retrositelover
Programmer
- Oct 20, 2004
- 35
Hello,
this is an more or less offtopic posting, I just want to ask for your opinion:
after dealing a long time with difficulties regarding text appearance of my homepage to 'not well educated people' who are better off with MS Office, I switched to outsourcing few texts to RTF which also has hyperlinking in the newer specifications, just as HTML.
would you personally appreciate from an professional point of view if colleges use a mix of HTML and RTF files? what would you expect as a symbol for an Office document link in HTML (TITLE=""-Tag, advise for newbies to take MS Office since older Windows versions have Wordpad associated, icon anchored possibility to open the document in a new Window (Word Viewer Internet Explorer 6.0 plugin)/TARGET="_top" in frames)? I have 0 experiences on how most Windows systems *Vista
* which I sadly have to support (because 99% of my visitors use them) react when surfers want to open RTFs over an HTML site. most Firefox based browsers open RTF as source, this is a problem, too.
My concerns especially regard the appearance and accessibility on mobile/small screen devices, no clue what a webmaster should code to ensure best viewing experience when leading visitors from HTML documents to RTFs. I guess it's impossible to embed RTFs in existing framesets, but don't know for sure.
I hope this is not too offtopic, but since the plugin problems concern the way you link RTF from HTML, it's certainly ok to post it here.
thanks in advance
Joerg
PS: I use Atlantis for compiling Supercompact RTFs, and link other documents both with embedded hyperlinks and showing the URL (for Wordpad). to not shock users too much compared to nicelooking CSS formatted Fonts (Trebuchet 10pt) -> Times 11pt in Office documents so they feel both familiar + know what document format they have loaded
this is an more or less offtopic posting, I just want to ask for your opinion:
after dealing a long time with difficulties regarding text appearance of my homepage to 'not well educated people' who are better off with MS Office, I switched to outsourcing few texts to RTF which also has hyperlinking in the newer specifications, just as HTML.
would you personally appreciate from an professional point of view if colleges use a mix of HTML and RTF files? what would you expect as a symbol for an Office document link in HTML (TITLE=""-Tag, advise for newbies to take MS Office since older Windows versions have Wordpad associated, icon anchored possibility to open the document in a new Window (Word Viewer Internet Explorer 6.0 plugin)/TARGET="_top" in frames)? I have 0 experiences on how most Windows systems *Vista
My concerns especially regard the appearance and accessibility on mobile/small screen devices, no clue what a webmaster should code to ensure best viewing experience when leading visitors from HTML documents to RTFs. I guess it's impossible to embed RTFs in existing framesets, but don't know for sure.
I hope this is not too offtopic, but since the plugin problems concern the way you link RTF from HTML, it's certainly ok to post it here.
thanks in advance
Joerg
PS: I use Atlantis for compiling Supercompact RTFs, and link other documents both with embedded hyperlinks and showing the URL (for Wordpad). to not shock users too much compared to nicelooking CSS formatted Fonts (Trebuchet 10pt) -> Times 11pt in Office documents so they feel both familiar + know what document format they have loaded