- From: poot <cvsmail@w3.org>
- Date: Tue, 24 Jun 2008 10:14:01 +0900 (JST)
- To: public-html-diffs@w3.org
Remove the paragraph that says 'URI' means 'IRI' since we'll just use
'URL' from now on. (whatwg r1794) (changed by: Ian Hickson)
Diff: http://people.w3.org/mike/diffs/html5/spec/Overview.1.984.html
Cumulative diff: http://people.w3.org/mike/diffs/html5/spec/Overview.diff.html
http://dev.w3.org/cvsweb/html5/spec/Overview.html?r1=1.983&r2=1.984&f=h
http://dev.w3.org/html5/spec/Overview.html
http://html5.org/tools/web-apps-tracker?from=1793&to=1794
===================================================================
RCS file: /sources/public/html5/spec/Overview.html,v
retrieving revision 1.983
retrieving revision 1.984
diff -u -d -r1.983 -r1.984
--- Overview.html 24 Jun 2008 01:00:50 -0000 1.983
+++ Overview.html 24 Jun 2008 01:12:10 -0000 1.984
@@ -2698,14 +2698,7 @@
<p>This specification uses the term <em>document</em> to refer to any use
of HTML, ranging from short static documents to long essays or reports
with rich multimedia, as well as to fully-fledged interactive
- applications.</p>
- <!-- XXXURL remove entire paragraph -->
-
- <p>For readability, the term URI is used to refer to both ASCII URIs and
- Unicode IRIs, as those terms are defined by RFC 3986 and RFC 3987
- respectively. On the rare occasions where IRIs are not allowed but ASCII
- URIs are, this is called out explicitly. <a
- href="#references">[RFC3986]</a> <a href="#references">[RFC3987]</a>
+ applications.
<p>The term <dfn id=root-element>root element</dfn>, when not explicitly
qualified as referring to the document's root element, means the furthest
Received on Tuesday, 24 June 2008 01:14:37 UTC