- From: Henry S. Thompson <ht@inf.ed.ac.uk>
- Date: Tue, 26 Nov 2013 13:59:33 +0000
- To: public-xml-core-wg <public-xml-core-wg@w3.org>, www-tag <www-tag@w3.org>
The draft of 3023bis, the proposed new media type registration for the XML media types, beyond the formal obligatory statement that the XML spec itself is the "published specification", includes (only) the following paragraph about the application-level semantics of XML documents: An XML document labeled as application/xml or text/xml, or with a '+xml' media type, might contain namespace declarations, stylesheet-linking processing instructions (PIs), schema information, or other declarations that might be used to suggest how the document is to be processed. For example, a document might have the XHTML namespace and a reference to a CSS stylesheet. Such a document might be handled by applications that would use this information to dispatch the document for appropriate processing. This paragraph notably fails to include bibliographic references to the XML Namespace specification, or the XHTML specification, or the XML Stylesheet Processing Instruction specification, or the (draft) XML Processor Profiles specification. Should it do so? If so, should it attempt to be exhaustive, or should it say something more along the lines of "There are lots of relevant specs out there, here are some strategies you might use to find them"? ht -- Henry S. Thompson, School of Informatics, University of Edinburgh 10 Crichton Street, Edinburgh EH8 9AB, SCOTLAND -- (44) 131 650-4440 Fax: (44) 131 650-4587, e-mail: ht@inf.ed.ac.uk URL: http://www.ltg.ed.ac.uk/~ht/ [mail from me _always_ has a .sig like this -- mail without it is forged spam]
Received on Tuesday, 26 November 2013 14:00:00 UTC