- From: Martin Duerst <duerst@it.aoyama.ac.jp>
- Date: Fri, 02 Nov 2007 16:22:01 +0900
- To: Richard Tobin <richard@inf.ed.ac.uk>, "Grosso, Paul" <pgrosso@ptc.com>, "Richard Tobin" <richard@inf.ed.ac.uk>, "Richard Ishida" <ishida@w3.org>, <public-i18n-core@w3.org>
- Cc: <public-xml-core-wg@w3.org>, <public-iri@w3.org>
At 22:25 07/11/01, Richard Tobin wrote: >> >> I'm about to hop a plane, but I don't think XPointer >> is a problem since it already refers to IRIs and >> talks about escaping--see >> http://www.w3.org/TR/xptr-framework/#escaping > >Is this the thing Konrad raised about RFC 2732 and square brackets for >IPv6 addresses? Yes. >If so, I haven't quite grasped what the problem is. Is it just that >people before 2732 could get away with using unescaped square brackets >in (never standardised) XPointer fragments? In RFC 2396 times, '[' and ']' were not allowed anywhere in an URI. With RFC 2732, they became okay in IPv6 literals. In RFC 3986/3987, they still only are allowed in IPv6 literals. My understanding was that one of the motivations behind Legacy Extended IRIs was to allow as little escaping as possible e.g. in XPointers. But '[' and ']', while as far as I understand being reasonably frequent in XPointers, are not allowed in the fragment part of a Legacy Extended IRI. If that's fine with you, that's fine with me, but please check. 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 Friday, 2 November 2007 08:44:26 UTC