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At Friday, 22 June 2001, Elliotte Rusty Harold <elharo@m.... edu> wrote: >At 10:38 PM +0100 6/21/01, Peter Flynn wrote: > >>Can someone explain why the problems of accommodating the >>enlarged set of code points in U3.x cannot be solved by moving >>the fence in the SGML Declaration for XML? A Technical >>Corrigendum to the 1.0 Spec could make clear that we should have >>worded it so that the permitted characters of XML are those >>non-control characters defined in Ux.y at any point in time >>(modulo whatever explicit exclusions). Or is there something >>worse going on here? >> > >Because XML parsers don't pay a whit of attention to SGML or SGML >declarations. They're defined in terms of the XML spec purely. In >particular they're part of the BNF grammar which lists each and every >character that is allowed by its Unicode code point. Whatever. One is simply a different expression of the other, so just change the lists. My point was that the lists should not have had these limits placed on them if it was known that Unicode would expand. Just issue a TC as and when Unicode changes, for implementors to adjust their software by. ///Peter
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