- From: Paul Downey <paul.downey@whatfettle.com>
- Date: Mon, 12 Jun 2006 22:09:56 +0100
- To: Jan Algermissen <jalgermissen@topicmapping.com>
- Cc: "Mark Baker" <distobj@acm.org>, "Tim Bray" <tbray@textuality.com>, "Paul Denning" <pauld@mitre.org>, public-web-http-desc@w3.org
On 11 Jun 2006, at 11:01, Jan Algermissen wrote: > When you say "information [...] that your app can use to decide", > do you refer to the time the app is built (or configured) or to the > time the app actually consumes the form in its runtime interactions > with the service. How can you tell if someone takes a HTML page and uses it to display a form, or uses it to generate Java code, builds it, and then some time later sends the same HTTP request? > IMHO it should be the latter - I think the former leads to > uneccessary coupling. IMHO making such a distinction is unnecessary coupling. Paul -- http://blog.whatfettle.com
Received on Monday, 12 June 2006 21:10:03 UTC