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[XML-DEV Mailing List Archive Home] [By Thread] [By Date] [Recent Entries] [Reply To This Message] Re: Why namespaces?
Paul Prescod <paul@p...> wrote: > David Megginson wrote: > > Sure -- that's why you have a DOCTYPE declaration at the top, so that > > validating processors can check the HTML against a DTD. > > This raises a major question about the utility of namespaces in a > vocabulary that cannot be mixed with other vocabularies. What does the > namespace add that you can't get from the doctype? > > And when we CAN mix XHTML with other vocabularies the precise details of > the namespace will be vital for proper validation! So multiple > namespaces will be necessary. I would presume that to mix XHTML with/inside another namespace, one would need to create a DTD for the "mixed" document that would somehow refer to (parts of) the XHTML DTD. It would then depend on which DTD variant he refers to, instead of on the namespace. Of course one can't do this sort of trick today with DTDs, but it might be possible with XSchemas, at least some day. There's so much churn going about distinguishing between three things: 1. Unique naming - making sure that one can call "areElementsTheSame(name1, name2)". 2. Grammar/Syntax/Structure constraints - "isDocumentValid(rootElement, DTD)", "addDefaultsToDocument(rootElement, DTD)". 3. Semantics - doing whatever the application is for. I would like to think that the intention was for namespaces to live exclusively in level 1 (call it "lex"), DTDs/Schemas in level 2 (call it "yacc"), and level 3 is the application itself. This is maybe simplistic but I found it to be a great help in figuring out my position on some of the issues raised in the relevant threads. In the XHTML multi-namespace issue, for example, I'd rather the three XHTML variants were defined at level 2 - possible sets of constraints and defaults for a document, such that the application (say, the browser) should not in principle have to worry about which variant was used. So far, I've seen no reason to abandon this view as a guide; it has obvious advantages and no serious disadvantages I can see. I quickly found out, typically by implication, that this view is not shared by others - some of whom I hesitate to disagree with without a very good reason. However, it is hard to figure out the exact "world view" of someone just by his position on a specific issue, so I don't have a clear grasp of a coherent alternative view. I'd greatly appreciate it if someone posted one; it is hard to disagree with someone you don't fully understand :-) What unsettles me is that I can't figure out the W3C view on the matter. The namespaces spec, for example, seems to follow the above view. The proposed XHTML recommendation obviously doesn't. It could be that there are differing views within the W3C itself. Of course this could be just my ignorance speaking, but I doubt that. If there was a clear decision on the overall view, the debate would have been on whether the W3C view is right or wrong, not whether feature X should be this way or that (the chances of there not being a debate at all are pretty slim :-) So, anyone care to make a crack at defining, in one or two paragraphs, an alternative view? And/or refer me to some W3C paper which clarifies what the "official view" is? Then we could start arguing - sorry, debating - about the core concepts instead of about each new feature as it appears in each new recommendation. After all, if there's no clear decision about this, we'd end up with features pulling XML in different directions - not a recipe for a healthy standard. Share & Enjoy, Oren Ben-Kiki xml-dev: A list for W3C XML Developers. To post, mailto:xml-dev@i... Archived as: http://www.lists.ic.ac.uk/hypermail/xml-dev/ and on CD-ROM/ISBN 981-02-3594-1 To (un)subscribe, mailto:majordomo@i... the following message; (un)subscribe xml-dev To subscribe to the digests, mailto:majordomo@i... the following message; subscribe xml-dev-digest List coordinator, Henry Rzepa (mailto:rzepa@i...)
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