- From: Felix Sasaki <fsasaki@w3.org>
- Date: Fri, 7 Sep 2012 00:24:40 +0200
- To: Leroy Finn <finnle@tcd.ie>
- Cc: Jirka Kosek <jirka@kosek.cz>, Multilingual Web LT-TESTS Public <public-multilingualweb-lt-tests@w3.org>
- Message-ID: <CAL58czrYDi5LoOFpx+dCJakuzDzW+FB_nuvMcZLQ7eC59G4szQ@mail.gmail.com>
Thanks, Leroy. Just two comments below. 2012/9/6 Leroy Finn <finnle@tcd.ie> > Update on test files: > > - All the XHTML references are gone > > It seems that the input files, e.g. http://phaedrus.scss.tcd.ie/its2.0/inputdata/translate/html/Translate2Html.html are still not "HTML5 syntax". E.g. <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" ... /> should be <meta http-equiv="Content-Type" ... "> (no "/" in the empty tag ) > > - its-rule is now its-rules > - The its rules in the HTML are now version = 2.0 > > Sorry, I don't understand this: the rules are not in(side) the HTML, are they? Best, Felix > I will double check them when i am getting the *new output *and *zipping*them incase i missed any and i will add in the new tab-delimited output > style (see this email *Test suite output format *for more details). > > Thanks, > Leroy > > On 6 September 2012 10:41, Leroy Finn <finnle@tcd.ie> wrote: > >> 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 >>> >>> >> > -- Felix Sasaki DFKI / W3C Fellow
Received on Thursday, 6 September 2012 22:25:05 UTC