- From: Ian Hickson <ian@hixie.ch>
- Date: Fri, 29 Feb 2008 02:23:03 +0000 (UTC)
Executive summary: I did most of the changes suggested below. On Wed, 15 Aug 2007, Simon Pieters wrote: > > The spec says: > > Other nodes types (e.g. Attr) cannot occur as children of elements. If > they do, this algorithm must raise an INVALID_STATE_ERR exception. > > s/elements/elements or documents/ as the algorithm can be used for documents > as well. > > What about PIs? They can occur as children of elements or documents. How? On Wed, 15 Aug 2007, Simon Pieters wrote: > > The serializing HTML fragments algorithm talks about "child node" to > refer to the current node being processed. This is a bit confusing, and > I think "current node" would be clearer. Done. On Thu, 16 Aug 2007, Lachlan Hunt wrote: > > There is a possible issue serialising HTML fragments section [1]. The > algorithm seems fine for use with things like innerHTML, but there are > other issues that should be considered when serialising to a file, > database, network stream or something. > > Such serialisers should consider the character encoding. Although a > Unicode encoding should ideally be used, some serialisers may need to > serialise to a different encoding at the request of the user or > limitations of the environment. In such cases, the serialisation should > output appropriate character references for characters that can't be > represented. > > It should also handle outputting the appropriate <meta charset=""> > and/or BOM, especially in environments that can't declare it at the > transport level like HTTP can. > > Perhaps the spec should say something about this issue somehwhere. > > [1] http://www.whatwg.org/specs/web-apps/current-work/#serialising The section is specifically for serialising a subtree to a Unicode stream without mutation, not to a byte stream. What's the use case that isn't covered by "8.1 Writing HTML documents"? On Mon, 27 Aug 2007, Simon Pieters wrote: > > IE7 and Firefox serialize U+00A0 characters in data and attribute values > as " " when getting innerHTML. Safari and Opera don't. Should the > spec be aligned with IE7 and Firefox here? > > http://software.hixie.ch/utilities/js/live-dom-viewer/?%3C%21DOCTYPE%20html%3E%0D%0A%3Cscript%3Ewindow.onload%3Dfunction%28%29%7Bw%28document.body.innerHTML%29%7D%3C/script%3E%3Cp%20title%3D%22x%A0x%22%3Ex%A0x I don't see any great benefit to doing so; do any pages require this? On Tue, 28 Aug 2007, Alexey Proskuryakov wrote: > > This has caused a compatibility issue for WebKit at least once. In > that case, we got away with evangelizing, but we still track this as a > bug that needs to be fixed eventually. > > http://bugs.webkit.org/show_bug.cgi?id=11947 Ah. Ok then. Done. On Tue, 28 Aug 2007, Boris Zbarsky wrote: > For what it's worth, the relevant Mozilla bugs are > https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=165686 and > https://bugzilla.mozilla.org/show_bug.cgi?id=169590 Cool, thanks. On Tue, 11 Sep 2007, Simon Pieters wrote: > > Consider the following document: > > <h:p xmlns:h="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml"><x/></h:p> > > When getting innerHTML on the root element, should the serialization > declare the no namespace explicitly as in <x xmlns=""/>? (I think it > should because setting innerHTML will imply namespace declarations so it > might change meaning if you insert it somewhere else with innerHTML.) I've added this: | If any of the elements in the serialisation are in the null namespace, | the default namespace in scope for those elements must be explicitly | declared as the empty string. Is that ok? > Also, the spec says: > > In an XML context, the innerHTML DOM attribute on HTMLElements and > HTMLDocuments, on getting, must return a string in the form of an > internal general parsed entity [...] > > ...and then goes on to say that some DocumentType nodes must raise an > exception, however internal general parsed entities can't have doctypes > in the first place. Oops. Fixed. Only elements should return internal general parsed entities; documents should return document entities. Empty documents now raise an exception. > Finally, the spec lists the following as something that throws: > > A Text node whose data contains characters that are not matched by the > XML Char production. [XML] > > But Text data is not the only case that might not match the Char > production in XML. Comment data, CDATASection data, > ProcessingInstruction target, and, I think, Attr value. Fixed. -- Ian Hickson U+1047E )\._.,--....,'``. fL http://ln.hixie.ch/ U+263A /, _.. \ _\ ;`._ ,. Things that are impossible just take longer. `._.-(,_..'--(,_..'`-.;.'
Received on Thursday, 28 February 2008 18:23:03 UTC