- From: W. Eliot Kimber <eliot@isogen.com>
- Date: Wed, 08 Jan 1997 09:26:20 -0900
- To: w3c-sgml-wg@www10.w3.org
At 11:42 PM 1/7/97 -0500, David G. Durand wrote: >At 4:25 PM 1/3/97, W. Eliot Kimber wrote: >>But wouldn't anything else be a query and thus have to go after a "?". > > Queries _always_ invoke a server-side process. #-strings invoke a >client-side process, that depends on the MIME-type of the resource >deisgnated by the URL the #-string is attached to. I hadn't realized that distinction. Given that, it does make sense, I think, to allow TEI extended pointers or something like them after the #. If understand the implications, we'd be saying that for the mime type "xml" (or x-xml, I suppose), that stuff following the "#" is interpreted as either a single ID reference or as some more complicated address (at least for TEI, you can distinguish the two as TEI locators would always be enclosed in parens--right? Cheers, E. -- W. Eliot Kimber (eliot@isogen.com) Senior SGML Consulting Engineer, Highland Consulting 2200 North Lamar Street, Suite 230, Dallas, Texas 75202 +1-214-953-0004 +1-214-953-3152 fax http://www.isogen.com (work) http://www.drmacro.com (home) "Rats in the morning, rats in the afternoon...if they don't go away, I'll be re-educated soon..." --Austin Lounge Lizards, "1984 Blues"
Received on Wednesday, 8 January 1997 10:32:27 UTC