- From: Kristof Zelechovski <giecrilj@stegny.2a.pl>
- Date: Thu, 21 Aug 2008 21:30:15 +0200
If I understand it correctly, we do not have a problem with the colon as a namespace separator. Our problem is that "a:x" sometimes means the same as "b:x" and there is no reasonable way to make legacy browsers support this. Different URLs, OTOH, are not expected to mean the same thing even if one is an alias for another. Chris -----Original Message----- From: Ben Adida [mailto:ben@adida.net] Sent: Thursday, August 21, 2008 8:53 PM To: Dan Brickley Cc: Tab Atkins Jr.; Bonner, Matt; WHAT-WG; Ian Hickson; hsivonen at iki.fi; giecrilj at stegny.2a.pl Subject: Re: [whatwg] Creative Commons Rights Expression Language Namespaces are an anti-pattern, really? Says who? The web is inherently namespaced. Everything you go to is scoped to a URL prefix. There isn't one "Paris" or one "New York," there is wikipedia/paris, and nyc.gov/NewYork. So is it the ":" that bothers you? Is that really relevant?
Received on Thursday, 21 August 2008 12:30:15 UTC