About wiki editing

Folks,

Compare:

> The following page has been changed by 84.201.143.187:
> http://esw.w3.org/topic/geoFAQxmllang

with

> The following page has been changed by RichardIshida:
> http://esw.w3.org/topic/geoFAQxmllang

Please remember to sign in (log on, or whatever it is) when using the wiki.  It makes it easier for me to determine whether or not the page is being sabotaged.  If you allow cookies you should only need to sign in once.

Cheers,
RI


============
Richard Ishida
W3C

contact info:
http://www.w3.org/People/Ishida/ 

W3C Internationalization:
http://www.w3.org/International/ 

Publication blog:
http://people.w3.org/rishida/blog/
 
 

> -----Original Message-----
> From: public-i18n-geo-request@w3.org 
> [mailto:public-i18n-geo-request@w3.org] On Behalf Of 
> w3t-archive+esw-wiki@w3.org
> Sent: 01 July 2005 13:04
> To: w3t-archive+esw-wiki@w3.org
> Subject: [ESW Wiki] Update of "geoFAQxmllang" by 84.201.143.187
> 
> Dear Wiki user,
> 
> You have subscribed to a wiki page or wiki category on "ESW 
> Wiki" for change notification.
> 
> The following page has been changed by 84.201.143.187:
> http://esw.w3.org/topic/geoFAQxmllang
> 
> --------------------------------------------------------------
> ----------------
>     </a>
>   }}}
>   
> - In the example, the contents of elements <b> and <d> and 
> the attribute ''attr'' of element <e> are all tagged as being 
> in English ('en'). The content of element <c> is tagged with 
> the empty language. The content of element <f> is tagged as 
> being in German ('de'). Element <e> itself contains what 
> appears to be a language tag ("en-US"): its content is not in 
> English, but rather conveys the value of "U.S. English".
> + In the example, the contents of elements <b> and <d> and 
> the attribute ''attr'' of element <e> are all tagged as being 
> in English ('en'). The content of element <c> is tagged with 
> the empty language [[DRC 1July05 Maybe "'''the empty 
> language'''" needs explanation]]. The content of element <f> 
> is tagged as being in German ('de'). Element <e> itself 
> contains what appears to be a language tag ("en-US"): its 
> content is not in English, but rather conveys the value of 
> "U.S. English".
>   
> 

Received on Friday, 1 July 2005 14:40:14 UTC