- From: Martin Duerst <duerst@it.aoyama.ac.jp>
- Date: Mon, 04 Sep 2006 21:00:09 +0900
- To: Karl Dubost <karl@w3.org>, www-i18n-comments@w3.org, public-i18n-core@w3.org
- Cc: Richard Ishida <ishida@w3.org>, Felix Sasaki <fsasaki@w3.org>
At 11:12 06/09/04, Karl Dubost wrote: >(PS: Though HTML 4.01 refers to Unicode 3.0, I wonder if using >characters from Unicode 4.0 and 5.0 make the document non conformant.) Sorry, I missed that. Of course not! HTML Internationalization (first RFC 2070 and later HTML 4.0) was explicitly designed to cope with the expanding repertoire of Unicode. The SGML declaration allows all unassigned codepoints, for example. The same applies to XML, which originally cited Unicode 2.0 or so. That was just the newest version available, and we didn't distinguish that carefully yet between dated versions and open-ended citations then. So, in short, don't worry, be happy! Regards, Martin. #-#-# Martin J. Du"rst, Assoc. Professor, Aoyama Gakuin University #-#-# http://www.sw.it.aoyama.ac.jp mailto:duerst@it.aoyama.ac.jp
Received on Monday, 4 September 2006 12:15:00 UTC