Hi Jirka, Leroy, all, I agree with Jirka, the HTML files should be "pure HTML syntax". That's very important for reaching out to the HTML community. Leroy, you said elsewhere that the test input file generation is manually, but the output file generation is automatically, I assume via XSLT? In that case you can use Jirka's tool https://github.com/kosek/html5-its-tools to do XSLT processing with HTML5. Best, Felix 2012/9/5 Jirka Kosek <jirka@kosek.cz> > On 5.9.2012 18:43, Leroy Finn wrote: > > > That HTML is actual valid HTML 5 > > http://www.w3.org/TR/2008/WD-html5-diff-20080122/#syntax as described > the > > W3C spec on HTML5. > > Yes, HTML5 allows many XHTML syntax constructs. Actually test files are > probably Polyglot, which means that they can be parsed both as HTML and > XHTML. But my point was that if those are tests targeted at HTML5 they > should use "pure HTML syntax". > > Jirka > > -- > ------------------------------------------------------------------ > Jirka Kosek e-mail: jirka@kosek.cz http://xmlguru.cz > ------------------------------------------------------------------ > Professional XML consulting and training services > DocBook customization, custom XSLT/XSL-FO document processing > ------------------------------------------------------------------ > OASIS DocBook TC member, W3C Invited Expert, ISO JTC1/SC34 member > ------------------------------------------------------------------ > > -- Felix Sasaki DFKI / W3C FellowReceived on Wednesday, 5 September 2012 22:22:57 GMT
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