On 4/21/06 7:18 PM, "Luke Arno" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > Mark P. is on the right track here as usual, I think.
Yes. > What has been glossed over in this convo is that > underlying the discomfort that has been expressed > on the validation front here is this: > > Sure you can validate a microformat reasonably > well (though it may be difficult to validate format > transformations that result in microformats) but > there is not meta-microformat (god, did I just say > that?!?) to conduct validation automatically > (ie without manually translating the spec into > rules that your validator can understand) We > have profiles, of course but they are not machine > readable like a schema for tower of babel XML > (XSD or RNG or what not). Not glossed over. I think you may have missed previous discussions which explained this quite simply. For *any* popular data format (e.g. HTML, RSS etc.), there is no meta-format that fully describes them, so the implied assumption that we should seek that goal for microformats is a poor assumption (or certainly one that is outside the scope of microformats). In fact, DTD, Schema, etc. are insufficient to validate any real world adopted format, whether SGML, XML or something else. Just go look at the source for validator.w3.org for HTML validation, or the source for the feed validator for RSS. Any really useful XML will similarly need far more than DTD or schema to validate. Tantek _______________________________________________ microformats-discuss mailing list [email protected] http://microformats.org/mailman/listinfo/microformats-discuss
