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Look at the WHATWG version of the HTML5 spec, it has annotations in the margins about the stability of each section, which browsers have implemented what, and some even link to existing test cases.Mike Gale wrote:I also don't have a list of the specification bits that are currently ready enough to implement.
That would be really useful -- please write tests for parts that you're interested in!Mike Gale wrote:When I have the time I think I'll be forced to write my own tests
You're right, the elements were poorly annotated. I've gone through the spec now and annotated things.Mike Gale wrote:Thanks for that.
The annotations in the margin don't tie in with what I see in the browsers. For some elements that I am interested in there are no marginal notes.
The one I saw with implementation details was (I think) head.
Could you make your tests public? Test cases are always good to have.Mike Gale wrote:Yes I've created my own private test pages and started comparing browsers.
meter and time are not implemented yet.Mike Gale wrote:These include the programmatic things (as tested by that MS test suite). Unsurprisingly IE8 pases the dom storage and xdm tests. FF also seems to pass those xdm tests.
For the focus of my interest meter and time, I didn't notice implementation of meter (which suggests a representation in the UI).
What are you using it for?Mike Gale wrote:(I'm not using meter for the purpose in it's description, but I can re-define it's parameters in a way that suits my puposes.)
Which implementations are you referring to? Those you listed are not implemented in IE, Gecko, WebKit or Opera, AFAIK. (Well, menu is implemented to the extent it was specified in HTML 3.2 but nothing new from HTML5 is supported.)Mike Gale wrote:For the special div elements (header, footer, menu, aside...) there seem to be several implementations though I didn't notice that in the marginal notes.
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