- From: <jg@zorch.w3.org>
- Date: Thu, 26 Sep 96 10:27:22 -0400
- To: Maurizio Codogno <mau@beatles.cselt.stet.it>
- Cc: http-wg%cuckoo.hpl.hp.com@hplb.hpl.hp.com
In general folks, (Maurizio in particular in this case), if there is wording in the specification that you believe can be clarified to prevent mis-understanding of the HTTP specifications as people implement it, now is the time to complain about it, so we can fix it for draft standard, and prevent future problems. If another sentence, a rewrite of existing text, or better cross-referenceing would help, I certainly want to know about it. The primary authors of the document have read the document until we no longer actually see problems; it is only by questions and problems being taken all the way to suggested improvements and clarifications of the document that further improvements can be made. All of us who wrote it are burned out on the words. So, for example, if a definition of idempotence in the glossary might have helped in understanding this issue, we can certainly add such things. If there are redundant words in the document confusing something, we can delete the redundancy. Editorial improvement of the specification is certainly allowed (and encouraged) in the period between proposed and draft standard; if we need to fix wording (or of course find the protocol itself is fundamentally flawed in some way), we can and should fix the problem. Some IETF documents get entirely rewritten in this period (though I am NOT volunteering to do a massive rewrite in this case; I will guide my choices by the doctor's mantra "first, do no harm".) Your editor, - Jim Gettys
Received on Thursday, 26 September 1996 07:35:48 UTC