On 15/10/2003 10:00, John Cowan wrote:

...

The W3C recommends, however, that non-normalized input be rejected rather
than forcibly normalized, on the ground that the supplier of the input
is not meeting his contract.


This is nothing at all to do with my canonical equivalence question, but does touch on my other question today about normalisation in XML and HTML. You told me then that normalisation is not mandatory and so effectively only recommended. But if a reader is recommended to reject non-normalised input, the effect is that normalisation is mandated except for private communication between a group of cooperating processes. So, while for example I may put a non-normalised text on my website, it would be rather pointless because any browser following recommendations would reject my page. Is that correct? Am I in fact forced to work on the basis that normalisation is mandatory?

--
Peter Kirk
[EMAIL PROTECTED] (personal)
[EMAIL PROTECTED] (work)
http://www.qaya.org/





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