- From: Julian Reschke <julian.reschke@gmx.de>
- Date: Mon, 25 May 2009 12:22:22 +0200
- To: "Martin J. Dürst" <duerst@it.aoyama.ac.jp>
- CC: Anne van Kesteren <annevk@opera.com>, Dan Connolly <connolly@w3.org>, "www-tag@w3.org" <www-tag@w3.org>, public-iri@w3.org
Martin J. Dürst wrote: > On 2009/05/22 21:04, Julian Reschke wrote: >> Martin J. Dürst wrote: >>> ... >>> - Normalization would have to occur at a stage when the document is >>> already in some Unicode encoding internally, and so the original >>> encoding may not be known anymore (this came from the CSS WG, as far >>> as I remember). Abstractly, this may be true, but then see below. >>> ... >> >> Could you please clarify what "below" refers to? > > The fact that query parts are treated differently for documents that > were originally in Unicode (in particular UTF-8) and for others. Yes, but that's a requirement that is *specific* to URLs in *non-valid* (*) HTML documents. I wouldn't want that encoding dependency to be present for *any* language that uses IRIs. BR, Julian (*) as defined in HTML5
Received on Monday, 25 May 2009 10:23:18 UTC