- From: Glenn A. Adams <gadams@xfsi.com>
- Date: Thu, 27 Jul 2006 11:05:01 -0400
- To: "Chris Lilley" <chris@w3.org>, <public-tt@w3.org>
Chris, Thanks for your comment. The TT WG has reviewed this comment has agreed upon the following response: The intention is that the presentation processing defined by DFXP that extends beyond or differs from XSL 1.0 also be required by a conformant presentation processor. That is, a strictly XSL 1.0 conformant formatter would not be wholly adequate. The text will be clarified to make this intention more clear. Regards, Glenn -----Original Message----- From: public-tt-request@w3.org [mailto:public-tt-request@w3.org] On Behalf Of Chris Lilley Sent: Friday, June 02, 2006 11:44 PM To: public-tt@w3.org Subject: Processor Conformance Hello public-tt, section 3.2 Processor Conformance states: If the processor claims to support presentation processing in order to produce a rendition of TT AF content on a visual medium, then it must implement the region and line layout semantics defined by 9.3 Region Layout and Presentation and 9.4 Line Layout, respectively. In addition, the processor should satisfy the user agent accessibility guidelines specified by [UAAG]. section 9.3.2 Synchronic Flow Processing states: for each TT AF style property attribute in some computed style specification set that has no counterpart in [XSL 1.0], map that attribute directly through to the relevant formatting object produced by the input TT AF content element to which the style property applies; My question - it is not clear whether an XSL-FO processor which claims to be a TTAF- DFXP processor and claims to support presentation processing, but does not support any TT AF style properties that are not already in XSL 1.0, is a Conformant Processor per 3.2. Please clarify. If it would be conformant, are the extra TT AF style properties ignored? -- Chris Lilley mailto:chris@w3.org Interaction Domain Leader Co-Chair, W3C SVG Working Group W3C Graphics Activity Lead Co-Chair, W3C Hypertext CG
Received on Thursday, 27 July 2006 15:08:22 UTC