- From: James Graham <jg307@cam.ac.uk>
- Date: Fri, 23 Mar 2007 14:21:27 +0000
Nicholas Shanks wrote: > On 23 Mar 2007, at 02:27, Robert Brodrecht wrote: > >> Just because "most ... doesn't bother" doesn't mean it ought to be >> removed. >> So let's not ignore elements because "no one uses them." >> Ignore them because they are useless. > > I was thinking more along the lines of: > > 1) We start with a set containing all potential authors, human and > robotic, past present and future. > 2) We remove from that set the people and programs who don't care about > or are not willing to learn correct methods of authorship, these people > should have no say. > 3) We then take a poll of every possible string value for new elements, > and sort the result as a priority list, amalgamating words that mean the > same thing. > 4) We decide how many elements HTML should have (i.e. how complicated it > should be/how hard for new people to learn), and cut the list at this > number. > 5) We then use this as the new HTML. > > That way I'm sure there would be 100 million votes for <copyright> and > perhaps 250,000 votes for <var>, <dfn>, <kbd> etc. Whilst I agree with your conclusion (drop <var>, <dfn>, <kbd>), I disagree with your methodology. All possible elements are not equal; some elements can be processed by general-purpose UAs to beneficial effect, others cannot. When designing the language we should be looking to include the first type of element and not the second. -- "Eternity's a terrible thought. I mean, where's it all going to end?" -- Tom Stoppard, Rosencrantz and Guildenstern are Dead
Received on Friday, 23 March 2007 07:21:27 UTC