- From: Sam Ruby <rubys@intertwingly.net>
- Date: Sun, 01 Mar 2009 05:46:43 -0500
- To: Mark Nottingham <mnot@mnot.net>
- CC: Ben Adida <ben@adida.net>, Manu Sporny <msporny@digitalbazaar.com>, "www-tag@w3.org WG" <www-tag@w3.org>, HTMLWG WG <public-html@w3.org>, RDFa mailing list <public-rdf-in-xhtml-tf@w3.org>, public-xhtml2@w3.org
Mark Nottingham wrote: > > On 01/03/2009, at 10:33 AM, Ben Adida wrote: > >> Mark Nottingham wrote: >>> Are people using RDFa in HTML using the profile mechanism, or xmlns, or >>> both? Do they flag the use of RDFa in any way (like @version does for >>> XHTML+RDFa)? >> >> We recommend using the doctype with @version. We've determined that, >> while @profile is the right approach for interpreting new values of >> @rel, it doesn't cover new attributes, so it's not the right way to flag >> RDFa. > > Sorry, I should have been more clear; I'm talking about in HTML4 (since > CC doesn't require or recommend XHTML for CC+). > [snip] > > But an HTML4 parser has absolutely no business knowing about xmlns, period. I think we use these terms differently than users do. $ curl --silent --head http://www.whitehouse.gov/ | grep -i content-type Content-Type: text/html; charset=utf-8 $ curl --silent http://www.whitehouse.gov/ | head -3 | tail -1 <!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0 Transitional//EN" "http://www.w3.org/TR/xhtml1/DTD/xhtml1-transitional.dtd"> From a user perspective features are things like canvas or RDFa. Add a little markup, include a bit of javascript and you have awesome graphics or delectable metadata. From a HTTP perspective, HTML is unversioned... there is no way to indicate via a MIME type whether something is HTML4 vs HTML5, just a way to indicate something is HTML vs XHTML; and that is done is a way that is beyond what most users can control and is at variance with what users understand XHTML to be and is entirely unsupported by the dominant browser. And triggers unforgiving error recovery strategies. From a browser perspective, HTML is unversioned. No browser that supports canvas will refuse to do so simply because that tag is included in a page which includes the HTML4 DOCTYPE. Firefox (to pick an concrete example) has no plans to have a separate HTML5 parser. Javascript libraries which will extract RDFa data will do so even in quirks mode. Even if the attributes happen to be named starting with the characters 'x', 'm', and 'l'. Users who are attracted to RDFa today are likely to have been influenced either directly or indirectly by Zeldman and his brethren. They include an XHTML DOCTYPE and try to be careful about quotes. The few that actually read specs will see that XHTML 1.0 Transitional allows the use of the text/html MIME type. I am biased. I believe that we should cater to these users. They outnumber us. - Sam Ruby
Received on Sunday, 1 March 2009 10:46:54 UTC