On Wed, 13 Jun 2001 08:01:51 -0400, Mikel <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
somehow managed to type:
>I am using Mozilla v0.9.1 on NT Workstation SP 6a.
>I am coming across email sent to me that is not being translated. It starts with
>this:
>
><x-html>
><html xmlns:o="urn:schemas-microsoft-com:office:office"
>xmlns:w="urn:schemas-microsoft-com:office:word"
>xmlns="http://www.w3.org/TR/REC-html40">
On one hand, this is valid XML. On the other, it's not surprising that
Mozilla doesn't have a clue how to format it. It's not really an XHTML
document, it's an XHTML document embedded inside an "x-html" (not the same
thing) document, mixed in with XML constructs that would presumably have
some kind of meaning to MS Office and Word.
Maybe it's the new Office XP file format?
Anyway, since this is valid use of XML Namespaces, Mozilla should be able
to format it, provided it was pointed to a set of stylesheets that would
describe how an "x-html" document is supposed to be rendered. Mozilla
knows how to render HTML, but it doesn't presume to guess that an HTML
fragment contained within a totally different XML document should be
rendered by the same rules.
Charles Miller