- From: Leroy Finn <finnle@tcd.ie>
- Date: Thu, 6 Sep 2012 10:41:01 +0100
- To: Felix Sasaki <fsasaki@w3.org>
- Cc: Jirka Kosek <jirka@kosek.cz>, Multilingual Web LT-TESTS Public <public-multilingualweb-lt-tests@w3.org>
- Message-ID: <CAMYWBwsHpbLZ2LwMxDDkKY6YptjymDsXiGDnsDvfMpN_SZV7CA@mail.gmail.com>
Sure I will make the necessary changes to the test files today. Thanks, Leroy On 5 September 2012 23:22, Felix Sasaki <fsasaki@w3.org> wrote: > Hi Jirka, Leroy, all, > > I agree with Jirka, the HTML files should be "pure HTML syntax". That's > very important for reaching out to the HTML community. Leroy, you said > elsewhere that the test input file generation is manually, but the output > file generation is automatically, I assume via XSLT? In that case you can > use Jirka's tool > https://github.com/kosek/html5-its-tools > to do XSLT processing with HTML5. > > Best, > > Felix > > > 2012/9/5 Jirka Kosek <jirka@kosek.cz> > >> On 5.9.2012 18:43, Leroy Finn wrote: >> >> > That HTML is actual valid HTML 5 >> > http://www.w3.org/TR/2008/WD-html5-diff-20080122/#syntax as described >> the >> > W3C spec on HTML5. >> >> Yes, HTML5 allows many XHTML syntax constructs. Actually test files are >> probably Polyglot, which means that they can be parsed both as HTML and >> XHTML. But my point was that if those are tests targeted at HTML5 they >> should use "pure HTML syntax". >> >> Jirka >> >> -- >> ------------------------------------------------------------------ >> Jirka Kosek e-mail: jirka@kosek.cz http://xmlguru.cz >> ------------------------------------------------------------------ >> Professional XML consulting and training services >> DocBook customization, custom XSLT/XSL-FO document processing >> ------------------------------------------------------------------ >> OASIS DocBook TC member, W3C Invited Expert, ISO JTC1/SC34 member >> ------------------------------------------------------------------ >> >> > > > -- > Felix Sasaki > DFKI / W3C Fellow > >
Received on Thursday, 6 September 2012 09:41:35 UTC