问题
What to use for poem?
pre
blockquote
code
- something else?
回答1:
Don't use code (unless computer code is part of the poem). Don't use blockquote (unless you quote a poem).
white space / line breaks: pre
or br
You may use the pre element. The spec gives an (informative) example:
The following shows a contemporary poem that uses the pre element to preserve its unusual formatting, which forms an intrinsic part of the poem itself.
<pre> maxling it is with a heart heavy that i admit loss of a feline so loved a friend lost to the unknown (night) ~cdr 11dec07</pre>
However, I'd only use the pre
element if the poem contains "more" than just meaningful line breaks (e.g. in this example the horizontal whitespace is meaningful).
If you have a simple poem, I'd go with the br element:
br
elements must be used only for line breaks that are actually part of the content, as in poems or addresses.
container: p
For most poems, the p element is the right candidate (or several p
elements, of course). The spec has an (informative) example:
<p>There was once an example from Femley,<br> Whose markup was of dubious quality.<br> The validator complained,<br> So the author was pained,<br> To move the error from the markup to the rhyming.</p>
Also:
For instance, an address is also a paragraph, as is a part of a form, a byline, or a stanza in a poem.
structure: (article
, figure
)
Depending on the context (content, page structure, …), a sectioning element might be appropriate (article in most cases).
Also depending on the context, the figure element might be appropriate:
Here, a part of a poem is marked up using
figure
.<figure> <p>'Twas brillig, and the slithy toves<br> Did gyre and gimble in the wabe;<br> All mimsy were the borogoves,<br> And the mome raths outgrabe.</p> <figcaption><cite>Jabberwocky</cite> (first verse). Lewis Carroll, 1832-98</figcaption> </figure>
But don't use these in general for all poems, it really depends on the page if their use is correct.
misc. & trivia
- someone proposed a
poetry
element (→ Rejected) - someone proposed a microformat for poems
- discussion in the w3.org wiki: Explicit Markup to Semantically Express Poetic Forms (thanks for the link, steveax)
- see also: on the mailing list
- similar question on Webmasters SE: How to mark up a poem in HTML for SEO
回答2:
I've looked for the same information and, similarly, haven't found any definitive "best practices" -- so I figured I'd just have to figure out my own method. The <p>
tag does make some sense as a stanza marker, with lines divided by <br>
s, per the spec -- BUT I've found that that markup style doesn't provide enough flexibility.
Specifically, I wanted control over indentation. For instance, if a line runs too wide for the width of the text column, it shouldn't just break: its continuation should be indented. This hanging indent can be achieved only (as far as I know) if each line is its own block element. So in my case I've made each poetry line a <p>
with a class (say, "poetry-line"). Then I can use the following CSS:
.poetry-line {
text-indent: -2em;
margin-left: 2em;
}
In another example, the poem I was posting indented every other line, with some irregularities at the ends of stanzas. I couldn't achieve this effect with just <br>
s between each line. I had to create a new class for the "indented-line" and apply it manually.
I'm just sharing my experience. I guess my suggestion is that you use a block-level element for each line, for formatting purposes. This could be a <p>
, or I guess you could use CSS to set a <span>
's "display" to "block". In any case, the spec's example with <br>
s between lines won't work for most poetry, I think: each line needs to be its own element.
来源:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/14734564/how-to-semantically-tag-poem-text