aboutsummaryrefslogtreecommitdiffstats
path: root/activesupport/Rakefile
diff options
context:
space:
mode:
authorSteve Klabnik <steve@steveklabnik.com>2013-09-10 14:37:39 -0700
committerSteve Klabnik <steve@steveklabnik.com>2013-09-10 14:37:39 -0700
commitba0407337e93c4ef55cef3472143f62e8a984a64 (patch)
treec8eb37c9c85cd237e598bc370e875fb511a4f235 /activesupport/Rakefile
parente7facb35eb67836d446283bcb7d15d665b1bb668 (diff)
downloadrails-ba0407337e93c4ef55cef3472143f62e8a984a64.tar.gz
rails-ba0407337e93c4ef55cef3472143f62e8a984a64.tar.bz2
rails-ba0407337e93c4ef55cef3472143f62e8a984a64.zip
Add meta tag with charset information to application layout.
Previously, our default HTML would validate properly, but would generate a warning: it doesn't declare a character encoding. According to [the spec][encoding-spec], if you don't specify an encoding, a 7 step algorithm happens, with a toooon of sub-steps. Or, we could just actually specify it. Since everything else in Rails assumes UTF-8, we should make sure pages are served with that encoding too. This meta tag is the simplest way to accomplish this. More resources: * http://blog.whatwg.org/the-road-to-html-5-character-encoding * http://www.w3.org/International/tutorials/tutorial-char-enc/ * http://validator.w3.org/ [encoding-spec]: http://www.whatwg.org/specs/web-apps/current-work/multipage/parsing.html#determining-the-character-encoding
Diffstat (limited to 'activesupport/Rakefile')
0 files changed, 0 insertions, 0 deletions