> Hi
>
> On Thu 08-May-2003 at 02:50:06AM +0200, Roland Schwaenzl wrote:
> > >
> > > In which case we might want to end it with a #
> >
> > Why "#" is relevant?
>
> Sorry, I was only joking really -- I don't think there is any point
> in having that debate again :-)
Good!
>
> > > and have a sample XSLT to generate RDF from the link and meta
> > > elements...
> >
> > The XSLT associated wit w3c-synd i think operates on the entire
> > HTML - not just on the head - Why not?
>
> I'm not sure what you are getting at, are you asking why does the
> W3C one operate on the whole page?
No...i was wondering whether you were indicating some reservation
on such use.
>
> If so it's because it is generating a RSS feed from the central
> column of latest news.
...i know.
>
> > > Also you can have multiple profiles, it takes a list [1].
> >
> > Yupp, but HTML4 only makes the first one operational and leaves
> > the rest for the future, or???
>
> Yes you are right, this is the wording:
>
> This attribute specifies the location of one or more meta data
> profiles, separated by white space. For future extensions, user
> agents should consider the value to be a list even though this
> specification only considers the first URI to be significant.
> Profiles are discussed below in the section on meta data.
>
> http://www.w3.org/TR/html4/struct/global.html#adef-profile
>
> One more thing I just noticed, on this page:
>
> http://www.w3.org/TR/html4/index/attributes.html
>
> Profile has a comment to say it is for "named dictionary of meta
> info" -- which makes sense with the URI you suggested
> (http://dublincore.org/documents/dcmi-terms/).
>
> Chris
>
> --
> Chris Croome <[log in to unmask]>
> web design http://www.webarchitects.co.uk/
> web content management http://mkdoc.com/
>
>
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