam, each of which is tantamount
>> (in the right Southern Hemisphere culture) to a first day of Spring,
>> n'est-ce pas :-) ?
>
>Well, okay, but who moved Vietnam into the southron hemisphere? Today is
>Labo(u)r Day in North America except Mexico.

You appear to have forgotten Greenland.

Warren Oates

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Sep 4, 2012, 11:50:43 PM9/4/12
to
In article <Q27LEgFR...@invalid.uk.co.demon.merlyn.invalid>,
Dr J R Stockton <repl...@merlyn.demon.co.uk.invalid> wrote:

>
> You appear to have forgotten Greenland.

I had no idea. Learn something new every day. Except that it's in the
spring.
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