- From: Terry Allen <terry@ora.com>
- Date: Wed, 8 Nov 1995 14:37:31 PST
- To: nazgul@utopia.com (Kee Hinckley), Terry Allen <terry@ora.com>, www-talk@w3.org
| >>HTML extensions (which are standard across all | >versions of a browser) | > | >Since when? | | Version 1.22 of Mozilla under Windows uses the same HTML extensions on your | machine as it does on mine. That's an argument that the extensions are the same (not "standard") across the same version of a browser, not all versions of it. If you wanted to do content negotiation re user-agent, you have to keep track of the Windows, the Unix(es), the Mac versions of each release. They may well not work the same despite the common number. Of course if those extensions were described in SGML, you could use the document type declaration or even the internal subset as the basis for negotiation---on a per-document basis, though. -- Terry Allen (terry@songline.com), Online Books Editor, Songline Studios affiliated with O'Reilly & Associates, Inc. A Davenport Group sponsor. See http://www.ora.com/davenport/README.html Footballisms: "That's the kind of self-destruction you can't afford to have."
Received on Wednesday, 8 November 1995 17:37:57 UTC