- From: CVS User lsilli <cvsmail@w3.org>
- Date: Mon, 02 Sep 2013 04:24:32 +0000
- To: public-html-commits@w3.org
Update of /sources/public/html5/html-xhtml-author-guide
In directory roscoe:/tmp/cvs-serv15664/html-xhtml-author-guide
Modified Files:
html-xhtml-authoring-guide.html
Log Message:
a typo
--- /sources/public/html5/html-xhtml-author-guide/html-xhtml-authoring-guide.html 2013/09/02 04:23:16 1.125
+++ /sources/public/html5/html-xhtml-author-guide/html-xhtml-authoring-guide.html 2013/09/02 04:24:31 1.126
@@ -127,7 +127,7 @@
</p>
<p> For the most part, polyglot markup is just a pure deduction of the validity constraints and syntax requirements that
- HTML and XHTML dictate, many of which took polyglotness into considertaion when they were added to HTML5.
+ HTML and XHTML dictate, many of which took polyglotness into consideration when they were added to HTML5.
However, for reasons of <a title="robustness">robustness</a>, the spec sometimes goes a little further than the principle of the lowest common
denominator would have required.</p>
Received on Monday, 2 September 2013 04:24:32 UTC