- From: Marcos Caceres <marcosc@opera.com>
- Date: Fri, 22 Jan 2010 05:44:53 +0800
- To: Doug Schepers <schepers@w3.org>
- Cc: Dominique Hazael-Massieux <dom@w3.org>, "public-mwts@w3.org" <public-mwts@w3.org>, Robin Berjon <robin@robineko.com>, public-webapps <public-webapps@w3.org>, Spec Prod <spec-prod@w3.org>
On Jan 20, 2010, at 6:03 AM, Doug Schepers <schepers@w3.org> wrote: > Hi, Marcos- > > Marcos Caceres wrote (on 1/19/10 10:49 AM): >> Hi all, >> A draft of "A Method for Writing Testable Conformance Clauses and its >> Applications" in now available for review online [1]. For those that >> have not seen it, it basically just documents how we are >> standardizing >> the Widget specs and some basic QA processes: >> >> http://dev.w3.org/2008/dev-ind-testing/extracting-test-assertions-pub.html >> >> Please consider this a working draft, as it likely contains typos, >> and a >> couple of half-baked ideas, etc. Comments are, of course, welcomed. >> It >> is expected that this document will be published as a working group >> note >> at some point in the future. > > This is an interesting doc and case study, with useful best- > practices that mirror some of my own experience in creating specs > and test suites. I plan on integrating this into specs I edit, > where possible. > > I think you could emphasize algorithms a bit more, which is > traditionally a weak point in W3C specs. Can you elaborate a bit here. I'm really interested because I've recieved both positive and negative feedback about algoriths. E.g. Some say it's great to have them as step by step; others says it's overly prescriptive and takes the freedom/fun/art out of implementing. > > It may or may not be appropriate for this document to discuss > document readability more; W3C specs traditionally serve multiple > audiences, such as implementers, tutorial/book writers, and content > creators (authors), and while there is a move to make specs more > implementer-focused and separate out these concerns, this decreases > the value of the specs as community artifacts, makes tutorials more > likely to be available only much later and to be error-prone, since > they are not written by the same group of people who wrote the prose > of the spec. Agree completely; you've exposed my political agenda:) I strongly believe specs should be legible and usable by all its community of users. I don't believe "implementers" should be priveledged and that they have same magical ability to read specs that we mere mortals lack. I believe specs should be written as accesible as possible in their language and structure. > > I really like the goal and execution of this practice. Some of it > reminds me of my experimental Speki [1] project, which was an > exploration of a wiki toolbar to mark up specs for easier spec > production. One aspect of this was to create special stylesheets > for making the conformance criteria more obvious (follow the link, > and select the "implementers" presentation on the sidebar for a > demonstration). I applied some of this markup to DOM3 Events, but > not consistently enough. This was part of my Project Tinker [2] > architecture proposal (which I've neglected for a year or two). I'll be sure to take a look. > > > Overall, I am very supportive of this kind of detailed analysis, and > I appreciate the time and care you took to develop and write it up. Thanks! > This kind of document stands to make the production and quality of > specs much better. My chief suggestion is that, having developed > your workflow and tools, you should make them available to other > groups; I've been talking to Robin about adding what is relevant to ReSpec. We have not yet reached any agreement, however. > I am interested in reusing your tools for DOM3 Events and SVG, > specifically the markup and implementation report tools, and with > some modification, the test suite markup and tools. Great! > SVG has its own tools and processes for some parts of this, but I > strongly believe that the benefit increases the more specs use the > same toolchain. Agreed. > > > Here are some specific comments, mostly typo corrections or > clarification suggestions: I think Dom has now integrated your suggestions/fixes. > > > 1. Common mistakes > > * For each of the commons mistakes, include corrections for the > faulty prose. > > > 2. The method > > * "stable identifier" may be a little vague and abstract; if you > mean to add an @id, say, "give them a stable identifier, (such as) > an 'id' attribute value that is consistent between drafts". If you > mean something else, describe it. > > * Typo: "(see )" > > * Typo: "learnt" -> "learned" > > > 2.1 Relationship to the standardization process > > * "tangible objects": it might be better to use the term > "deliverables", since that is the wording of the Process Document > and charters; at the least, associate the 2 terms... "tangible > objects (also called the "deliverables" of the group) .. > > * Include "issue tracking software" in the list of tools provided by > the W3C, which can be used as part of the test/spec feedback loop. > > > 3. Structural components of a conformance clause > > * "Product" might be better stated as a "Conformance Category", > which includes authoring tools and authors. While tests against > authored content are not in the scope for this document, editors > need to be aware of the various conformance categories that they > need to keep in mind when writing, of which "user agents" are only > one category. DOM3 Events describes the following conformance > categories: Web browsers and other dynamic or interactive user > agents; Authoring tools; Authors and content; and Specifications and > host languages. > > > 4. Conventions for marking-up conformance clauses > > * Typo: "anylising" -> "analyzing" > > * Typo: "Prerequisites: <"If"" -> "Prerequisites: "If"" > > * Typo: "Working Groups is" -> "Working Group is" > > * "Hyperlink to the appropriate terms." Show, don't tell. Give us > an example here, to contextualize what you mean by "the appropriate > terms", even though the full example is down below: "Hyperlink to > the appropriate terms. For example, "encounters a <a class="term" > href="#file">file</a> matching"" > > > 5. Extracting conformance clauses > > * "in favor of using JavaScript" -> "in favor of using a custom > JavaScript library called _____"... make it easy to discuss and share > > * Typo: "with am XML document" -> "with an XML document" > > * Typo: "it allows to quickly assess" -> "it allows quick assessment" > > * Typo: "informant ion" -> "information" > > * Typo: "describe individual results" -> "describes individual > results" > > * Typo: "attrite" -> "attribute" > > * Grammaro: This is a sentence fragment: "And where the test ran, > but it was not possible to determine if the test actually passed or > failed (labeled as "incomplete")." -> "And where the test ran, but > it was not possible to determine if the test actually passed or > failed, the verdict was indicated as "incomplete"." > > * Typo: "three separate steps (, marking it up the specification," - > > "three separate steps (marking it up in the specification," or > "three separate steps (marking up the specification," > > * Typo: "and in practice to work best as an iterative process." -> > "and in practice work best as an iterative process." > > > [1] http://www.schepers.cc/speki/index.php?title=MonkeyML > [2] http://www.schepers.cc/tinker/ > > Regards- > -Doug Schepers > W3C Team Contact, SVG and WebApps WGs Thanks again for the detailed review and you supportive comments. >
Received on Friday, 22 January 2010 05:05:12 UTC