- From: <S.N.Brodie@ecs.soton.ac.uk>
- Date: Fri, 1 Sep 1995 14:14:26 +0100 (BST)
- To: www-talk@w3.org
Larry Masinter wrote: > > Right now, #fragment identifiers are only interpreted for URLs that > resolve to text/html. I'd like to push forward to define some > interpretation for fragment identifiers for other media types. I presume you are talking about current observed practice, yes? I've checked RFCs 1738 and 1808 and find no such restriction. > First, we define that each media type in the MIME registration may > optionally define a semantics for fragment identifiers for that media > type. > > Second, we define the meaning of fragment identifiers for the > media types commonly recognized by web browsers: image/gif & > image/jpeg, video/mpeg, audio/basic, multipart/*. > > For images, this might be an area which should be highlighted or > scrolled to, for video, it might be a frame range, while for audio, it > might be a time range. I agree with your suggestion as far as video and audio are concerned, but not as far as images go. Some image file formats have the capability to store multiple images, so the fragment identifier could be used to identify an image within that object. My platform (Acorn RISC OS) is one not supported much outside of the UK, (primarily due to a lack of marketing budget and it not running Microsoft software natively - although many users feel that the latter is an advantage :-) but its primary bitmap graphics file format does have multiple (named) sprite objects contained in it. My web browser can pick individual sprites from the file based on the #fragment. This was a design decision that I thought made sense, especially in light of the multi-image support contained in GIF (this was in August 1994), and appeared to me to be in the spirit of usage of #fragment. I also cannot see a clear alternative to this whilst remaining within the URL spec. -- Stewart Brodie Dept. Electronics & Computer Science, Southampton University, UK. http://louis.ecs.soton.ac.uk/~snb94r/ http://delenn.ecs.soton.ac.uk/ <-- running on my Risc PC
Received on Friday, 1 September 1995 09:14:22 UTC