Peter Kirk scripsit: > [A process] must > interpret a non-normalised variant in the same way as the normalised > form; and it cannot assume that the process presenting the data makes a > distinction between the normalised and non-normalised form and does not > reorder the data into an arbitrary canonically equivalent form. This > renders superfluous any guarantees of the stability of normalisation, > for processes which require normalised data must perform their own > normalisation each time they read data.
Not necessarily. A process may check its input for normalization and reject it if it is not normalized, and XML consumers are encouraged (not required) to do so. -- John Cowan [EMAIL PROTECTED] www.ccil.org/~cowan www.reutershealth.com "In the sciences, we are now uniquely privileged to sit side by side with the giants on whose shoulders we stand." --Gerald Holton