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title | date | replyURI | replyTitle | replyType | replyAuthor | replyAuthorURI | syndicatedCopies | |||||
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Legacy emphasis in HTML | 2023-01-11T14:44:50-08:00 | https://octodon.social/@jalefkowit/109672348277053943 | who decided it would be a good idea to teach beginning web developers that <B> is the “Bring Attention To” tag and <I> is the “Idiomatic Text” tag | SocialMediaPosting | Jason Lefkowitz | https://jasonlefkowitz.net/ |
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Going forward, the CSS Speech Module seems like a better place for auditory tonal indicators. The CSS we've already had for years should be a better place for visual presentation.
This leaves only a minuscule semantic difference between <i>
and <em>
, or <b>
and <strong>
, as outlined in the HTML Living Standard. I don't think that difference warrants extra elements in the HTML standard: the extra elements likely create more confusion than actual benefit. Over the past decade, I'm unaware of any user-agents treating them differently enough, in a way that aligns with author intent, to matter.
I personally just avoid <i>
and <b>
when authoring. The complexity is more trouble than it's worth.