- From: Jim Hurley <hurleyj@arachnaut.org>
- Date: Fri, 10 Mar 1995 08:00:29 -0800
- To: www-html@www10.w3.org
Steinar Bang <steinarb@falch.no>: >Making browsers forgiving about HTML syntax errors, instead of giving >good user feedback, is probably the gravest error committed by the >browser writers. I think I disagree. It follows from the network pricipal of being liberally in what ones accepts and cautious in what one sends. If casual users where made aware of every problem in the document and every glitch in the network that occurred while viewing, the Web might not be the success story it is. Not many people really care that much about these things. I do think it is pretty bad when, for example, an FTP fetch resulting in anonymous login being denied is told to the user in such a way that they think a link is broken, so a little more info when a catastrophe occurs other than 'can't get doc' would be nice. Individual homepages are not necessarily the best examples to pick on when it comes to sloppy or abusive markup, professional people are sometimes even more abusive when they try to make HTML a publishing tool and spend all their time achieving the right look and forgetting that they should be providing information. BTW, Dan's Validation service still works at the old URL. -- Jim Hurley email: hurleyj@arachnaut.org <URL: http://www.webcom.com/%7Ehurleyj/home.html>
Received on Friday, 10 March 1995 11:00:42 UTC