At 10:48  +0000 15/08/07, Ian Hickson wrote:
 > > > * I would also suggest to put "If the src attribute is omitted,
 > > there is no alternative image representation." after the last
 > > statement on the alt attribute.
 >
 > Done. (I think. I edited a bunch of stuff before reading your comment
 > so it may be not quite what you meant.)

 And, as I mentioned in IRC, I think it should be defined that the value
 should resolve to a valid URI for an image, so that <img src="" alt="">
 isn't conforming, except in this rare case:

 <p xml:base="foo.png"><img src="" alt=""/></p>

Ok but... what's an image? Do we exclude PDFs and SVG? (Safari and Opera
respectively support those.)

If we allow SVG, it's trivial to send XHTML as image/svg+xml and the
processing is as defined then for HTML as for SVG, so why exlude HTML?

If we disallow SVG, what's the definition? image/* that corresponds to a
non-interactive bitmapped resource? What about WMFs? Why would those be
disallowed?

As Simon asked on IRC, who are we helping by limiting what's allowed?


Making life a little easier for the browser implementers in what they might reasonably expect to find there?



Clearly images have to have a visual representation. Embedding only audio, or ancillary data, here would be too weird.

Perhaps images are things that are non-temporal and with visual representation, or "slightly temporal" in the sense of animated GIFs etc. where temporal control etc. is not expected or desired. They probably do not have associated audio, perhaps?

That means that a 'static' SVG image is indeed an image, whereas an SVG presentation that has 'significant' temporal behavior is video.

I'm not sure what to say about interactivity; SVG allows it, so probably it's allowed. But then, why isn't an HTML page embeddable in image? It has a visual representation, and if we allow interactivity, it would seem to fit.

Similarly using SMIL to layup something that was 'static' (perhaps several images overlayed in regions) would seem to also be allowed.

Hm.  More principles, someone?
--
David Singer
Apple/QuickTime

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