Figuring out
A recent simplequiz over on HTML5 Doctor threw up some interesting semantic issues. Although the figure
element wasn’t the main focus of the article, a lot of the comments were concerned with how it could and should be used.
This is a subject that has been covered before on HTML5 Doctor. It turns out that we may have been too restrictive in our use of the element, mistaking some descriptive text in the spec for proscriptive instruction:
The element can thus be used to annotate illustrations, diagrams, photos, code listings, etc, that are referred to from the main content of the document, but that could, without affecting the flow of the document, be moved away from that primary content, e.g. to the side of the page, to dedicated pages, or to an appendix.
Steve and Bruce have been campaigning on the HTML mailing list to get the wording updated and clarified.
Meanwhile, in an unrelated semantic question, there was another HTML5 Doctor article a while back about quoting and citing with blockquote
and its ilk.
The two questions come together beautifully in a blog post on the newly-redesigned A List Apart documenting this pattern for associating quotations and authorship:
<figure>
<blockquote>It is the unofficial force—the Baker Street irregulars.</blockquote>
<figcaption>Sherlock Holmes, <cite>Sign of Four</cite></figcaption>
</figure>
Although, unsurprisingly, I still take issue with the decision in HTML5 not to allow the cite
element to apply to people. As I’ve said before we don’t have to accept this restriction:
Join me in a campaign of civil disobedience against the unnecessarily restrictive, backwards-incompatible change to the cite element.
In which case, we get this nice little pattern combining figure
, blockquote
, cite
, and the hCard microformat, like this:
<figure>
<blockquote>It is the unofficial force—the Baker Street irregulars.</blockquote>
<figcaption class="vcard"><cite class="fn">Sherlock Holmes</cite>, <cite>Sign of Four</cite></figcaption>
</figure>
Or like this:
<figure>
<blockquote>Join me in a campaign of civil disobedience against the unnecessarily restrictive, backwards-incompatible change to the cite element.</blockquote>
<figcaption class="vcard"><cite class="fn">Jeremy Keith</cite>, <a href="http://24ways.org/2009/incite-a-riot/"><cite>Incite A Riot</cite></a></figcaption>
</figure>