- From: John Cowan <cowan@mercury.ccil.org>
- Date: Mon, 21 Nov 2011 19:19:26 -0500
- To: Julian Reschke <julian.reschke@gmx.de>
- Cc: tantek@cs.stanford.edu, John Cowan <cowan@ccil.org>, Jeni Tennison <jeni@jenitennison.com>, www-xml-schema-comments@w3.org, HTML Data Task Force WG <public-html-data-tf@w3.org>, RDFa WG <public-rdfa-wg@w3.org>, public-html-xml@w3.org
Julian Reschke scripsit: >> 2. Precedent. Explicit exclusion of month and year durations from iCalendar (which was the basis for hCalendar, which was a key design driver for the time element). > > Interesting. See <https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc5545#section-3.3.6>. Well, yes; meetings don't normally last for months or years. Timespans on the Web are not so limited; there are hundreds of millions of Google hits for phrases like "for six months" and "for five years" that might be sensibly marked up with the <time> element. -- One Word to write them all, John Cowan <cowan@ccil.org> One Access to find them, http://www.ccil.org/~cowan One Excel to count them all, And thus to Windows bind them. --Mike Champion
Received on Tuesday, 22 November 2011 00:20:16 UTC