Question

How usable is a document which uses <ins> and <del>, compared to seeing the deltas in a two-pane split-screen diff viewer?

Although a command-line diff tool will show its output as one diff after another (in a single vertical column / console window), all the GUI diff tools that I know of tend to show diffs in a two-pane, split-screen UI.

I'd like it if <ins> and <del> were usable but it worries me that, instead, two-pane split-screen diff viewers seem to be the norm.

Secondly, have you seen any sites or software which use the <ins> and <del> elements to show revisions, and if so would you please point them out to me? I'd like to see examples of their being used (in order to make a subjective opinion of how usable they are).

Was it helpful?

Solution

Trac uses this for example on its diff pages and does that even in a two-pane view. You can see an example here.

OTHER TIPS

Stackoverflow shows inline diffs in the its edit history pages. So, if you're comfortable with how that works, its safe to say that its fairly usable.

The <ins> & <del> elements aren't used, <span> tags with a class are, but <ins> & <del> elements could have been used instead.

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