web commit by http://joey.kitenet.net/: response
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Currently, the page title (either the name of the page or the title specified with `\[[meta title="..."]]`) shows up in a `<div class="header">`. I tend to follow the [w3c guideline recommending the use of h1 for the title](http://www.w3.org/QA/Tips/Use_h1_for_Title); for this purpose, how about an option to make the page title an `<h1 class="header">`, and shift the markdown headings down by one (making # an h2, ## an h3, etc; or alternatively making # equivalent to `\[[meta title="..."]]`)?
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Currently, the page title (either the name of the page or the title specified with `\[[meta title="..."]]`) shows up in a `<div class="header">`. I tend to follow the [w3c guideline recommending the use of h1 for the title](http://www.w3.org/QA/Tips/Use_h1_for_Title); for this purpose, how about an option to make the page title an `<h1 class="header">`, and shift the markdown headings down by one (making # an h2, ## an h3, etc; or alternatively making # equivalent to `\[[meta title="..."]]`)?
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> The reason I don't use a h1 for the navbar is that while it incorporates
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> the page title, it's not just a page title, it has the links to parent pages.
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> I also don't want to get in the business of munging up markdown's semantics. This
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> way, # is reserved for h1 if you choose to use headers in your page. --[[Joey]]
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