class-design-pattern
Revision as of 21:45, 17 January 2006 by RyanKing (talk | contribs) (→How to use it: cleaned up verbiage)
Class design pattern
Purpose
Use the class-design-pattern to indicate semantic meaning about XHTML elements
How to use it
- add semantics to (X)HTML by using class names. The
class
attribute is a space sepearted list of class names. - if an appropriate semantic element is not available, use
span
ordiv
.
Description
This is one of the most frequently occurring design patterns in microformats. Semantic meaning can be indicated on XHTML content by using the class
attribute of an enclosing element. For example, hcard adds information indicating that certain elements are a vCard URL, a Full Name and Organization by the class design pattern:
<div class="vcard"> <a class="url fn" href="http://tantek.com/">Tantek Çelik</a>, <span class="org">Technorati</span> </div>
Note especially the preceding example:
- the section of the XHTML document that the microformat is being applied to is defined by
class="vcard"
. This is very common among non-trivial microformats. - the use of both inline (<a> and <span>) and block (<div>) level elements. This provides the microformat designer with a range of options for inserting semantic information without interfering with existing presentation
- the use of multiple class names on a single element (such as
"url fn"
). This allows:- single elements to have multiple meanings
- allows adding semantics to existing presentation
See Also
- All microformat design patterns
- John Udel writes about multiple class names
- HTML 4.0 defintion of 'class', including notes about multiple class names