- From: <bugzilla@jessica.w3.org>
- Date: Wed, 12 Feb 2014 02:19:48 +0000
- To: public-html-bugzilla@w3.org
https://www.w3.org/Bugs/Public/show_bug.cgi?id=16970 --- Comment #7 from John Daggett <jdaggett@mozilla.com> --- Addison, the terminology "compatibility caseless manner" implies that it's needed to be compatible with existing implementations but there's no consistency to be compatible with. The results for radio button name attribute matching, etc. will be different across IE/Gecko/Webkit-derivative (and across OS with IE). So I think it would actually be smarter here to eliminate the "compatibility caseless" definition and specify ASCII-case-insensitive, since that's simpler to standardize on for these specific, isolated instances. Basically, I think comment 2 is wrong, you don't get any sort of compatibility by using what is defined to be "compatibility caseless" matching here. I suspect that there wouldn't be much web content that would be broken by specifying ASCII-case-insensitive matching here, since the only way a site can currently work across browsers is to limit themselves to ASCII-case-insensitive. -- You are receiving this mail because: You are the QA Contact for the bug.
Received on Wednesday, 12 February 2014 02:19:50 UTC