- From: Eve L. Maler <elm@arbortext.com>
- Date: Mon, 09 Sep 1996 16:09:47 -0400
- To: bosak@atlantic-83.Eng.Sun.COM (Jon Bosak), tbray@textuality.com
- Cc: w3c-sgml-wg@w3.org
At 01:44 PM 9/9/96 -0700, Jon Bosak wrote: >[Responding to Tim Bray:] >| XML should have *no* concept of quantities. Names, nesting depths, whatever, >| can be as large as required to meet the requirements of the application. >| One straightforward way to do this and preserve compatibility >| with SGML is to require an XML processor to have the capability of writing >| an appropriate SGML declaration to set the quantities high enough to make >| a particular XML DTD valid. > >I agree with Tim's intent here, but aren't some quantities related to >the particular document instance? (Correct me if I'm wrong, but I >seem to recall cases where declarations worked fine for me until a >specific instance blew them up.) This is correct. For example, IDCAP reflects the "bulk" of assigned ID attribute values, which is instance-specific. I suppose the same solution could work, though -- an SGML declaration could be constructed per SGML document, not just per DTD. Eve
Received on Monday, 9 September 1996 17:36:17 UTC