[whatwg] Configure Apache to send the right MIME type for XHTML
Maciej Stachowiak
mjs at apple.com
Wed Mar 7 12:44:38 PST 2007
On Mar 7, 2007, at 8:13 AM, Elliotte Harold wrote:
> Anne van Kesteren wrote:
>
>
>> Personally I'd just give everyone HTML unless they specifically
>> ask for XML and even then those tools should be capable of
>> handling HTML imo. After all, it's the exchange format of the web.
>
> Personally I'm happy just sending XHTML as text/html and letting
> the browsers and other tools do what they like with it. I don't
> hold to the belief that the MIME type is holy writ from GOD that
> clients must not modify for their convenience under penalty of
> hellfire and damnation. Nonetheless, some people do seem to believe
> that so this article offers them a reasonable alternative.
>
> If one were conspiratorially minded, one might begin to wonder
> whether any reasonable alternative will be accepted, or if a lot of
> the arguments and claims are really designed merely to eliminate
> XHTML from consideration by making it too inconvenient for
> practical development. The insistence on sending XHTML as
> application/xhtml+xml is pretty pedantic, and without a lot of
> practical benefit. It's strange to see such a picky point being
> made by the same people who aren't all that interested in the much
> more useful standard of well-formedness. It's also strange that
> these are the same folks who are bending over backwards to maintain
> compatibility with older browsers in every area except this one
> little HTTP header field.
>
> Indeed, if one were of a suspicious turn of mind, one might think
> the insistence on sending XHTML as application/xhtml+xml were
> nothing but a strategy to make XHTML so practically inconvenient
> that no one would consider it. But I don't have such a suspicious
> mind, so I'm sure it's all honest disagreement. :-)
HTML5 will make it easier to make valid HTML/XHTML hybrid documents
by legalizing certain XML-specific constructs in HTML and defining
their behavior in a compatible way. You'll be able to avlidate your
document as both HTML and XHTML, though there still may be some risks
of different behavior.
So I think it's unfair to accuse this particular group of not wanting
to solve the problem.
Regards,
Maciej
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