- From: Julian Reschke <julian.reschke@gmx.de>
- Date: Fri, 08 Jul 2011 09:23:14 +0200
- To: Ian Hickson <ian@hixie.ch>
- CC: Tim Berners-Lee <timbl@w3.org>, HTML WG <public-html@w3.org>, TAG List <www-tag@w3.org>
On 2011-07-08 02:30, Ian Hickson wrote: > ... >>>>> 3. Because it has a hash in he middle instead of at the end, typical >>>>> serializers won't be able to use namespace prefix on output, so any >>>>> files which use these URLs will by ugly, unreadable, and large. >>> >>> I don't understand this issue. Could you elaborate? >> >> Serializers use namespaces to make the output compact and readable. >> They typically use N3/turtle prefixes or XML namespaces as abbreviations >> where the hash or if none the last slash is taken as the end of the >> namespace URI, and everything from then on must be basically a >> localname. > > I don't really see what the problem is here. In http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml/microdata#http://microformats.org/profile/hcard%23:adr the fragment identifier is http://microformats.org/profile/hcard%23:adr which is not a legal XML local name. Best regards, Julian
Received on Friday, 8 July 2011 07:23:45 UTC