[
Lists Home |
Date Index |
Thread Index
]
- From: james anderson <James.Anderson@mecomnet.de>
- To: Tim Bray <tbray@textuality.com>
- Date: Fri, 07 Jan 2000 11:19:55 +0100
ie., Mr Waldin's conclusion is correct, and the REC actually requires
application recognize that a conforming parser may well distinguish between
the two encodings and the application must act as if the standard is option #2.
Ray Waldin wrote:
>
> Tim Bray wrote:
> > So... let's try again. Consider these two
> >
> > <html:a href="foo">
> > <html:a html:href="foo">
> >
> > The namespace spec could have said one of three things:
> >
> > 1. These must always be treated as identical
> > 2. These must always be treated as different
> > 3. Applications can make up their minds
> >
> > The then-Working Group eventually went for #3. ...
>
> How can #3 be an option at the application level if #2 isn't enforced at
> the parser level? Will parsers allow switching between these universes
> at parse time?
>
Tim Bray responded:
>
> At 04:48 PM 1/6/00 -0800, Ray Waldin wrote:
> > <html:a href="foo" html:href="bar"/>
> >
> >This element must be considered well-formed from the standpoint of XML
> >1.0 + Namespaces in order to allow #3 at the application level, no? And
> >furthermore, applications wanting to live in #1 have to do extra work
> >for each and every attribute to ensure that documents in #3 are in the
> >subset that is universe #1. Yikes!
>
> That's correct. Apps can't rely on a generic XML or namespace processor
> to raise an error on this. If they want to do so, they have to do the
> work themselves. But the alternative - never allowing this to happen -
> seemed even more unattractive. -Tim
xml-dev: A list for W3C XML Developers. To post, mailto:xml-dev@ic.ac.uk
Archived as: http://www.lists.ic.ac.uk/hypermail/xml-dev/ and on CD-ROM/ISBN 981-02-3594-1
To unsubscribe, mailto:majordomo@ic.ac.uk the following message;
unsubscribe xml-dev
To subscribe to the digests, mailto:majordomo@ic.ac.uk the following message;
subscribe xml-dev-digest
List coordinator, Henry Rzepa (mailto:rzepa@ic.ac.uk)
|