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Diffstat (limited to 'lib/htmlpurifier/docs/ref-whatwg.txt')
-rw-r--r-- | lib/htmlpurifier/docs/ref-whatwg.txt | 26 |
1 files changed, 0 insertions, 26 deletions
diff --git a/lib/htmlpurifier/docs/ref-whatwg.txt b/lib/htmlpurifier/docs/ref-whatwg.txt deleted file mode 100644 index 4bb4984f2..000000000 --- a/lib/htmlpurifier/docs/ref-whatwg.txt +++ /dev/null @@ -1,26 +0,0 @@ - -Web Hypertext Application Technology Working Group - WHATWG - -== HTML 5 == - -URL: http://www.whatwg.org/specs/web-apps/current-work/ - -HTML 5 defines a kaboodle of new elements and attributes, as well as -some well-defined, "quirks mode" HTML parsing. Although WHATWG professes -to be targeted towards web applications, many of their semantic additions -would be quite useful in regular documents. Eventually, HTML -Purifier will need to audit their lists and figure out what changes need -to be made. This process is complicated by the fact that the WHATWG -doesn't buy into W3C's modularization of XHTML 1.1: we may need -to remodularize HTML 5 (probably done by section name). No sense in -committing ourselves till the spec stabilizes, though. - -More immediately speaking though, however, is the well-defined parsing -behavior that HTML 5 adds. While I have little interest in writing -another DirectLex parser, other parsers like ph5p -<http://jero.net/lab/ph5p/> can be adapted to DOMLex to support much more -flexible HTML parsing (a cool feature I've seen is how they resolve -<b>bold<i>both</b>italic</i>). - - vim: et sw=4 sts=4 |