- From: <bugzilla@jessica.w3.org>
- Date: Wed, 19 Sep 2012 08:45:29 +0000
- To: public-html-bugzilla@w3.org
https://www.w3.org/Bugs/Public/show_bug.cgi?id=18915
Summary: Encouraged cite attribute behavior is unlikely to be
implemented and so should be dropped
Product: HTML WG
Version: unspecified
Platform: PC
OS/Version: All
Status: NEW
Severity: normal
Priority: P2
Component: HTML5 spec
AssignedTo: erika.doyle@microsoft.com
ReportedBy: mjs@apple.com
QAContact: public-html-bugzilla@w3.org
CC: mike@w3.org, public-html-wg-issue-tracking@w3.org,
public-html@w3.org
The Rendering section, in subsection Links, Forms and Navigation
<http://dev.w3.org/html5/spec/rendering.html#links,-forms,-and-navigation>
says:
"User agents are expected to allow users to navigate browsing contexts to the
resources indicated by the cite attributes on q, blockquote, ins, and del
elements."
As far as I can tell, mainstream UAs do not implement this, and I don't know of
any planning to offer such behavior. Making these elements act as hyperlinks
directly is likely to be incompatible with existing content, a context menu
item is too obscure to be worth it, and out-of-line UI is likely not to merit
space in the UI chrome.
"expected" statements in the Rendering section are MUST-level conformance
criteria for the "Visual user agents that support the suggested default
rendering" conformance class:
<http://dev.w3.org/html5/spec/infrastructure.html#conformance-classes>
Since this requirement is unlikely to be implemented, it should be dropped.
Otherwise it is likely to be dropped in CR anyway.
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Received on Wednesday, 19 September 2012 08:45:30 UTC