Nitobe
Nitobe is fixed width and used by the Prime Minister of Australia on his personal (paid for by taxpayers) publicity site www.pm.gov.au.
Download Nitobe from drupal.org/project/nitobe. This Nitobe is version 6.x-3.4 from 2009-Apr-15, a 311.36 KB download.
Validation
The theme validates as XHTML 1.0 Strict plus US 508 plus WCAG at levels A, AA, and AAA. Wave did not detect accessibility errors. Cynthia Says agree it is US 508 and WAI compliant as far as a computer can check.
W3C approves the CSS at level 2.1 and produced the following error at level 3.
URI : http://d-theme.com/sites/all/themes/nitobe/html.css?s
161 blockquote:before, blockquote:after Value Error : content none is not a content value : none
Sites using Nitobe
www.pm.gov.au
The new Prime Minister of Australia, Kevin Rudd, contributed very few new ideas, instead continuing most of the policies of the previous government, policies that Kevin said where wrong before the election.
At least Kevin chose the right way to develop his Web site. The site does not validate for two reasons. The developers use inline styles but do not specify the style language. The developers use inline javascript but do not specify the default scripting language. The site also uses Flash for one of the animated images leaving the image invisible to lots of people.
Kevin's policies including spending $42 billion dollars duplicating one of the existing telephone companies for absolutely no benefit to anyone other than his personal image. Some of the images on the Web site show equal stupidity. The banner images are decent quality but the thumbnails in links are almost unreadable due to evil JPEG compression. Spending an extra $2 of his time to actually look at the results from image editing would be the best investment he could make. Politicians are quick to slap their name all over anything without actually trying it.
Example HTML
Here are example HTML elements to see how they are formatted by this theme.
<a href="?x">link 1</a>: link 1 This is a test of a link you have not visited. See how links are highlighted. Hover your mouse over this link to see any hover effects that might be used then select the link to see the link displayed as visited.
<a href="?y">link 2</a>: link 2 Leave this link unselected as a comparison link you have not visited.
<abbr title="abbreviation">abbr</abbr>: abbreviation
<acronym title="Cyclic Redundancy Checksum">CRC</acronym>: CRC
<blockquote>blockquote</blockquote>:
blockquote
<cite>cite</cite>: cite
<code>code</code>: code
<div>div</div>:
<form> and <input>: The the comments form at the end of this page (if you are logged in).
<em>em</em>: em
<h1>h1</h1> is usually the top heading in the page. Repeating h1 in this test would break heading nesting.
<h2>h2</h2>:
h2
<h3>h3</h3>:
h3
<h4>h4</h4>:
h4
<h5>h5</h5>:
h5
<h6>h6</h6>:
h6
<hr />:
<ol><li>li</li></ol>:
- li
<p>paragraph</p>:
paragraph
<pre>.h3
{
font-size: 1.17em;
}</pre>
.h3
{
font-size: 1.17em;
}
<q>quote</q>: quote
<span>span</span>: span
<strong>strong</strong>: strong
<table><thead><tr><td>th1</td><td>th2</td></tr></thead>
<tbody>
<tr><td>td1</td><td>td2</td></tr>
<tr><td>td3</td><td>td4</td></tr>
</tbody>
</table>:
| th1 | th2 |
| td1 | td2 |
| td3 | td4 |
<ul><li>li</li></ul>:
- li
Content block title
Content block body. This block shows you what a block looks like in the content region.