On 21.01.2011 17:57, Ted Hardie wrote:
Howdy,
...
Reminder: the reason this was written down was so that "about:legacy-compat"
can be specified as XML system identifier in HTML5
(<http://dev.w3.org/html5/spec/Overview.html#the-doctype>).
This rationale isn't in the draft, nor is the token legacy-compat.
...because HTML5 defines it... (I think)
Having looked
at the section you reference, I see it also defines about:srcdoc as reserved,
unresolvable URI. It should be included in this doc, if it goes forward.
I don't think the goal of the registration document is to define all
about URIs out there. (and I don't think it should).
That said, I note that HTML5 has a number of what it calls "willful violations"
of the URI spec, in which it counsels the reading who actually knows what
Sadly.
the spec says to pretend it was using a term other than URI. (One of these
is just past the fragment identifier used above). Most uses of about
are outliers in the URI world by a long chalk. Why not simply define about
as a different identifier form that happens to have a colon in it
(which, broadly,
it is) and make its use as system identifier in HTML5 a "willful violation" of
the XML spec? That seems entirely consistent with the document's modus operandi
and save IANA the trouble of setting up a registry.
...
:-)
Browsers use "about:" where URIs are entered. So no matter what we
think, it will be very hard to ever register a "about" URI scheme for
something else.
Why not just accept it, and have a registration that at least enhances
the situation (as opposed to it not being registered)?
Also -- the spec doesn't define an IANA registry, so there won't be any
trouble for them anyway.
Best regards, Julian
_______________________________________________
Ietf mailing list
Ietf@xxxxxxxx
https://www.ietf.org/mailman/listinfo/ietf