- From: Jim Ley <jim.ley@gmail.com>
- Date: Wed, 6 Apr 2005 16:20:40 +0100
On Apr 6, 2005 3:41 PM, Olav Junker Kj?r <olav at olav.dk> wrote: > Lachlan Hunt wrote: > There are three types of conformance criteria: > (1) Criteria that can be expressed in a DTD > (2) Criteria that cannot be expressed by a DTD, but can still be checked > by a machine. > (3) Criteria that can only be checked by a human. > > A conformance checker must check (1) and (2). A simple validator which > only checks (1) is therefore not conformant. One of the motivations of the WHAT-WG stuff, is that existing users don't have to change their existing tools, processes and understanding, now all of sudden we're removing one of the most valuable QA tools available today, based on some spurious notion that all these existing users don't understand the QA tools limitations. Firstly I think the conclusions that the audience for WHAT-WG stuff doesn't understand the limitations of the validator is sustainable - where's the evidence? And secondly, there won't be any QA tools at all if the validator isn't one of them, so we'll be getting even more crap published, and far from cleaning up the correctness, we'll just have a whole new load of crud to rubber stamp as valid in WF2, now I realise it's to the advantage of existing browser manufacturers to rubber stamp complicated heuristic behaviour they've already solved into a spec (it prevents new entrants from coming along) but how is it to the advantage to the rest of us - understanding specifications becomes harder and harder and relies on the fact that we knew what happened before... I simply cannot see the point in removing one of the few QA tools that actually exists for HTML, and would like to hear the actual argument for doing so. (as this is a seperate issue to if application of SGML is something that it would be) Jim.
Received on Wednesday, 6 April 2005 08:20:40 UTC