On Nov 24, 2003, at 4:38 AM, David Carlisle wrote:
An xslt system is allowed to output characters in any way that produce
the same input when parsed. Since é and an e-acute character
produce the same input to any XML parser either of these may be used.
An XML parser doesn't care.
Thanks for the explanation.
So do you consider it a bug if a processor does one thing with one
template, and another thing with another template?
(hope this renders right in your email client!)
It did, which suggests that actually you posted a latin-1 e-acute which
presumably wasn't the output of your stylesheet, which was specifying
utf-8 output.
I'm not following you here; can you explain again? Are you just
pointing out that I had first said a-acute, and what I posted was
really e-acute? If yes, the first was a mistake.
I'm just confused by your latin-1 vs. utf-8 distinction above. The
file was indeed output as utf-8.
Bruce
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