- From: William F Hammond <hammond@csc.albany.edu>
- Date: Wed, 16 Apr 2008 16:01:49 -0400
- To: whatwg@whatwg.org, public-html@w3.org, www-math@w3.org, www-svg@w3.org
"Anne van Kesteren" <annevk@opera.com> writes: >> As we all know, a clear boundary was drawn, presumably because it >> was onerous for browsers to "sniff" incoming content and then decide >> how to parse. > > Actually, it was not the browsers: > > http://lists.w3.org/Archives/Public/www-html/2000Sep/0024.html Oh, but that is about sniffing even if it's not explicitly stated. And, at that time, there was not extant tag soup masquerading as xhtml. > That's a very limited set of differences which mostly affect page layout. Yes, but the point is, once a user agent begins to sniff, there's no rational excuse for it not to recognize compliant xhtml+(mathml|svg). >> What obstacles to this exist? > > The Web. Really!?! It's time for user agents to stop supporting bogus document preambles. -- Bill
Received on Wednesday, 16 April 2008 20:02:27 UTC