On Sun, 13 Jun 2004, Karl Pongratz wrote: > > XUL Basic sounds really cool.
Great -- start up a new body to standardise it (since the "XUL alliance" has failed to get any standardisation done in its years of existence) and go with it. Many people agree with you -- for example the SVG folk agree (and think SVG is the way to go), the XForms folk agree (and think XForms should be the key part of the solution), Microsoft agree (Avalon, XAML, etc), Macromedia agree (Flex), etc. > Can't WHAT just forget about the html thing? I don't require to run my > web apps in IE 5, Opera 5 or Netscape 4 and who wants html in 2 years > from now? You may not require that your Web applications work in IE5, Opera 5 or Netscape 4 (or more to the point IE6, Opera 8 and Mozilla 2) but many people do, and they are the people whom the WHATWG group are targetting. Similarly, while you may not want HTML to exist two years from now, we (the WHATWG group) see no evidence that it is going away, and see no reason to require that all current developers use a new language now. On Sun, 13 Jun 2004, Charles Goodwin wrote: > > I really don't understand what this solves. If your advocating that > HTML support basic XUL (which is the implication) then you may as well > just advocate that all browsers support XUL. In which case, XUL doesn't > need to be part of HTML but instead an alternative markup for web apps. > And you do a full circle. The WHATWG is not suggesting that HTML should "support basic XUL". We simply intend to introduce to HTML some of the more commonly requested features, including some that XUL (and XAML, and XForms, and SVG) happen to already support in non-backwards-compatible ways. The point is, HTML has been a wild success with developers, while the other technologies that try to address these problem really haven't, at least not on the same scale. WHATWG members noticed this, and decided that if everyone else had not had much success with a non-backwards compatible solution, maybe we would have more success with one that _was_ backwards compatible, and that concentrated on the same basic principles as HTML itself did. WHATWG has no official status. It claims even less of an official status than, say, the laughable "XUL alliance". You are just as able to create other working groups with similar goals but different basic principles if you think you can do a better job. -- Ian Hickson U+1047E )\._.,--....,'``. fL http://ln.hixie.ch/ U+263A /, _.. \ _\ ;`._ ,. Things that are impossible just take longer. `._.-(,_..'--(,_..'`-.;.' ------------------------------------------------------- This SF.Net email is sponsored by the new InstallShield X. >From Windows to Linux, servers to mobile, InstallShield X is the one installation-authoring solution that does it all. Learn more and evaluate today! http://www.installshield.com/Dev2Dev/0504 _______________________________________________ xul-talk mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/xul-talk