I think we could say it's useful but the problem is it's not spec'd. So 
authors that use it will get broken content everywhere but IE.

This isn't an ARIA-specific issue. Since it's arguably useful you could 
try to get attribute mirroring into the relevant specs. If it's not in a 
speci do not support it or you break everyone else.

- Aaron





Chris Wilson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> 
03/14/2008 01:47 PM

To
Simon Pieters <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, Marc Silbey 
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, Anne van Kesteren <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, 
Dave Pawson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, "[EMAIL PROTECTED]" 
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
cc
Cullen Sauls <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, Jon Gunderson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, 
Aaron M Leventhal/Cambridge/[EMAIL PROTECTED], Charles McCathieNevile 
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, David Poehlman <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>, 
"[email protected]" <[email protected]>, Richard 
Schwerdtfeger/Austin/[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject
RE: IE8 incompatibility issues (was: Re: Issue: IE 8 adds new DOM 
Properties for ARIA -- not compatible with other impls)






Simon Pieters [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>I understand that IE works this way internally, but this behavior -- that
>all attributes are reflected by DOM attributes and that any DOM 
attributes
>(or JS properties) on elements also turn into real attributes -- is not
>backed up by any DOM spec, and Opera, Safari and Firefox don't do this. 
In
>those browsers, unknown attributes are only accessible with
>getAttribute(), and saying elm.foobar = 'x' just creates a JS property
>"foobar" without adding/changing the "foobar" attribute on the element.

IIRC, this does not necessarily happen with unknown attributes - only with 
known attributes.  If it's a known attribute, it gets reflected into the 
DOM with camelCasing.  If it's an unknown/unrecognized attribute, it is 
only accessible via getAttribute().

-Chris

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