On Apr 2, 2007, at 4:59 PM, Jacob Rus wrote:
What's the use case? Please read [this](http://www.hixie.ch/ advocacy/xhtml) before you decide to use XHTML. XHTML is almost always the wrong choice of format.
I disagree with the hixie article for so many reasons. Its a preference. And it's not one that, at this point, really makes a whole lot of difference either way.;
My favorite of the initial responses to the hixie article: http://h3h.net/2005/12/xhtml-harmful-to-feelings/
And just for fun: http://meyerweb.com/eric/comment/chech.html?dupe=1
I have no desire for an argument but felt the need to answer that last email as I'm tired and probably a bit grumpy. In fact I don't consider the issue nearly big enough for the importance Hickson places on it. Let alone important enough to argue over for any extended length of time.
HTML itself is in such a state of flux right now (and hasn't it always been?) that when we worry about the kinds of things metioned in the hixie article I think we are getting a little silly.
Writing using XHTML encourages well formed code. I like that about it. I like that it makes me check to make sure I haven't done anything silly. If I end up serving that code as text/html until the end of the site's life I could really care less as long as it works reliably (and it does). By the time I might want to serve my pages as xml hopefully the w3c and the whatwg will have worked out their differences and given us something else. You do have your content in a database separate from both your markup structure and display code right? But even if they do work out something better we still have to rely on the browser devs to implement it correctly which they never seem to be capable of despite their sometimes best intentions.
Again I apologize if I'm upsetting anyone. It wasn't my intention.
Jamie
_______________________________________________________________________ Email: jamie@methnen.com Homepage: http://www.methnen.com
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