First of all thanks for all the work you've all done on this and appologies for going silent... again... Hopefully this time I'll keep my computers working at least long enough to participate in discussions again.
On Fri, Aug 25, 2017 at 09:25:42PM -0700, Kevin Carhart wrote: > > Thanks for pointing this out. I guess I took something overly literal that > is not a part of the generic principle they're getting at in the test. > Clearly node-ifying every '\n' in every web page isn't common or important > or we would have hit it previously.. I could have keyed in to this fact > sooner. Oh well. I was only in tidy for a short time, and the exploration > seems useful anyhow. Tbh it sounds like it wasn't wasted time in that we now understand that this could be a thing in the future (although it sounds like a strange thing which is probably why tidy doesn't do it). I'd also say that the more we know about the tidy code the better so, as you say, the exploration was probably worth it. Anyway I agree with safely ignoring the lack of a newline because... who cares about blank text nodes (which is, I guess, what this would be). May be we need this in the future, but I can't imagine why. Cheers, Adam. _______________________________________________ Edbrowse-dev mailing list [email protected] http://lists.the-brannons.com/mailman/listinfo/edbrowse-dev
