************************* Erik Stein <1001-1@gmx.net> ************************** [Wir sollten einige Gedanken in die spezifische Struktur (merkwürdigerweise bzw. ist es klar daß die gegenwärtigen Informationssysteme strukturalistisch am besten zu verstehen sind; dies heißt aber nicht, daß wir selbst eine strukturalistische Analyse vorantreiben -- natürlich im Gegenteil) von VerkaufsOBERFLÄCHEN investieren. S. z.B. auch die Dokumentation von Cascading Style Sheets Level 2 (at www.w3.org). 13 Paged media * 13.1 Introduction to paged media * 13.2 Page boxes: the @page rule * 13.2.1 Page margins * 13.2.2 Page size: the 'size' property * Rendering page boxes that do not fit a target sheet * Positioning the page box on the sheet * 13.2.3 Crop marks: the 'marks' property * 13.2.4 Left, right, and first pages * 13.2.5 Content outside the page box * 13.3 Page breaks * 13.3.1 Break before/after elements: 'page-break-before', 'page-break-after', 'page-break-inside' * 13.3.2 Using named pages: 'page' * 13.3.3 Breaks inside elements: 'orphans', 'widows' * 13.3.4 Allowed page breaks * 13.3.5 Forced page breaks * 13.3.6 "Best" page breaks * 13.4 Cascading in the page context 18 User interface * 18.1 Cursors: the 'cursor' property * 18.2 User preferences for colors * 18.3 User preferences for fonts * 18.4 Dynamic outlines: the 'outline' property * 18.4.1 Outlines and the focus * 18.5 Magnification 19 Aural style sheets * 19.1 Introduction to aural style sheets * 19.2 Volume properties: 'volume' * 19.3 Speaking properties: 'speak' * 19.4 Pause properties: 'pause-before', 'pause-after', and 'pause' * 19.5 Cue properties: 'cue-before', 'cue-after', and 'cue' * 19.6 Mixing properties: 'play-during' * 19.7 Spatial properties: 'azimuth' and 'elevation' * 19.8 Voice characteristic properties: 'speech-rate', 'voice-family', 'pitch', 'pitch-range', 'stress', and 'richness' * 19.9 Speech properties: 'speak-punctuation' and 'speak-numeral' | es] > Before we all get very excited about this, we should remember the boast > from the designers of new network systems that they can deliver > information anytime anywhere. With the understanding of this as the goal, > the government's proposals take on an entirely new light. If a web page > designer wishes his page to read by among others users with LAN connected > workstations with high resolution displays and at the same time be > accessible to users with wireless connected PDAs with small screens, > then these designers will have to be cognisant of the > technology required to do this. After all this is promise > of XML, that we can separate content from presentation. > It is more than the promise of XML that it can accomplish both the > delivery of ubiquitous information and the objective of disabled access. > The accommodation of users who use Braille terminals will be no more > difficult that the accommodation of users who use small screen monochrome > PDAs. > The technology is being developed. > It will just take care and > craftsmanship on the part of the content designer to achieve it. All these > guidelines are do is providing a standard which can guide the designer in > the achievement of the desirable social goal of enabling the disabled. A > great collateral benefit to this is that these guidelines will also > provide guidance to content designers in the task of making content > available on the wide number of terminal devices which have widely > differing capabilities. ******************************************************************************** ROLUX h0444wol@rz.hu-berlin.de http://www2.hu-berlin.de/~h0444wol/rolux/