Thanks DavidF for all your work researching this matter. Just an FYI, I
suspect we can't really say it's "broken" as technically it is doing what
it's supposed to. The ALT text is clearly in the html code and thus will be
used for it's purpose. The purpose of ALT text is that it be read by browsers
for the sight-impaired. A sight-impaired browser reads the ALT text out to
the sight-impaired page visitor to inform them of an image and it's purpose.
It is not intended to be used as a "caption" to a picture. Depending on that
is frankly bad web design practice. It is up to the browser to render that
ALT text in a "tooltip" box. For a time only IE would do that. I would
suspect that the VML logic in IE and Pub 2003 is the interference in IE's
behavior with this. If so then non VML browsers probably do render the
"tooltip".
--
David Bartosik - [MSFT MVP]
http://www.publishermvps.com
http://www.davidbartosik.com
DavidF said:
Sorry, but it appears that the alt tag is broken in Pub 2003, and I don't
know of a workaround other than to create a text box label, or a label
embedded in the image.
DavidF
in message I have typed in alt text for all my pictures in Publisher 2003. When I
preview my web site and mouse over the pictures the alt text will not
appear.
I do not understand this because the alt text would pop up when I was
using
Publisher 2000.