- From: William F. Hammond <hammond@csc.albany.edu>
- Date: Mon, 21 Dec 1998 09:57:47 -0500 (EST)
- To: davidc@nag.co.uk
- Cc: hutch@psfc.mit.edu, www-amaya@w3.org, www-math@w3.org
David writes: : > It goes without saying : : why? : : > that I see no place for character entities in : > authoring dtd's. : : You use characters, so why not character entities (which are on the : same level from an XML/SGML viewpoint). In a few words: it's more flexible. Yes, I confess that I do use characters. I have decided that there are only 62 characters, namely [0-9][A-Z][a-z], that I completely trust in every situation. Every other character has special "command" or "mark-up" meaning in at least one presentation format that I know. (For example, I see /bin/sh code as a possible presentation format.) Therefore, every other character has a name in my authoring DTD. As an author I sometimes choose not to use all of these names in every document that I produce, depending on the list of presentation formats that I plan for that document. For \alpha ---> <alpha/> at the authoring level I offer these reasons: 1. I want to avoid having the documents that I write be dependent on public standards that have not stood the test of time. 2. I may have a presentation format in my list that does not encompass "α". 3. With some types of sgml/xml processing, e.g., sgmlspl/sgmlspm, it is more difficult to provide non-default handling for "α" than for "<alpha/>". 4. I may decide that I do not want to rely on a browser to provide the string "alpha" in red when it cannot handle it. -- Bill
Received on Monday, 21 December 1998 09:59:51 UTC