![](https://feddit.org/pictrs/image/210928f3-9fdd-475b-b269-f1cf041322af.png)
![](https://lemmy.ml/pictrs/image/c0ed0a36-2496-4b4d-ac77-7d2fd7f2b5b7.png)
I heard that SVGs in <img>
tags are more restricted than ones in <object>
or plain <svg>
tags. Try using these instead.
I heard that SVGs in <img>
tags are more restricted than ones in <object>
or plain <svg>
tags. Try using these instead.
You’re right, it was a vad example. I added some other examples that might be more accurate, allthough less popular.
Interesting question because I think there are entire families of programming languages that share mostly the same syntax. Often, a popular language of its time like C, Java, Python or Lua inspires a range of languages with a similar syntax, but different semantics. Like how JavaScript was supposed to look like Java, but to be adopted to a browser environment. Edit: C# may be a more accurate example, or how Godot Script and Bend look like Python.
I’d say the language family that has the most uniform syntax is shell scripting languages. They have mostly been standardized by POSIX and features are often being copied to make the shell more familiar and interoperable.
For me it’s even worse. Forward slash is also Shift + 7 and backslash is AltGr + ß?? I hate that computing is only optimized for US american layouts. Going by my keyboard, the filepath separator should probably be an ö.