- From: Anne van Kesteren <annevk@opera.com>
- Date: Mon, 31 Mar 2008 09:54:18 -0700
- To: "Bruce Miller" <bruce.miller@nist.gov>, "Henri Sivonen" <hsivonen@iki.fi>
- Cc: "David Carlisle" <davidc@nag.co.uk>, ian@hixie.ch, public-html@w3.org, www-math@w3.org
On Mon, 31 Mar 2008 08:43:21 -0700, Bruce Miller <bruce.miller@nist.gov> wrote: > The proposal seems to be something like: > an HTML5 page with MathML-ish stuff in it. > The math in the _text_ of the page (1) emphatically > does not have the MathML namespace, (2) may have omitted > end tags, (3) doesn't have empty elements marked as <tag/>, > (4) may have attribute values that aren't quoted, > (5) may be limited to exclude <semantics> and named entities, > (6) and may in the extreme case, even omit tags for token > elements (<mo>,<mi>,<mn>). > Did I miss anything? I don't think it was proposed that declaring xmlns on the <math> would be disallowed. Just that it would not have any effect. The same goes for the other parts of the proposal I think. That is, you may mark empty elements as <tag />, you may quote attribute values if you want, etc. I would also expect named entities to be included. > Now, that math is clearly not the serialization of Classic MathML, nor > would it be allowable to put Classic MathML in the HTML5; > Correct so far? I would expect a subset of the "Classic MathML serialization" to work as-is in HTML5. Again, I don't believe anybody proposed otherwise. > OTOH, even in the more extreme case, there's no > reason the DOM in the browser created by the HTML5 > parser would be any different than the DOM that > would have been created by an XML parser parsing > Classic MathML. > Correct? I think the answer here is yes, though it's not entirely clear to me what the "extreme case" refers to. > Would this actually be a _requirement_ in the HTML5 spec? The HTML5 specification would dicate what input leads to what output. So I think the answer is yes, if I followed you correctly. :-) > Clearly, such a DOM could be serialized as > either Classic MathML or HTML5-MathML. Right. > [...] > > Requiring every MathML importer to include an > HTML5 parser, and every MathML exporter to > include an HTML5 serializer just seems like > a quadratic version of the old joke: > "Now you've got _two_ problems". Well, if we want MathML in text/html we'll need to have some amount of syntax differences. So we'll always have this problem. I would expect that over time the tools will support both serializations, but also that browsers provide UI features to make this task easier. I don't expect HTML5 to mandate any one of those UI features though. -- Anne van Kesteren <http://annevankesteren.nl/> <http://www.opera.com/>
Received on Monday, 31 March 2008 16:55:19 UTC