- From: Léonie Watson <tink@tink.uk>
- Date: Tue, 19 Jan 2016 19:46:54 -0000
- To: <public-webapps@w3.org>
-----Original Message----- From: Léonie Watson [mailto:tink@tink.uk] Sent: 19 January 2016 19:21 To: public-html@w3.org Subject: HTML plan Dear all, We've put a new draft of the HTML specification into GitHub: http://github.com/w3c/html. You can read the editor's draft: http://w3c.github.io/html. It is based on the W3C HTML 5.1 build scripts, synchronised to the WHATWG source from 12th January 2016. We would like to check the interoperability of those changes, and work towards a new Recommendation, with the understanding that anything which isn't demonstrably interoperable when we publish will be removed from the specification proposed as a Recommendation and incorporated into a later update when it is. We welcome all pull requests for outstanding issues, in particular to fix important interoperability bugs such as those affecting web developers working on production web sites. Pull requests with supporting data to justify a change are actively encouraged. All you need is a GitHub account, and if you are not a member of the Web Platform working group, please remember we work to W3C's patent policy terms [1]. This means anyone can easily help us improve the existing HTML spec by contributing corrections and clarifications. If you want to add a new feature to HTML, we encourage you to develop a specification in the Web Platform Incubator community group [2] (or elsewhere if you like). Wherever you work on the proposal, you should consider bringing it to the Web Platform working group when it has buy-in from a sizeable community who are prepared to ship it in production, when it is "reasonably clear" what the rough architecture is, but before you have got every last detail sorted out. When a proposal has sufficient buy-in to move it along the W3C Recommendation Track Process, bring it to this Working Group for wider testing and review, and formal standardisation. See the "intent to migrate" template [3] for the kind of questions the Working Group will ask about new proposals. When HTML5 was published W3C announced its intention to continue publishing updates, based on interoperable deployment, every year or so. We would like to meet this goal and publish a new improved Working Draft rapidly, as a first step towards meeting that commitment to the community. The specification has been converted to be generated directly from the source in GitHub, using Bikeshed [4]. Making bug fixes means editing HTML source code. You should then run the Bikeshed processor to check for build errors - this can be done locally, or online. One of our first tasks will be to triage the outstanding bugs in Bugzilla [5], fix and resolve any quick editorial issues, resolve feature requests with a recommendation to take the idea to the Web Platform Incubator community group, and migrate all other issues to GitHub. Please file new issues in GitHub. A year ago, there was a lot of discussion about modularising HTML and the working group charter [6] calls this out as a deliverable, citing a proposal that Robin Berjon worked on [7]. The feedback we have received on the proposed split by chapter is that it doesn't provide the benefits that modularisation promises. To do this properly will require refactoring of the specification. We would still like to do this, but we recognise it is a lot of work and there are drawbacks as well as benefits. One approach to test modularisation is to encourage people working on a specific section to split it out from the "main" HTML specification, move it independently to Recommendation, so that it can be referenced normatively from the base specification. This way we can get some experience of the process without undertaking a massive project before we really know the costs and benefits. We welcome feedback from WG participants on this approach, and on the HTML plan itself. Finally, we also welcome expressions of interest from anybody who would like to join the editing team - for which the reward is hard work and the satisfaction of a job well done. While anybody can submit a pull request proposing a change to the specification, the editors will work together to review pull requests and integrate them when they are ready. Regards, Web Platform Working Group chairs and Team contacts [1] W3C Patent Policy http://www.w3.org/Consortium/facts#patpol [2] Web Platform Incubator Community Group (WICG) https://www.w3.org/community/wicg/ [3] Intent to Migrate https://wicg.github.io/admin/intent-to-migrate.html [4] Bikeshed https://github.com/tabatkins/bikeshed [5] Bugzilla bugs http://tinyurl.com/nkjxluk http://tinyurl.com/j78uzg3 [6] Web Platform Working Group Charter http://www.w3.org/2015/10/webplatform-charter.html [7] Robin Berjon's module proposal http://darobin.github.io/breakup/specs/ -- @LeonieWatson tink.uk Carpe diem
Received on Tuesday, 19 January 2016 19:47:31 UTC