- From: John Cowan <cowan@ccil.org>
- Date: Wed, 18 Nov 2009 13:55:11 -0500
- To: Shelley Powers <shelley.just@gmail.com>
- Cc: John Cowan <cowan@ccil.org>, Julian Reschke <julian.reschke@gmx.de>, Lachlan Hunt <lachlan.hunt@lachy.id.au>, Liam Quin <liam@w3.org>, public-html@w3.org, public-xml-core-wg@w3.org
Shelley Powers scripsit: > I can understand the concept of fatal error, but draconian means > "extremely harsh and severe". I don't see that one needs to be > punitive when reporting an error, especially when parsing XHTML in a > browser. Relative to the behavior of HTML parsers, XML parsers are indeed draconian. > Perhaps rather than redefine XML, make it looser, we need to educate > browser developers about being aware of the user environment in which > they operate, and respond to errors accordingly. Indeed. -- Let's face it: software is crap. Feature-laden and bloated, written under tremendous time-pressure, often by incapable coders, using dangerous languages and inadequate tools, trying to connect to heaps of broken or obsolete protocols, implemented equally insufficiently, running on unpredictable hardware -- we are all more than used to brokenness. --Felix Winkelmann
Received on Wednesday, 18 November 2009 18:55:55 UTC