[html5] r7166 - [e] (0) update intro Affected topics: HTML

whatwg at whatwg.org whatwg at whatwg.org
Mon Jul 9 13:53:40 PDT 2012


Author: ianh
Date: 2012-07-09 13:53:39 -0700 (Mon, 09 Jul 2012)
New Revision: 7166

Modified:
   complete.html
   index
   source
Log:
[e] (0) update intro
Affected topics: HTML

Modified: complete.html
===================================================================
--- complete.html	2012-07-09 20:29:41 UTC (rev 7165)
+++ complete.html	2012-07-09 20:53:39 UTC (rev 7166)
@@ -1393,8 +1393,8 @@
   (the one you are reading right now),
 
 
-  parts of which are republished in a variety of other forms,
-  including an edition optimized for Web developers
+  parts of which are republished in an edition optimized for Web
+  developers
 
   (known as <a href=http://developers.whatwg.org/>HTML5</a>).
 
@@ -1403,8 +1403,8 @@
   <p>The W3C also publishes parts of this specification as separate
   documents. One of these parts is called "HTML5"; it is a subset of
 
-  this specification (the HTML Living Standard).
-
+  this specification (the HTML Living Standard)
+  as it stood in late June 2012.
   </p>
 
 <!--
@@ -1425,14 +1425,19 @@
   <h6 class=no-toc id=how-do-the-whatwg-and-w3c-specifications-differ?><span class=secno>1.2.1 </span>How do the WHATWG and W3C specifications differ?</h6>
 
   <p>The features present in both the WHATWG and W3C specifications
-  are specified using identical text, except for the following (mostly
-  editorial) differences:</p><!--FORK-->
+  are specified using identical text, except for the following
+  differences:</p><!--FORK-->
 
   <ul><!--
    <li>Instead of this section, the W3C HTML specification has a
    different paragraph explaining the difference between the W3C and
    WHATWG versions of HTML.</li>
---><!-- in the status section --><li>The W3C HTML specification refers to the technology as HTML5,
+--><!-- in the status section --><li>The W3C HTML specification lacks any of the fixes made to this
+   specification since late June 2012. (Specifically, <a href="http://html5.org/tools/web-apps-tracker?from=7147">changes
+   from revision r7148 onwards</a> have not yet been applied to the
+   W3C HTML specification.)</li>
+
+   <li>The W3C HTML specification refers to the technology as HTML5,
    rather than just HTML.</li><!--VERSION-->
 
    <li>Examples that use features from HTML5 are not present in the

Modified: index
===================================================================
--- index	2012-07-09 20:29:41 UTC (rev 7165)
+++ index	2012-07-09 20:53:39 UTC (rev 7166)
@@ -1393,8 +1393,8 @@
   (the one you are reading right now),
 
 
-  parts of which are republished in a variety of other forms,
-  including an edition optimized for Web developers
+  parts of which are republished in an edition optimized for Web
+  developers
 
   (known as <a href=http://developers.whatwg.org/>HTML5</a>).
 
@@ -1403,8 +1403,8 @@
   <p>The W3C also publishes parts of this specification as separate
   documents. One of these parts is called "HTML5"; it is a subset of
 
-  this specification (the HTML Living Standard).
-
+  this specification (the HTML Living Standard)
+  as it stood in late June 2012.
   </p>
 
 <!--
@@ -1425,14 +1425,19 @@
   <h6 class=no-toc id=how-do-the-whatwg-and-w3c-specifications-differ?><span class=secno>1.2.1 </span>How do the WHATWG and W3C specifications differ?</h6>
 
   <p>The features present in both the WHATWG and W3C specifications
-  are specified using identical text, except for the following (mostly
-  editorial) differences:</p><!--FORK-->
+  are specified using identical text, except for the following
+  differences:</p><!--FORK-->
 
   <ul><!--
    <li>Instead of this section, the W3C HTML specification has a
    different paragraph explaining the difference between the W3C and
    WHATWG versions of HTML.</li>
---><!-- in the status section --><li>The W3C HTML specification refers to the technology as HTML5,
+--><!-- in the status section --><li>The W3C HTML specification lacks any of the fixes made to this
+   specification since late June 2012. (Specifically, <a href="http://html5.org/tools/web-apps-tracker?from=7147">changes
+   from revision r7148 onwards</a> have not yet been applied to the
+   W3C HTML specification.)</li>
+
+   <li>The W3C HTML specification refers to the technology as HTML5,
    rather than just HTML.</li><!--VERSION-->
 
    <li>Examples that use features from HTML5 are not present in the

Modified: source
===================================================================
--- source	2012-07-09 20:29:41 UTC (rev 7165)
+++ source	2012-07-09 20:53:39 UTC (rev 7166)
@@ -93,8 +93,8 @@
   (the one you are reading right now),
 <!--START dev-html-->
 
-  parts of which are republished in a variety of other forms,
-  including an edition optimized for Web developers
+  parts of which are republished in an edition optimized for Web
+  developers
 
 <!--END complete-->
   (which you are reading right now).
@@ -107,12 +107,12 @@
   <p>The W3C also publishes parts of this specification as separate
   documents. One of these parts is called "HTML5"; it is a subset of
 <!--END dev-html-->
-  this specification (the HTML Living Standard).
+  this specification (the HTML Living Standard)
 <!--END complete-->
 <!--START dev-html-->
-  the <a href="http://www.whatwg.org/specs/web-apps/current-work/multipage/">HTML Living Standard</a>.
+  the <a href="http://www.whatwg.org/specs/web-apps/current-work/multipage/">HTML Living Standard</a>
 <!--START complete-->
-
+  as it stood in late June 2012.
   </p>
 
 <!--
@@ -133,8 +133,8 @@
   <h6 class="no-toc">How do the WHATWG and W3C specifications differ?</h6>
 
   <p>The features present in both the WHATWG and W3C specifications
-  are specified using identical text, except for the following (mostly
-  editorial) differences:</p><!--FORK-->
+  are specified using identical text, except for the following
+  differences:</p><!--FORK-->
 
   <ul>
 
@@ -144,6 +144,12 @@
    WHATWG versions of HTML.</li>
 --> <!-- in the status section -->
 
+   <li>The W3C HTML specification lacks any of the fixes made to this
+   specification since late June 2012. (Specifically, <a
+   href="http://html5.org/tools/web-apps-tracker?from=7147">changes
+   from revision r7148 onwards</a> have not yet been applied to the
+   W3C HTML specification.)</li>
+
    <li>The W3C HTML specification refers to the technology as HTML5,
    rather than just HTML.</li><!--VERSION-->
 




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