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superscripted nos beside link text -- what is it?

Question posted by: (Guest) on June 27th, 2008 07:15 PM
I often see, on certain websites, to the right of link-text, a number or
letter inside angle-brackets, and superscripted (or raised slightly).

I've never seen anything explaining what these are or what their
significance or purpose is.

I've also tried to google on this but of course don't know what they're
called, so I've always come-up empty-handed on searches.

Anyone care to share insight on this?


John Hosking's Avatar
John Hosking
Guest
n/a Posts
June 27th, 2008
07:15 PM
#2

Re: superscripted nos beside link text -- what is it?
q[REMOVE-ME]@vex.net wrote:
Quote:
I often see, on certain websites, to the right of link-text, a number or
letter inside angle-brackets, and superscripted (or raised slightly).
>
I've never seen anything explaining what these are or what their
significance or purpose is.


It sounds like you're just talking about footnotes, but you didn't
provide a URL to an example of one of these sites, so I can't be sure.
Footnotes don't have to be to the right of link-text, though, and can be
links themselves (actually they're the links TO the footnotes).

See for example the page at
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Democr...nited_States%29 ,
which has lots of footnotes, linked to from the cross-references in the
text.

If that's not what you mean, how about an example URL or two?

--
John
Pondering the value of the UIP: http://improve-usenet.org/

's Avatar
Guest
n/a Posts
June 27th, 2008
07:15 PM
#3

Re: superscripted nos beside link text -- what is it?
On Mon, 19 May 2008 09:42:19 +0200,
John Hosking <John@DELETE.Hosking.name.INVALIDwrote:
Quote:
>
If that's not what you mean, how about an example URL or two?
>

<http://www.fsf.org/blogs/>

(see beside "About", "Campaigns", etc. What are they?

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Jukka K. Korpela's Avatar
Jukka K. Korpela
Guest
n/a Posts
June 27th, 2008
07:15 PM
#4

Re: superscripted nos beside link text -- what is it?
Scripsit rj{REMOVE]@panix.com:
Quote:
On Mon, 19 May 2008 09:42:19 +0200,
John Hosking <John@DELETE.Hosking.name.INVALIDwrote:
Quote:
>>
> If that's not what you mean, how about an example URL or two?
>>

<http://www.fsf.org/blogs/>
>
(see beside "About", "Campaigns", etc. What are they?


Yes, what are they? I see no "superscripted nos" there. Are you using
some odd browser or some browser in an odd state?

What made you think this was an HTML issue? Did you check the HTML
source before asking? The links are just something like

<a href="http://www.fsf.org/about" class=""
accesskey="v">

About

</a>

which is clueless, with an empty class and with the
accessibility-hostile accesskey attribute (used very cluelessly by
assigning the same value to different links), but it does not cause any
fancy "superscripted nos", except perhaps on a fancy browser that
displays accesskey assignments that way (and that would indeed be odd,
though possible in this clueless world).

The links are awfully designed, using nonstandard link color, destroying
distinction between unvisited and visited links, SHOUTING, THAT IS ALL
CAPITALS, but this damage has been created with carefully crafted CSS,
not HTML.

--
Jukka K. Korpela ("Yucca")
http://www.cs.tut.fi/~jkorpela/


John Hosking's Avatar
John Hosking
Guest
n/a Posts
June 27th, 2008
07:16 PM
#5

Re: superscripted nos beside link text -- what is it?
rj{REMOVE]@panix.com wrote:
Quote:
On Mon, 19 May 2008 09:42:19 +0200,
John Hosking wrote:
Quote:
> If that's not what you mean, how about an example URL or two?
>>

<http://www.fsf.org/blogs/>
>
(see beside "About", "Campaigns", etc. What are they?
>


Well, I'm no wiser.

I don't see in IE6 or FF2 what you seem to see. Are you perhaps using
Netscape 4? (The page has references to nine different style sheets,
which is more than some sites have pages.) At least one style sheet
purports to support NN4, so maybe you're getting something *special* in
whatever UA you're using. (The styles also include the obligatory
font:85%, pixel-based sizing, redundant definitions of repeated
properties being defined reduntantly, etc. So, no telling.)

--
John
Pondering the value of the UIP: http://improve-usenet.org/

 
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