[XML-DEV Mailing List Archive Home] [By Thread] [By Date] [Recent Entries] [Reply To This Message] re: RE: XHTML 1.0 returned to HTML WG
Curt Arnold sez: > After ranting on application profiles, etc. I wanted to clarify that it > doesn't seem to be necessary to get an answer to application profiles for > XHTML to be useful. Application profiles would be a useful thing to have > resolved for other XML applications, but doesn't seem necessary for XHTML > 1.0. The three namespaces thing seemed to be adding a feature to XHTML 1.0 > that HTML 4.01 did not have. As a new feature, it should have probably been > reserved for XHTML 1.1 or whatever. Actually, I found the namespace feature to be handy and quite logical, paralleling the triple DTD for HTML 4.0. But then, I just tinkered a bit with my processor and didn't have any problems making it work. (I use one macro which generates the !DOCTYPE statement, as I don't like to have to remember that whole string. When I added the XHTML processing path, I just reworked the macro so that it would handle the !DOCTYPE statement and the <html> tag - and, on the XHTML side, it also adds the namespace stuff and the <?xml?> tag.) As for reserving the feature for XHTML 1.1...why? XHTML 1.0 is a significant jump that will require almost every webmaster on the planet to do some fixing...given that scope, how significant is the effort expended to change the opening <html> tag?!? > Namespace free XHTML would be fine with me. Depends on what you mean by that; I see the dangerous potential there of descending into the same morass we currently have with HTML, where we theoretically go by the DTD, but in actuality, it's anybody's guess what browserisms a random user agent will support. Witness the spotty support CSS1 and CSS2 have, not to mention HTML4 itself. As a content provider, I don't mind the namespace attribute one bit. It's just one more thing to remember when coding, and I have a nice tool which remembers that for me - in short, I literally dropped the code in and forgot about it. From the programming side, I really don't see a whole lot of difference; if the UAs we have for HTML blithely ignore specified DTDs when given as !DOCTYPE statements, why should we expect that the UAs we will have for XML will do any better? Rev. Robert L. Hood | http://rev-bob.gotc.com/ Get Off The Cross! | http://www.gotc.com/ Download NeoPlanet at http://www.neoplanet.com *---------------------------------------------------------* E-Mail Delivery By VEI Internet Mail Services http://www.veiinternet.com - $14.95 Unlimited Internet Visit The New VEI Stores Open For Christmas: VEI DVD Store - http://vei.vstoredvds.com/ VEI Book Store - http://veibooks.vstorebooks.com/ *---------------------------------------------------------* 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 unsubscribe, mailto:majordomo@i... the following message; unsubscribe 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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