- From: Jean-Claude Dufourd <jean-claude.dufourd@telecom-paristech.fr>
- Date: Mon, 18 Apr 2011 11:06:39 +0200
- To: Dave Raggett <dsr@w3.org>
- CC: Glenn Adams <glenn@skynav.com>, Mark Watson <watsonm@netflix.com>, "public-web-and-tv@w3.org" <public-web-and-tv@w3.org>
Hi Dave On 16/4/11 11:45 , Dave Raggett wrote: > A more sophisticated approach would allow you as a web page developer to > designate a markup element as a message hub. JCD: Can you please expand on that sentence ? Are you saying that (a clone of) an incoming XML message could end up simply appended to a element in the DOM ? Thanks JC > You could then register DOM > event listeners to handle incoming messages, and send events by > targeting events at the hub. The library script would look for elements > with a given attribute and add the above behavior. This is feasible as > the DOM allows scripts to define new kinds of events. We could then > standardize the attribute and the event format. -- JC Dufourd Directeur d'Etudes/Professor Groupe Multimedia/Multimedia Group Traitement du Signal et Images/Signal and Image Processing Telecom ParisTech, 37-39 rue Dareau, 75014 Paris, France Tel: +33145817733 - Mob: +33677843843 - Fax: +33145817144
Received on Monday, 18 April 2011 09:07:02 UTC