- From: CVS User egraff <cvsmail@w3.org>
- Date: Mon, 18 Mar 2013 20:56:32 +0000
- To: public-html-commits@w3.org
Update of /sources/public/html5/html-xhtml-author-guide In directory roscoe:/tmp/cvs-serv25680 Modified Files: html-xhtml-authoring-guide.html Log Message: Changes to link to editor's draft --- /sources/public/html5/html-xhtml-author-guide/html-xhtml-authoring-guide.html 2013/03/18 20:52:15 1.87 +++ /sources/public/html5/html-xhtml-author-guide/html-xhtml-authoring-guide.html 2013/03/18 20:56:31 1.88 @@ -13,7 +13,7 @@ publishDate: "2013-03-18", previousPublishDate: "2010-10-19", previousMaturity: "WD", - edDraftURI: "http://dev.w3.org/html5/html-xhtml-author-guide/html-xhtml-authoring-guide-ED-COPY.htm", + edDraftURI: "http://dev.w3.org/html5/html-xhtml-author-guide/html-xhtml-authoring-guide.htm", // lcEnd: "2009-08-05", editors: [ { name: "Eliot Graff", company: "Microsoft Corporation" }, @@ -31,7 +31,7 @@ <section id=abstract> A document that uses polyglot markup is a document that is a stream of bytes that parses into identical document trees (with some exceptions, as noted in the <a href="#introduction">Introduction</a>) when processed as HTML and when processed as XML. - Polyglot markup that meets a well defined set of constraints is interpreted as compatible, regardless of whether they are processed as HTML or as XHTML, per the HTML5 specification. + Polyglot markup that meets a well-defined set of constraints is interpreted as compatible, regardless of whether they are processed as HTML or as XHTML, per the HTML5 specification. Polyglot markup uses a specific DOCTYPE, namespace declarations, and a specific case—normally lower case but occasionally camel case—for element and attribute names. Polyglot markup uses lower case for certain attribute values. Further constraints include those on void elements, named entity references, and the use of scripts and style.
Received on Monday, 18 March 2013 20:56:32 UTC