- From: Karl Dubost <karl@w3.org>
- Date: Mon, 31 Jan 2005 09:52:35 -0500
- To: Ian Hickson <ian@hixie.ch>
- Cc: www-qa@w3.org
Le 19 janv. 2005, à 09:55, Ian Hickson a écrit : > In 4.2, there is an example that reads "CSS3 module: Syntax > [CSS3-SYNTAX] defines an extension mechanism which uses a not valid > start character for identifiers in CSS, so it is guaranteed never to > be used by any current or future level of CSS. CSS-conforming parsers > will skip rules that contain identifiers with such a character. > Therefore it is not authorized to redefine the properties defined in > the specification." -- this has been changed in CSS2.1. The properties > are not valid, but the working group guarentees to never start a > standard identifier with a hyphen, which has the same result. What do you mean? That in CSS 2.1 it's forbidden to have extensions, new properties starting by an hyphen and then that the file will not be valid ? Do you know if CSS 3 will be conformant to that? -- Karl Dubost - http://www.w3.org/People/karl/ W3C Conformance Manager *** Be Strict To Be Cool ***
Received on Monday, 31 January 2005 14:52:38 UTC