On 10/08/2010, at 10:44 AM, Tab Atkins Jr. wrote:

> On Mon, Aug 9, 2010 at 5:41 PM, Ryosuke Niwa <ryosuke.n...@gmail.com> wrote:
>> On Mon, Aug 9, 2010 at 8:36 AM, Andy Mabbett <a...@pigsonthewing.org.uk>
>> wrote:
>>> 
>>> On Mon, August 9, 2010 15:10, Daniel Glazman wrote:
>>>> Le 09/08/10 03:11, Kit Grose a écrit :
>>>> 
>>>>> should the "year" field also permit the entry of BC/AD?
>>>> 
>>>> Or a jewish year? Or a muslim year? Or counting since the
>>>> first tooth of Carolus Magnus or the last onomatopoeia
>>>> pronounced by Hannibal during his crossing of the Alps?
>> 
>> All popular calendar systems should be supported.  What is the reason we
>> restrict ourselves to Gregorian calendar?
> 
> The Gregorian calendar is the de facto official calendar of the world.
> Mixing in other calendars is a horrendous nightmare with nearly zero
> benefit.
> 
> ~TJ


All the more reason for simply letting page authors define any fields they need 
using the existing input primitives like "number". I think putting the onus for 
this sort of investigation on the UA will simply mean this won't get 
implemented.

Is any of this discussion being had for the existing date type? The existing 
spec simply says a year must be "Four or more digits, representing year, where 
year > 0".

I think all of this is important discussion not explicitly related to the need 
for a new input of type "year". The question we need to identify is whether 
there's additional value (semantic or otherwise) in defining input type="year" 
distinctly from a textual/numeric input with name="year". The precise behaviour 
of any such field is surely dependent on an agreement that its existence is 
valuable.

—Kit

Reply via email to