- From: Philip TAYLOR <P.Taylor@Rhul.Ac.Uk>
- Date: Thu, 13 Nov 2008 16:33:39 +0000
- To: noah_mendelsohn@us.ibm.com
- CC: Dean Edridge <dean@dean.org.nz>, public-html <public-html@w3.org>, www-tag@w3.org
noah_mendelsohn@us.ibm.com wrote: [A great deal of common sense] Hear hear, Noah : I had begun to wonder if I was alone in these views. There is (I think) just one place where I would want HTML 5 to be more strict than you. You are (I think) happy to allow unquoted values for attributes; I would prefer to /require/ quotation marks around strings, but to disallow them elsewhere. This would allow an HTML 5 parser to more easily be able to differentiate between a string (qua string) and keyword. Strings could legally contain anything, whilst the set of valid keywords would be defined by the specification. Numeric values would similarly be unquoted in my "ideal" world. Philip TAYLOR
Received on Thursday, 13 November 2008 16:34:18 UTC