> Hmm, does that mean that all HTML 3.0 browsers have to implement
> style sheets?
No, only the ones that wish to be successful. Word processors got
along fine without stylesheets until one came along that had them;
then it was just a very short time before it was a feature required by
the market, and programs that couldn't implement that feature went
under. There's no difference between page output and screen output in
this regard. In either medium, stylesheets are such an incredibly
powerful and obviously useful capability that you won't be able to
convince anyone to use a product that doesn't support them once any
product that does support them becomes generally available. It really
is just that simple. Anyone who tries to tell you that it's too hard
to do or that people really won't want to use stylesheets is just
whistling in the dark.
Jon
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Jon Bosak, Novell Corporate Publishing Services [email protected]
2180 Fortune Drive, San Jose, CA 95131 Fax: 408 577 5020
A sponsor of the Davenport Group (ftp://ftp.ora.com/pub/davenport/)
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The Library is a sphere whose consummate center is any hexagon, and
whose circumference is inaccessible. -- Jorge Luis Borges
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