サクサク読めて、アプリ限定の機能も多数!
トップへ戻る
掃除・片付け
blog.whatwg.org
Welcome to the newest standard maintained by the WHATWG: the URL Pattern Standard! The URL Pattern Standard gives a generic pattern syntax for matching URLs, and extracting the parts from them. It is inspired by the path-to-regexp library, although it extends beyond paths to encompass all the parts of a URL. You can read more about the API on MDN. The URL Pattern Standard joins us as a graduation
Sometimes, new authors need a gentle reminder to think about accessibility when designing and writing web pages and apps. Experienced authors need a quick way to look up the allowed ARIA roles, states and properties for each HTML element. Browser and Assistive Technology (AT) implementers need quick access from an HTML element to its platform accessibility API. For a look at how these needs transl
As part of my work at Bocoup, I recently started working with browser implementers to improve the state of fieldset, the 21 year old feature in HTML, that provides form accessibility benefits to assistive technologies like screen readers. It suffers from a number of interoperability bugs that make it difficult for web developers to use. Here is an example form grouped with a <legend> caption in a
(If you’re interested in the IPR status of WHATWG standards this post is for you; otherwise, feel free to skip.) One aspect of last year's working mode changes is the periodic publication of a Review Draft for each WHATWG Living Standard, as per the IPR Policy. The WHATWG published an initial five of these just now: Compatibility Console DOM Encoding Fetch To get notified of future Review Draft pu
Please leave your sense of logic at the door, thanks! Further working mode changes December 11th, 2017 by Anne van Kesteren in WHATWG The WHATWG has been going great since it began in 2004, but without participation from all the browser engine implementers, was only partially meeting its goals. Over the last year, engineers and attorneys from the organizations behind Blink, Edge, Gecko, and WebKit
Please leave your sense of logic at the door, thanks! Progressing Streams July 5th, 2017 by Adam Rice in What's Next Back in 2014 we announced the Streams Standard. It's about time for an update on where we are and what's coming up. Streaming the response to fetch() via the response.body attribute was standardized last year and is now implemented in several major browsers. Recently streaming uploa
Please leave your sense of logic at the door, thanks! Improving interoperability January 30th, 2017 by Philip Jägenstedt in WHATWG The goal of the WHATWG’s Living Standards is to achieve interoperable implementations. With an ever-evolving web platform, we want changes to our standards to reach all implementations quickly and reliably, but from time to time there have been mishaps: Two table-relat
Please leave your sense of logic at the door, thanks! Infra November 16th, 2016 by Anne van Kesteren in What's Next, WHATWG Welcome to the newest standard maintained by the WHATWG: the Infra Standard! Standards such as DOM, Fetch, HTML, and URL have a lot of common low-level infrastructure and primitives. As we go about defining things in more detail we realized it would be useful to gather all th
Please leave your sense of logic at the door, thanks! DRM and Web security September 21st, 2016 by Ian Hickson in Multimedia, W3C For a few years now, the W3C has been working on a specification that extends the HTML standard to add a feature that literally, and intentionally, does nothing but limit the potential of the Web. They call this specification "Encrypted Media Extensions" (EME). It's ess
Please leave your sense of logic at the door, thanks! Sunsetting the JavaScript Standard August 15th, 2016 by Mathias Bynens in WHATWG Back in 2012, the WHATWG set out to document the differences between the ECMAScript 5.1 specification and the compatibility and interoperability requirements for ECMAScript implementations in web browsers. A specification draft was first published under the name of
Please leave your sense of logic at the door, thanks! Defining the WindowProxy, Window, and Location objects May 12th, 2016 by Anne van Kesteren in WHATWG The HTML Standard defines how navigation works inside a browser tab, how JavaScript executes, what the overarching web security model is, and how all these intertwine and work together. Over the last decade, we’ve made immense progress in specif
Please leave your sense of logic at the door, thanks! Adding JavaScript modules to the web platform April 13th, 2016 by Domenic Denicola in Elements, Processing Model, WHATWG One thing we’ve been meaning to do more of is tell our blog readers more about new features we’ve been working on across WHATWG standards. We have quite a backlog of exciting things that have happened, and I’ve been nominated
Please leave your sense of logic at the door, thanks! HTML Standard now more community-driven January 25th, 2016 by Anne van Kesteren in WHATWG It’s been several months now since maintenance of the HTML Standard moved from a mostly-private Subversion repository to the whatwg/html GitHub repository. This move has been even more successful than we hoped: We now have thirty-seven contributors who hav
Please leave your sense of logic at the door, thanks! Streams October 30th, 2014 by Domenic Denicola in WHATWG We're happy to announce the addition of the Streams Standard to the list of specs maintained by the WHATWG! Streaming data shows up all over the web platform, and this new spec gives us a set of APIs for creating and interfacing with that data. We hope that streams will be a unifying prim
Please leave your sense of logic at the door, thanks! CSS Books & CSS Figures October 14th, 2013 by Håkon Wium Lie in WHATWG Today we're happy to add two more specs to the WHATWG stable, Books and Figures! These are specifications focused on CSS features. Books provides ways to turn HTML document into books, either on screen or on paper. Using Books, authors can style cross-references, footnotes,
Please leave your sense of logic at the door, thanks! Relationship update on HTML Living Standard and W3C HTML5 July 20th, 2012 by Anne van Kesteren in W3C, WHATWG In an email to the WHATWG mailing list Ian Hickson explained how the relationship between the WHATWG and W3C effort around HTML has evolved. It is recommended reading if you want to know the details. In summary, we will remain focused o
Please leave your sense of logic at the door, thanks! WHATWG Weekly: HTML canvas version 5 has arrived March 29th, 2012 by Anne van Kesteren in Weekly Review The StringEncoding proposal is getting closer to consensus. It now consists of a TextEncoder and a TextDecoder object that can be used both for streaming and non-streaming use cases. This is the WHATWG Weekly. Some bad news for a change. It m
Please leave your sense of logic at the door, thanks! WHATWG Weekly: Path objects for canvas and creating paths through SVG syntax March 14th, 2012 by Anne van Kesteren in Weekly Review Jonas Sicking proposed an API for decoding ArrayBuffer objects as strings, and encoding strings as ArrayBuffer objects. The thread also touched on a proposal mentioned here earlier, StringEncoding. This is the mid-
Please leave your sense of logic at the door, thanks! WHATWG Weekly: New canvas API goodies February 29th, 2012 by Anne van Kesteren in Weekly Review A draft for the SPDY protocol has been submitted, the W3C HTML WG mailing list goes crazy over media DRM. This is the WHATWG Weekly. In response to feedback Adam Barth changed the getRandomValues() method to return the array the method modifies. The
Please leave your sense of logic at the door, thanks! WHATWG Weekly: Unicode for the platform? February 22nd, 2012 by Anne van Kesteren in Weekly Review In less than a year we reached another arbitrary milestone. HTML is another thousand revisions further, now over 7000 (not quite 9000). This is the WHATWG Weekly. Over on [email protected], the mailing list used by TC39 (responsible for JavaScript
Please leave your sense of logic at the door, thanks! WHATWG Weekly: Happy New Year! January 9th, 2012 by Anne van Kesteren in Weekly Review Happy new year everyone! We made great progress in standardizing the platform in 2011 and plan to continue doing just that with your help. You can join our mailing list to discuss issues with web development or join IRC if you prefer more lively interaction.
Please leave your sense of logic at the door, thanks! WHATWG Weekly: Stream API and better autocomplete December 15th, 2011 by Anne van Kesteren in Weekly Review James Hawkins proposed the intent element in a way that brings back memories of HTML4. Happy to be reminded we are over SGML now. This is the WHATWG Weekly. Better autocomplete Overnight a complete proposal for better autocomplete appeare
Please leave your sense of logic at the door, thanks! WHATWG Weekly: TPAC 2011 November 10th, 2011 by Anne van Kesteren in Weekly Review A long week Filled with people and meetings WHATWG Weekly Last week the W3C held its yearly TPAC conference. See Unorganization for an impression of the event written by me. Karl wrote down some technical details. What follows is my brief technical takeaway. <tim
Please leave your sense of logic at the door, thanks! WHATWG Weekly: Now it’s <time> for <data> October 29th, 2011 by Anne van Kesteren in Weekly Review Revision 6695 made HTML attribute values match in a case-sensitive manner as far as Selectors are concerned. This approach was favored over having a hardcoded list of HTML attributes whose values had to be matched case-insensitively. Revision 6701
Please leave your sense of logic at the door, thanks! WHATWG Weekly: Simplifying the DOM October 5th, 2011 by Anne van Kesteren in Weekly Review Odin Hørthe Omdal brought up cross-origin image loading via CORS as Gecko and WebKit have different implementations. Julien Chaffraix considers the relation between the disabled and sheet IDL attributes of the link element to be insufficiently defined. We
Please leave your sense of logic at the door, thanks! WHATWG Weekly: Is XBL still alive? And what are Web Intents? September 22nd, 2011 by Anne van Kesteren in Weekly Review In commit 6559 CanvasPixelArray was destroyed in favor of Uint8ClampedArray from the Typed Arrays specification. DOM Core is now known as DOM4. Welcome to another WHATWG Weekly. On the mailing list of the W3C WebApps WG James
Please leave your sense of logic at the door, thanks! WHATWG Weekly: End of HTML5 Last Call July 25th, 2011 by Anne van Kesteren in WHATWG Next week Wednesday, August 3, the W3C HTML5 Last Call review period ends. Consider taking another look and giving some feedback! Here is a quick rundown of what happened last week: The proposed download attribute made it into the HTML specification. Specify it
Please leave your sense of logic at the door, thanks! WHATWG Weekly: Microdata, WebSocket protocol, Web IDL July 11th, 2011 by Anne van Kesteren in Weekly Review The debate on what to do with mutation events is still ongoing, Web IDL and the WebSocket protocol are heading towards Last Call, HTML5 still is in Last Call, and Karl is still providing an alternative view on things in the Open Web Platf
Please leave your sense of logic at the door, thanks! WHATWG Weekly: Sniffing, Peer-to-Peer, and hgroup January 31st, 2011 by Anne van Kesteren in Weekly Review Another week, another WHATWG Weekly. While the change of name continues to excite the wider world — be sure to read HTML5 vs. HTML by Jeffrey Zeldman for some perspective — standards development marches on. Media Type Sniffing At the start
次のページ
このページを最初にブックマークしてみませんか?
『The WHATWG Blog』の新着エントリーを見る
j次のブックマーク
k前のブックマーク
lあとで読む
eコメント一覧を開く
oページを開く