However, such feedback is not considered formal feedback for the W3C process. The editor guarantees that all substantive feedback sent to this list will receive a reply. Alternatively, you can e-mail feedback to ( subscribe, archives). If you cannot do this then you can also e-mail feedback to ( subscribe, archives), and arrangements will be made to transpose the comments to our public bug database. (Note: Your IP address and user agent will be publicly recorded for spam prevention purposes.) Please don't use section numbers as these tend to change rapidly and make your feedback harder to understand. That's more important than the solution, in fact. If you're suggesting a new feature, it's really important to say what the problem you're trying to solve is. Please enter your feedback, carefully indicating the title of the section for which you are submitting feedback, quoting the text that's wrong today if appropriate. If you do not have an account then you can enter feedback using this form: Feedback Comments If you wish to make comments regarding this document in a manner that is tracked by the W3C, please submit them via using our public bug database. A list of current W3C publications and the latest revision of this technical report can be found in the W3C technical reports index at. Other documents may supersede this document. This section describes the status of this document at the time of its publication. Readers are encouraged to report such discrepancies as bugs in the bug tracking system of the HTML Working Group. However, if the documents disagree, this is a bug in the redaction process and the unredacted full HTML specification takes precedence. As such, the two documents are supposed to agree on normative matters concerning Web authors. This document is an automated redaction of the full HTML5 specification. Because this document does not provide implementation conformance criteria, UA implementors should not rely on it, but should instead refer to the full HTML5 specification. It is targeted toward Web authors and others who are not UA implementors and who want a view of the HTML specification that focuses more precisely on details relevant to using the HTML language to create Web documents and Web applications. This document is a strict subset of the full HTML5 specification that omits user-agent (UA) implementation details. The bulk of the text of this specification is also available in the WHATWG Web Applications 1.0 specification, under a license that permits reuse of the specification text. W3C liability, trademark and document use rules apply. This is revision 1.4938.Ĭopyright © 2011 W3C ® ( MIT, ERCIM, Keio), All Rights Reserved. This specification is available in the following formats: single page HTML, multipage HTML, full specification. HTML5: Edition for Web Authors W3C Working Draft 07 July 2011 This Version: Latest Published Version: Latest Editor's Draft: Editor: Ian Hickson, Google, Inc. table tbody td textarea tfoot th thead time title.s samp script section select small source span.nav noscript object ol optgroup option output.label legend li link map mark menu meta meter.h1 h2 h3 h4 h5 h6 head header hgroup hr html.
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