ANSI X3.4 is missing

This is a last call comment from C. M. Sperberg-McQueen (cmsmcq@acm.org) on
the Character Model for the World Wide Web 1.0
(http://www.w3.org/TR/2002/WD-charmod-20020430/).

Semi-structured version of the comment:

Submitted by: C. M. Sperberg-McQueen (cmsmcq@acm.org)
Submitted on behalf of (maybe empty): 
Comment type: editorial
Chapter/section the comment applies to: A.2 Other References
The comment will be visible to: public
Comment title: ANSI X3.4 is missing
Comment:
The spec refers several times to ASCII.  In the context of
a specification defining a character model, I assume that this
term is used in its proper and narrow sense to denote the
coded character set defined by American national standard
ANSI X3.4.  That American national standard should be included
among the non-normative references.


Structured version of  the comment:

<lc-comment
  visibility="public" status="pending"
  decision="pending" impact="editorial">
  <originator email="cmsmcq@acm.org" represents="-"
      >C. M. Sperberg-McQueen</originator>
  <charmod-section href='http://www.w3.org/TR/2002/WD-charmod-20020430/#sec-OtherReferences'
    >A.2</charmod-section>
  <title>ANSI X3.4 is missing</title>
  <description>
    <comment>
      <dated-link date="2002-07-12"
        >ANSI X3.4 is missing</dated-link>
      <para>The spec refers several times to ASCII.  In the context of
a specification defining a character model, I assume that this
term is used in its proper and narrow sense to denote the
coded character set defined by American national standard
ANSI X3.4.  That American national standard should be included
among the non-normative references.</para>
    </comment>
  </description>
</lc-comment>

Received on Thursday, 11 July 2002 21:11:55 UTC