- From: William Perry <wmperry@aventail.com>
- Date: Mon, 23 Sep 1996 06:42:01 -0700
- To: Chris Ridd <C.Ridd@imc.exec.nhs.uk>
- Cc: Stuart Young <nakor@glasswings.com.au>, Walter Ian Kaye <walter@natural-innovations.com>, www-html@w3.org, www-style@w3.org
Chris Ridd writes: >Stuart Young wrote: >> >> On Mon, 23 Sep 1996, Walter Ian Kaye wrote: >> >> > None of those are usable for computer source code, however. In source >> > code, a specific number of space characters can be vital to the correct >> > functioning of the program! Currently, HTML is unusable as a means of >> > transmitting source code; other content types must be used instead. >> >> Isn't this what <PRE> is all about? > >No, because the contents of a <pre> section is only PCDATA, which >prevents you from using the 'special' SGML characters inside your >program. This will greatly annoy your programmers... > >eg > ><pre> >PROCEDURE frob >BEGIN > IF silly <> foolish THEN > WRITELN("Ooops."); >END ></pre> > >is not legal because of the "<>". That's perfectly legal from what I understand. CDATA entries are only terminated by </[a-z] -Bill P.
Received on Monday, 23 September 1996 09:48:56 UTC