- From: Roy T. Fielding <fielding@avron.ICS.UCI.EDU>
- Date: Mon, 08 Apr 1996 18:53:56 -0700
- To: Larry Masinter <masinter@parc.xerox.com>
- Cc: http-wg%cuckoo.hpl.hp.com@hplb.hpl.hp.com
Everything else looks fine, though it may be editorially difficult to make sensible sentences with just "charset". > [** These tokens don't seem to correspond to the tokens used by most > of the multilingual servers in the world today!!! Why don't we fix > them to match? EUC, Shift-JIS, Big5, GB... It was my impression that > we might get IANA to assign a canonical and get out of this buisness. > Why can't we do this? **] Because we can't do it until IANA does it [or at least puts in place the initial list and procedures for additions]. Can you work on getting that done via the appropriate channels? > [** I note that there was a change suggested that 'the character set > of an entity body should be labeled as the lowest common denominator > of the character codes used within that body, with the exception that > no label is preferred over the labels US-ASCII or ISO-8859-1', and > object to this wording as confusing and unnecessary, and wonder why it > was put in. **] That exists (as per a request on the mailing list long ago) to preserve backwards compatibility with 1.0 clients. It is needed because the old MIME specs prefer explicit naming, which breaks many 1.0 systems. I don't see what is confusing about it. ...Roy T. Fielding Department of Information & Computer Science (fielding@ics.uci.edu) University of California, Irvine, CA 92717-3425 fax:+1(714)824-4056 http://www.ics.uci.edu/~fielding/
Received on Monday, 8 April 1996 19:07:01 UTC