- From: poot <cvsmail@w3.org>
- Date: Tue, 14 Jul 2009 10:05:14 +0900 (JST)
- To: public-html-diffs@w3.org
hixie: work in some consistency in the ways of referencing HTML4. (whatwg r3398) http://dev.w3.org/cvsweb/html5/spec/Overview.html?r1=1.2527&r2=1.2528&f=h http://html5.org/tools/web-apps-tracker?from=3397&to=3398 =================================================================== RCS file: /sources/public/html5/spec/Overview.html,v retrieving revision 1.2527 retrieving revision 1.2528 diff -u -d -r1.2527 -r1.2528 --- Overview.html 14 Jul 2009 01:01:33 -0000 1.2527 +++ Overview.html 14 Jul 2009 01:03:55 -0000 1.2528 @@ -296,7 +296,7 @@ <li><a href="#compliance-with-other-specifications"><span class="secno">1.5.2 </span>Compliance with other specifications</a></ol></li> <li><a href="#relationships-to-other-specifications"><span class="secno">1.6 </span>Relationships to other specifications</a> <ol> - <li><a href="#relationship-to-html-4.01-and-dom2-html"><span class="secno">1.6.1 </span>Relationship to HTML 4.01 and DOM2 HTML</a></li> + <li><a href="#relationship-to-html-4.01-and-dom2-html"><span class="secno">1.6.1 </span>Relationship to HTML 4.01 and DOM2 HTML</a></li> <li><a href="#relationship-to-xhtml-1.x"><span class="secno">1.6.2 </span>Relationship to XHTML 1.x</a></ol></li> <li><a href="#html-vs-xhtml"><span class="secno">1.7 </span>HTML vs XHTML</a></li> <li><a href="#structure-of-this-specification"><span class="secno">1.8 </span>Structure of this specification</a> @@ -1216,7 +1216,7 @@ games), public telephone books or address books, communications software (e-mail clients, instant messaging clients, discussion software), document editing software, etc.<h3 id="history-0"><span class="secno">1.4 </span>History</h3><p><i>This section is non-normative.</i><p>Work on HTML 5 originally started in late 2003, as a proof - of concept to show that it was possible to extend HTML4's forms to + of concept to show that it was possible to extend HTML 4's forms to provide many of the features that XForms 1.0 introduced, without requiring browsers to implement rendering engines that were incompatible with existing HTML Web pages. At this early stage, @@ -1259,9 +1259,9 @@ specification violating the requirements of these other specifications. Whenever this has occurred, the transgressions have been noted as "<dfn id="willful-violation" title="willful violation">willful - violations</dfn>".<h3 id="relationships-to-other-specifications"><span class="secno">1.6 </span>Relationships to other specifications</h3><h4 id="relationship-to-html-4.01-and-dom2-html"><span class="secno">1.6.1 </span>Relationship to HTML 4.01 and DOM2 HTML</h4><p><i>This section is non-normative.</i><p>This specification describes a new revision of the HTML language + violations</dfn>".<h3 id="relationships-to-other-specifications"><span class="secno">1.6 </span>Relationships to other specifications</h3><h4 id="relationship-to-html-4.01-and-dom2-html"><span class="secno">1.6.1 </span>Relationship to HTML 4.01 and DOM2 HTML</h4><p><i>This section is non-normative.</i><p>This specification describes a new revision of the HTML language and its associated DOM API.<p>The requirements in this specification for features that were - already in HTML4 and DOM2 HTML are based primarily on the + already in HTML 4 and DOM2 HTML are based primarily on the implementation and deployment experience collected over the past ten years. Some features have been removed from the language, based on best current practices; implementation requirements for some of @@ -1269,7 +1269,7 @@ garnered wide use, are still included in this specification to allow implementations to continue supporting legacy content. <a href="#references">[HTML4]</a> <a href="#references">[DOM2HTML]</a><p>A separate document has been published by the W3C HTML working group to provide a more detailed reference of the differences - between this specification and the language described in the HTML 4 + between this specification and the language described in the HTML 4 specification. <a href="#references">[HTMLDIFF]</a><h4 id="relationship-to-xhtml-1.x"><span class="secno">1.6.2 </span>Relationship to XHTML 1.x</h4><p><i>This section is non-normative.</i><p>This specification is intended to replace XHTML 1.0 as the normative definition of the XML serialization of the HTML vocabulary. <a href="#references">[XHTML10]</a><p>While this specification updates the semantics and requirements @@ -52456,8 +52456,8 @@ close resemblance to SGML and XML, it is a separate language with its own parsing rules.</p> - <p>Some earlier versions of HTML (in particular from HTML2 to - HTML4) were based on SGML and used SGML parsing rules. However, few + <p>Some earlier versions of HTML (in particular from HTML 2 to + HTML 4) were based on SGML and used SGML parsing rules. However, few (if any) web browsers ever implemented true SGML parsing for HTML documents; the only user agents to strictly handle HTML as an SGML application have historically been validators. The resulting @@ -55243,7 +55243,7 @@ identifier, or system identifier, switch to a conformance checking mode for another language (e.g. based on the DOCTYPE token a conformance checker could recognize that the document is an - HTML4-era document, and defer to an HTML4 conformance + HTML 4-era document, and defer to an HTML 4 conformance checker.)</p> <p>Append a <code>DocumentType</code> node to the @@ -63845,7 +63845,7 @@ <h4 id="warnings-for-obsolete-but-conforming-features"><span class="secno">12.1.1 </span>Warnings for obsolete but conforming features</h4> - <p>To ease the transition from HTML4 Transitional documents to the + <p>To ease the transition from HTML 4 Transitional documents to the language defined in <em>this</em> specification, and to discourage certain features that are only allowed in very few circumstances, conformance checkers are required to warn the user when the
Received on Tuesday, 14 July 2009 01:05:52 UTC