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この文書は、 WHATWG HTML5 仕様書の日本語訳です。
HTML5 の正式な仕様書は英語版だけであり、
この日本語訳はあくまで参考としてご利用ください。
This document is a Japanese translation of
the WHATWG HTML5 specification. Note that the only normative specification
for the HTML5 is the original English version and this Japanese
translation is non‐normative.
日本語訳は Web 界面を使って編集できます。
編集結果はおよそ3時間おきに反映されます。
また、原文の変更には毎日自動的に追随しています。
The Japanese text can be edited using the Web
interface. Any modifications will be reflected to this translation
in about three hours. Note that any changes to the original specification
will automatically be incorporated to this translation every day.
© Copyright 2004-2008 Apple Computer, Inc., Mozilla Foundation, and Opera Software ASA.
You are granted a license to use, reproduce and create derivative works of this document.
この仕様書は、 Web ベースのアプリケーションの制作の簡単化のために HTML やそれに関係する API を拡張します。 新たに文脈メニュー、直接モード図形画布、全二重クライアント鯖型通信路、 更なる意味、音声や動画、オフライン Web アプリケーションのための各種機能、 砂箱化 iframe、範囲指定スタイル付けなどの機能を追加します。 また、既存の旧来の利用者エージェントに対する言語の後方互換性を維持し、 既存の旧来の文書に対する利用者エージェントの後方互換性を維持することに特に留意しています。
この文書は作業中です! この文書は、コメントへの対応や通常の開発の過程として、 毎時毎分とは言い過ぎですが毎日のペースで変更されています。 コメントは非常に歓迎していますので、 whatwg@whatwg.org へお送りください。よろしくお願いします。
現在の焦点は未解決のフィードバックへの対応です。 (現在の進捗を示したグラフもあります。)
実装者は、この仕様書が安定していないことに注意するべきです。 実装者は議論に参加しておかないと、 仕様がその実装とは非互換に変更されてしまうかもしれません。 この仕様書がいずれ実装呼び掛けの段階に達するのよりも前にこの仕様を実装したい販売者は、 WHATWG メイリング・リストに参加し、 議論に加わるべきです。
この仕様書は W3C HTML WG によっても出版されています。2つの仕様書の目次以降は同一です。
この仕様書は、従来 HTML4、XHTML 1.x、DOM2 HTML の仕様書にあったものを置き換える (その新しい版となる) ことを意図しています。
この仕様書の各部分はそれぞれ異なる成熟度にあります。
Some of the more major known issues are marked like this. There are many other issues that have been raised as well; the issues given in this document are not the only known issues! Also, firing of events needs to be unified (right now some bubble, some don't, they all use different text to fire events, etc).
a
element
q
element
cite element
em element
strong element
small element
mark element
dfn element
abbr element
time element
progress element
meter element
code element
var element
samp element
kbd element
sub and sup elements
span element
i element
b element
bdo element
ruby element
rt element
rp element
figure element
img element
iframe element
embed element
object element
param element
video element
audio element
source element
canvas element
canvas elements
map element
area element
table element
caption element
colgroup element
col element
tbody element
thead element
tfoot element
tr element
td element
th element
td and th elements
form element
fieldset element
input element
button element
label element
select element
datalist element
optgroup element
option element
textarea element
output element
details element
datagrid element
datagrid data model
datagrid element
datagrid
command element
bb element
menu element
a element to define a command
button element to define a command
input element to define a command
option element to define a command
command element to define a command
bb element to define a command
alternate"
archives"
author"
bookmark"
external"
feed"
help"
icon"
license"
nofollow"
noreferrer"
pingback"
prefetch"
search"
stylesheet"
sidebar"
tag"
irrelevant attribute
contenteditable attribute
この節は規定の一部ではありません。
World Wide Web のマーク付け言語は、いつもずっと HTML でした。 HTML は主に意味的に記述された科学的な文書のための言語として設計されましたが、 一般性を持った設計になっていたことと長年にわたる適応化が行われたことから、 それ以外の様々な種類の文書の記述にも使えるようになりました。
HTML がこれまで十分に取り扱わなかった分野としては、主に、Web アプリケーションと大まかに括られる分野が挙げられます。 この仕様書は、この状況を是正しようと試みると共に、 過去数年間に取り上げられた問題を解決するべく、 HTML 仕様書を更新するものです。
この節は規定の一部ではありません。
この仕様書は、静的な文書から動的なアプリケーションまで、 Web のアクセス性の高い頁を著述するための、 意味レベルのマーク付け言語とそれに関連付けられた意味レベルのスクリプト API を提供することに限定されています。
この仕様書の適用範囲には、提示の媒体特有のカスタム化のための機構の提供は含みません (ただし、 Web ブラウザの既定のレンダリング規則がこの仕様書の最後に含まれており、 CSS に引っ掛けるための仕組みもいくつか言語の一部として提供します)。
この仕様書の適用範囲には、 Web ブラウザで提供されるすべての HTML や DOM
の機能の文書化は含みません。ブラウザは、アクセス可能性的に非常に悪いか、
その他の理由で不適切と考えられる機能に多く対応しています。例えば、
blink 要素は明らかに提示的であり、
著者は文章を点滅させたい時には代わりに CSS を使うべきです。
この仕様書の適用範囲には、オペレーティング・システム全体を記述することは含みません。 特に、ハードウェア設定ソフトウェア、画像操作ツール、高級ワークステーションでの日常用途向けアプリケーションは適用範囲外です。 この仕様書は、アプリケーションに関しては、時たま利用するか、日常的ながらも様々な場所から利用するような、 しかも CPU に対する要求の低いアプリケーションを特に対象としています。 例えば、オンライン購入システム、検索システム、ゲーム (特に多プレイヤー・オンライン・ゲーム)、 公衆電話帳・住所録、通信ソフトウェア (電子メイル・クライアント、 即席メッセージ・クライアント、議論ソフトウェア)、 文書編集ソフトウェアなどです。
洗練された多環境対応アプリケーションについては、独占的な解決策が既にいくつか存在します (Mozilla の XUL、 Adobe の Flash、 Microsoft の Silverlight など)。 これらの解決策は標準化過程よりも速く進化しており、 要求も更に速いスピードで高まっています。これらのシステムは、 この文書で説明している解決策よりも甚だ複雑で規定しがたく、 相互運用性の達成も桁違いに難しいものです。 洗練されたアプリケーションのための環境特有の解決策 (例えば Mac OS X 中核 API) は更にそれ以上です。
元々 HTML5 に関する作業は2003年の暮れに、 XForms 1.0 が導入した機能の多くは既存の HTML Web 頁と非互換なレンダリング・エンジンをブラウザに実装させずとも HTML4 のフォームの拡張によって提供できることの実証としてはじまりました。 この早い段階の作業は、原案は既に公開されていましたし、意見は既にあらゆる方面から募られていましたが、 仕様書は Opera Software の著作権のもとにのみ置かれていました。
2004年のはじめ、この作業の根底にある原理の一部やフォーム関連の機能のみを扱った早期の原案提案を Mozilla と Opera が共同で W3C に対して Web における Web アプリケーションの将来を議論する会議において示しました。 この提案は以前選ばれた Webの発展の方向と矛盾しているとの理由で却下されました。
そのすぐ後、 Apple と Mozilla と Opera はこの作業を継続する意思を共同で発表しました。 公開のメイリング・リストが作成され、原案は WHATWG サイトに移されました。 それ以後著作権はこれら3販売者が共同で所有し、仕様書の再利用を認めるように改定されました。
2006年には、 W3C はこの仕様書に対する興味を示し、 HTML5 仕様書の開発を WHATWG と共に行うことを憲章に含めた作業部会を作成しました。作業部会は2007年に開始しました。 Apple と Mozilla と Opera は W3C が仕様書を W3C の著作権のもとで出版することを認めつつ、 WHATWG サイトでより制限のゆるいライセンスの版を提供し続けています。
それ以後、両部会は共同で作業を続けています。
この節は規定の一部ではありません。
この仕様書は HTML4 の新しい版であり、それに対応する DOM2 HTML API の新しい版です。この仕様書は後方互換性を残すことに注意を払っていますので、 ほとんどの場合、 HTML4 からこの仕様書で説明する書式や API への移行は簡単なはずです。[HTML4] [DOM2HTML]
この節は規定の一部ではありません。
この仕様書は、 HTML 語彙の XML 直列化の規定的定義としての XHTML 1.0 を置き換えることを意図しています。 [XHTML10]
この仕様書は XHTML モジュール化 1.1 で定義され XHTML 1.1 で使われている語彙の意味と要件を更新することを意図していますが、 これらの仕様書 (やその他の仕様書) で定義され使用されているモジュール化手法の置き換えを提供しようとはしていませんので、 これらの完全なる置き換えとはいえません。 [XHTMLMOD] [XHTML11]
従って、当該モジュール化手法が必要ない著者や実装者にとってはこの仕様書を XHTML 1.x を置き換えるものと考えることができますが、それが必要な人は XHTML 1.1 系列の仕様書を使い続けることをお勧めします。
この節は規定の一部ではありません。
XHTML2 [XHTML2] は、 ハイパーリンク、多媒体内容、文書の編集の注釈付け、豊富なメタデータ、 宣言的対話的フォーム、詩など人文学的作品や科学的論文の意味の記述などのためのよりよい機能を持つ、 新しい HTML 語彙を定義しています。
しかし、 XHTML2 は Web でよく見られる、文書以外の種類の内容の多くの意味を表現する要素に欠いています。 例えば、掲示板サイト、オークション・サイト、検索エンジン、オンライン店舗などは、 文書のメタファーに十分なじまないので、 XHTML2 でカバーされていません。
この仕様書は、 HTML を拡張し、これらの文脈でも適切なものとなることを目指します。
XHTML2 とこの仕様書は異なる名前空間を使用していますので、 同じ XML 処理器でどちらをも実装することができます。
この節は規定の一部ではありません。
この仕様書はゆくゆくは Web Forms 2.0 に取って代わることになります。 その時までは、現在の Web Forms 2.0 はこの仕様書の一部であると考えることができます。 Web Forms 2.0 の機能はゆくゆくはこの仕様書と併合されます。 [WF2]
現時点では、この仕様書は XForms とは無関係で、直交したものです。 HTML4 と Web Forms 2.0 で定義されたフォーム機能がこの仕様書に併合された折には、 Web Forms 2.0 案で説明している XForms との関係がこの仕様書についても適用されます。[XForms]
この節は規定の一部ではありません。
この仕様書は、各種販売者が提供する各種独占的利用者界面言語とは独立です。 HTML は、開放的で販売者に対して中立な言語として、 特定販売者への囲い込みの危険のない解決策を同じ問題に対して提供します。
この節は規定の一部ではありません。
この仕様書は、文書とアプリケーションを記述するための抽象言語と、 その言語を用いた資源の記憶装置内表現と対話する API をいくつか定義します。
記憶装置内表現は「DOM5 HTML」、あるいは略して「DOM」と呼ばれます。
この抽象言語を用いた資源を転送するために使用できる具象構文はいろいろありますが、 この仕様書ではそのうちの2つを定義します。
1つ目の具象構文は「HTML5」です。これは、ほとんどの著者に推奨する書式です。
この具象構文はすべての遺物 Web ブラウザと互換性があります。
文書が MIME 型 text/html で転送される場合、 Web ブラウザはこれを「HTML5」
として処理します。
2つ目の具象構文は XML を使い、「XHTML5」と呼ばれます。文書が XML MIME 型、例えば application/xhtml+xml で転送される時には、 Web
ブラウザは XML 処理器によりこれを処理し、「XHTML5」文書として扱います。
著者は、 XML と HTML の処理が異なることに注意する必要があります。
特に、 XML 文書は小さな構文誤りによってさえ完全には表示されなくなってしまいます。
一方の「HTML5」構文では小さな誤りは無視されます。
「DOM5 HTML」、「HTML5」、「XHTML5」の各表現は、
すべてが同じ内容を表現できるわけではありません。例えば、
名前空間は「HTML5」では表現できませんが、「DOM5 HTML」と「XHTML5」
は対応しています。同様に、 noscript 機能を用いた文書は「HTML5」
を使って表現できますが、「XHTML5」や「DOM5 HTML」では表現できません。
文字列「-->」を含む注釈は「DOM5 HTML」
では表現できますが、「HTML5」や「XHTML5」では表現できません。
他にもあります。
この節は規定の一部ではありません。
この仕様書は次の大きな章で構成されています。
この仕様書には、 Web ブラウザのレンダリング規則を定義する附属書やこの仕様書の適用範囲外の分野を列挙する附属書もあります。
この仕様書は、他のすべての仕様書と同じように読むべきです。 まず、最初から最後まで、何回も読むべきです。 次に、最低1回は後ろから読むべきです。 その次に、目次から無作為に節を選び、すべての相互参照をたどりながら読むべきです。
これは定義や要件や説明です。
これは注意書きです。
これは例です。
これは未解決の問題です。
これは警告です。
用語の定義を行う実現値はこのようにマーク付けされます。この用語を使う場合は、このように、あるいはこのようにマーク付けされます。
要素、属性、API を定義する実現値は、
このようにマーク付けされます。
この要素、属性、API への参照はこのようにマーク付けされます。
その他の符号素片は、このようにマーク付けされます。
変数はこのようにマーク付けされます。
interface 例 {
// これは IDL 定義です。
};
この仕様書では、よく、同じ文脈で HTML や XML の属性と DOM の属性の両方に言及します。 いずれの属性を指しているのかが明確でない場合には、 HTML や XML の属性を内容属性、 DOM の属性を DOM 属性と呼びます。 同様に、用語「特性」は ECMAScript のオブジェクト特性と CSS の特性の両方に使います。 いずれを指すか曖昧な場合には、それぞれオブジェクト特性や CSS 特性のように修飾して使います。
用語 HTML 文書は時々 XML 文書と対比させて使いますが、 (XML 構文解析器を使って構文解析されたものや純粋に DOM を使って作られたものに対して) HTML 構文解析器を使って構文解析された文書を意味します。
一般に、この仕様書が HTML か XHTML に適用される機能を述べる時には、 他方についても含んでいます。ある機能がこの2つの言語のうちのいずれかにのみに特に適用される時は、 それがわかるように、他方の書式には適用されないことを明記します。
この仕様書では、短く静的な文書であっても豊かな多媒体を用いた長い随筆や報告書であっても、 はたまた本格的な対話的アプリケーションであったとしても、 あらゆる HTML の利用方法をも含めて、すべて用語文書によって表します。
簡単のため、文書が利用者に対してレンダリングされる方法に言及する時に示す、 表示する、可視などの用語を使うことがあります。 このような用語は特に視覚媒体を暗示しているわけではありません。 他の媒体であってもこれらの用語が等価な方法で適用されるものと考えなければなりません。
この仕様書にある算法のうちのいくつかは、歴史的な理由により、何らかの条件が満たされるまでの間、 利用者エージェントが一時停止することを要求しています。 利用者エージェントは、一時停止している間、スクリプト (事象取扱器やタイマーなど) が実行されないようにしなければなりません。 しかし、一時停止中利用者エージェントは、 スクリプトの呼び出しに関わってくるような Web 頁との対話を利用者にさせないでおきながらも、 利用者の入力に応答的であり続けるべきです。
HTML から XHTML への移行を簡単にするために、
この仕様書に適合する利用者エージェントは、
少なくても DOM と CSS に関しては、 HTML の要素を
http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml
名前空間に置きます。
この仕様書では、用語「HTML 名前空間の要素」、
略して「HTML 要素」は、
HTML と XHTML の両方の要素を指します。
特に断らない場合、
この仕様書で定義または言及するすべての要素は
http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml 名前空間にあり、
この仕様書で定義または言及するすべての属性は名前空間を持ちません
(要素毎区画にあります)。
XML の名前 (属性名や要素名など) を prefix:localName の形表す場合 (例えば xml:id や
svg:rect) には、局所名が localName であり、
名前空間は接頭辞によって次の表で定義する通りであるような名前を表します。
xml
http://www.w3.org/XML/1998/namespace
html
http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml
svg
http://www.w3.org/2000/svg
属性名が XML 互換であるとは、 XML で定義されている Name 生成規則に一致し、 U+003A
COLON (:) 文字を含まず、最初の3文字が ASCII 大文字・小文字不区別で文字列「xml」に一致しないことをいいます。 [XML]
用語根要素は、 文書の根要素と明示的に修飾していない時は、 当該節点の最遠の祖先要素節点か、祖先を持たない場合にはその節点自体を意味します。 節点が文書の一部である時には、これは文書の根要素となります。 しかし、節点がその時点で文書木の一部でない場合は、 根要素は孤児節点となります。
要素が文書に挿入されるというのは、その根要素が変化し、新しく文書の根要素となった時です。
用語木順は、関係 DOM 節点の (parentNode/childNodes 関係を通じた)
行きがけ順幅優先探索を表します。
要素や属性が無視される、他の値であるとして扱う、 何か他のものであるかのように扱うと述べられている時は、その節点が DOM に入った後の処理についてのみ言及しています。利用者エージェントは、そのような状況で DOM を変異させてはなりません。
用語テキスト節点は、任意の
Text 節点を指し、 CDATASection 節点を含みます。
厳密には、節点型が TEXT_NODE (3) か CDATA_SECTION_NODE
(4) の任意の Node を指します。
[DOM3CORE]
「Foo オブジェクト」という構文 (Foo
は実際には界面) を時々使いますが、より正確な「界面 Foo
を実装しているオブジェクト」の代わりに用いています。
DOM 属性は、その値が (例えば著者のスクリプトにより) 取り出される時取得されるといい、 新しい値がその属性に割り当てられる時設定されるといいます。
DOM オブジェクトが生きているという場合、 そのオブジェクトを返す属性は常に同じオブジェクトを返さなければならない (毎回新しいオブジェクトを返すのではなく) 上に、 そのオブジェクトの属性やメソッドがそのオブジェクトの裏にある実際のデータのスナップ写真ではなく、 データそのものに対して操作されなければならないことを意味します。
用語発火、発送は、 DOM 事象仕様書にある通り、 事象の文脈では交換可能なものとして使います。 [DOM3EVENTS]
用語プラグインは、任意の内容取扱器を意味して使います。 典型的には利用者エージェントが生で対応していない Web 内容型のためや DOM を晒さない内容型のための、第3者による内容取扱器で、 利用者エージェントの界面の一部として内容をレンダリングすることに対応しているものです。
プラグインの一例は、利用者が PDF ファイルに操縦した時に閲覧文脈中に実現値化される PDF 表示器です。この場合、PDF 表示器部品が利用者エージェント自体と同じ者により実装されたかどうかを問わず、 プラグインと考えます。しかし、 PDF 表示器アプリケーションが利用者エージェントとは (同じ界面を使わずに) 別に起動する場合には、この定義ではプラグインではありません。
この仕様書は、プラグインと対話する仕組みを定義しません。そのような仕組みは利用者エージェントや環境に依存すると思われるからです。 ある利用者エージェントは Netscape プラグイン API のようなプラグインの仕組みに対応したいかもしれません。 他の利用者エージェントは遠隔内容変換器を使ったり、ある型については組み込みで対応したりするかもしれません。
ブラウザは、プラグインを想定した外部の内容と対話する時に特に十分な注意を払うべきです。 第3者ソフトウェアが利用者エージェント自体と同じ特権で走る時は、 第3者ソフトウェアの脆弱性が利用者エージェントの脆弱性と同じくらい危険となります。
この仕様書のすべての図、例示、注意書き、ならびに規定の一部ではないと明記したすべての節は、 規定の一部ではありません。 この仕様書のそれ以外の部分はすべて規定の一部です。
この文書の規定の部分にあるキーワード「しなければなりません」、 「してはなりません」、 「必須です」、「するべきです」、 「するべきではありません」、 「推奨します」、「して構いません」、 「任意です」は、 RFC 2119 で説明されているように解釈します。 この仕様書の原文では、 可読性の観点から、 これらの語の原語のすべて大文字による表記は行っていません。 [RFC2119]
算法の一部として動作の指示の形で (原文では命令形で) 記述された要件 (例えば「先頭の間隔文字をすべて除去します」や「偽を返し、これらの段階を停止します」) は、算法を紹介するに当たって使われたキーワード (しなければなりません、 するべきです、して構いませんなど) の意味により解釈します。
この仕様書は、利用者エージェントに対する適合性基準 (実装者に関係するもの) と文書に対する適合性基準 (著者や著述ツール実装者に関係するもの) を説明します。
文書適合性要件と実装適合性要件の間には暗示的な関係もありません。 利用者エージェントは不適合の文書を好きなように取り扱ってよいわけではありません。 入力文書の適合性の如何を問わず、この仕様書で説明する処理モデルが適用されます。
利用者エージェントは異なった適合性要件を持つ複数の (重なり合った) 範疇に分類できます。
XHTML に対応する Web ブラウザは、 XML 文書中に見える HTML 名前空間の要素や属性をこの仕様書で説明するように処理することにより、 利用者がそれらと対話できるようにしなければなりません。ただし、 それらの要素の意味が他の仕様書により上書きされている場合を除きます。
適合 XHTML 処理器は、 XML 文書中で XHTML script
要素を見つけた際に、その要素に含まれるスクリプトを実行することになります。しかし、
その要素が XSLT 変形シート中に見える場合には (利用者エージェントが XSLT
にも対応しているとすると)、処理器は通常の処理の代わりに script 要素を変形の一部を形成する不透明な要素として扱うことになります。
HTML に対応する Web
ブラウザは、 text/html と札付けされた文書をこの仕様書で説明するように処理することにより、
利用者がそれらと対話できるようにしなければなりません。
HTML 文書と XHTML 文書を純粋にその非対話的な版をレンダリングするために処理する利用者エージェントは、 利用者との対話に関する要件を除き、 Web ブラウザと同じ基準に従わなければなりません。
非対話的提示利用者エージェントの典型的な例は印刷機 (静的利用者エージェント) や頭上表示機 (動的利用者エージェント) です。ほとんどの静的非対話的提示利用者エージェントはスクリプティング対応を欠くことをも選ぶと思われます。
それでも、非対話的ながら動的な提示の利用者エージェントはスクリプトを実行し、 フォームを動的に提出することを許すなどすることでしょう。しかし、 利用者が文書に対話できない時には「焦点」の概念は無関係となるので、 利用者エージェントは焦点に関係する DOM API のいずれにも対応する必要がありません。
スクリプティングに対応しない (またはスクリプティング機能が完全に無効化されている) 実装は、この仕様書で言及している事象や DOM 界面への対応を免除されます。 この仕様書で事象モデルや DOM を用いて定義されている部分に関しては、 この種の利用者エージェントもやはり事象や DOM に対応しているかのように動作しなければなりません。
スクリプティングはアプリケーションの不可分の部分を形成することがあります。 スクリプティングに対応しない、またはスクリプティングを無効化された利用者エージェントは、 著者の意図を完全に伝えることができないかもしれません。
適合性検査器は、文書がこの仕様書中で説明する適用可能な適合性基準に適合するかを検証しなければなりません。
自動化された適合性検査器については、著者の意図の解釈が必要な誤りの検出を免除します
(例えば、 blockquote 要素の内容が引用ではない文書は不適合ですが、
人間の判断の入力なしで走っている適合性検査器は
blockquote
要素が引用されたものだけを含むかを検査しなくてかまいません)。
適合性検査器は、閲覧文脈なしの時に (つまりスクリプトが走らず、 構文解析器のスクリプティング旗が無効化された状態で) 入力文書が適合するかを検査しなければならず、スクリプトを実行する閲覧文脈中で構文解析する時に入力文書が適合するか、 スクリプトが決して不適合状態を引き起こさないか (スクリプト自体の実行中の過渡状態を除きます。) も検査するべきです。 (これは不可能であると証明されているので、 「するべき」要件であり、「しなければならない」要件ではありません。 [HALTINGPROBLEM])
用語「HTML5 妥当性検査器」は、それ自体がこの仕様書の適用可能な要件に適合する適合性検査器を指して使うことができます。
XML DTD はこの仕様書のすべての適合性要件を表現することができません。 従って、妥当性を検証する XML 処理器 と DTD は適合性検査器が適合性検査器を構成することはできません。 また、この仕様書が定義する2つの著述書式のどちらも SGML の応用ではありませんから、 妥当性を検証する SGML システムが適合性検査器を構成することはできません。
別の言い方をすると、適合性基準には次の3種類があります。
適合性検査器ははじめの2つを検査しなければなりません。 単純な DTD を基にした妥当性検証器は1つ目の級の誤りしか検査しませんから、 この仕様書による適合妥当性検証器ではありません。
文書のレンダリングや適合性の検査以外の理由で HTML 文書や XHTML 文書を処理するアプリケーションやツールは、その処理する文書の意味に従って作用するべきです。
文書の輪郭を生成するツールで、 入れ子の水準を段落毎に増加させ、章節毎には増加させないものは、 適合しません。
著述ツールとマーク付け生成器は、適合文書を生成しなければなりません。 著者に適用される適合性基準は著述ツールにも適当なら適用されます。
著述ツールは要素をその指定された目的のみに用いるという厳密な要件を免除されますが、 これは著述ツールがまだ著者の意図を判断することができない範囲内に限ります。
例えば、 address 要素を任意の連絡先情報に使うことは適合しません。
この要素は文書や章節の著者の連絡先情報のマーク付けにのみ使うことができます。
しかし、著述ツールはこの違いを判断できないでしょうから、
著述ツールはこの要件を免除されます。
このため、適合性検査に関しては、編集器は適合性検査器が検証できるのと同程度に適合する文書を出力されることが要求されます。
著述ツールを不適合の文書を編集するために用いる時には、 その編集セッションで編集しなかった文書中の部分の適合性誤りを保持して構いません (つまり、編集ツールは誤った内容を往復することが認められます)。しかし、 著述ツールは誤りが保持される場合に出力が適合していると主張してはなりません。
著述ツールは2つに大きく分けられると思われます。1つは構造・意味的なデータに対して働くもので、 もう1つは見たままな感じの媒体指定の編集 (WYSIWYG) に基づき働くものです。
前者は原始構造中の構造を HTML のどの要素や属性が最も適切かに関して十分な選択を行うために使うことができるので、 HTML を著述するツールにはより好ましい仕組みです。
しかし、 WYSIWYG ツールは合法です。 WYSIWYG ツールは適切であると知っている要素を使うべきで、
適切ではないと知っている要素を使うべきではありません。
これは、極端な場合に、使用する流れ要素を div、
b、
i、span のような少数の要素に制限し、 style
属性を使いまくるようにすることを意味するかもしれません。
すべての著述ツールは、 WYSIWYG か否かに関わらず、 よく構造化され、意味的に豊かな、媒体非依存の内容を利用者が作成できるようにするため、 最大限の努力を行うべきです。
いくつかの適合性要件は属性やメソッドやオブジェクトの要件として説明されています。 そのような要件は、2つの範疇に分類されます。1つは内容モデルの制限を説明するもので、 もう1つは実装の動作を説明するものです。前者の範疇の要件は文書や著述ツールの要件です。 後者の範疇は利用者エージェントの要件です。
算法や特定の段階として説明されている適合性要件は、 最終的な結果が等価である限り、任意の方法で実装して構いません。 (特に、この仕様書で定義されている算法は追うのを簡単にしており、 高性能であることを目指してはいません。)
利用者エージェントは、サービス拒否攻撃を防ぐため、 記憶容量を使い尽くすことを防ぐため、 あるいは環境特有の制限に対応するためなどの目的で、 別段の制約のない入力に対して実装特有の制限を設けて構いません。
既存の内容や以前の仕様書との互換性のため、この仕様書は2つの著述書式を説明します。 1つは XML に基づくもので (XHTML5 と呼びます)、もう1つは SGML に着想を得たカスタム書式を使うもの (HTML5 と呼びます) です。実装者はこれら2つの書式の1つだけに対応して構いませんが、 両方に対応することをおすすめします。
そのような XML 文書は、望ましければ DOCTYPE
を含んで構いませんが、この仕様書に適合するために必要なわけではありません。
XML 仕様書によれば、 XML 処理器が DOCTYPE 中で参照されている外部 DTD
部分集合を処理することは保証されていません。これは、例えば XHTML 文書中で文字を参照するために実体参照を使うことは (<、
>、&、"、 ' を除き)
安全ではないことを意味しています。
この仕様書の言語は、利用者エージェントがすべての実体参照を展開し、 従って DOM 中には実体参照節点が含まれないことを仮定しています。 利用者エージェントが DOM 中に実体参照節点を含めるという場合には、 利用者エージェントはこの仕様書を実装する時には実体参照節点が完全に展開されているかのように取り扱わなければなりません。 例えば、ある要件が要素の子供テキスト節点について反している場合には、 その要素の子供の実体参照の子供であるテキスト節点も同じように使われることになります。 未知の実体に対する実体参照は、この仕様書で定義する算法に関しては、 単に空のテキスト節点を含むかのように扱わなければなりません。
この仕様書は、他のいくつかの下位の仕様書に依存しています。
XHTML5 に対応する実装は、 XML のいずれかの版と、 それに対応する名前空間仕様書に対応しなければなりません。 XHTML5 は名前空間を用いた XML 直列化を使います。 [XML] [XMLNAMES]
文書オブジェクト・モデル (DOM) は、文書とその内容の表現 (モデル) です。 DOM は単なる API ではなく、この仕様書では HTML 実装の適合性基準を DOM 上の操作として定義しています。 [DOM3CORE]
実装は、 DOM 中核と DOM 事象のそれぞれのいずれかの版に対応しなければなりません。 この仕様書は DOM を使って定義を行っていますし、この仕様書で定義するいくつかの機能は DOM 中核界面に対する拡張となっています。 [DOM3CORE] [DOM3EVENTS]
この仕様書で定義する API を実装するために ECMAScript を使用する実装は、 Web IDL 仕様書で定義されている ECMAScript 束縛と整合的な方法で実装しなければなりません。 この仕様書は Web IDL 仕様書の用語法を使っているからです。 [WebIDL]
実装は、媒体照会言語のいずれかの版を実装しなければなりません。 [MQ]
この仕様書は、特定のネットワーク輸送プロトコル、スタイル・シート言語、 スクリプティング言語の仕様書への対応を要求しませんし、 ここまでに述べた内容以上には DOM や WebAPI の仕様書への対応も要求しません。 しかし、この仕様書で説明する言語は、 スタイル付け言語として CSS、スクリプティング言語として ECMAScript、 ネットワーク・プロトコルとして HTTP に偏向しており、 いくつかの機能はこれらの言語やプロトコルが使われることを想定しています。
この仕様書は、文字符号化、画像書式、音声書式、動画書式に関して、 それぞれに関する節で追加の要件を示すかもしれません。
this section will be removed at some point
Some elements are defined in terms of their DOM textContent attribute. This is an
attribute defined on the Node interface in DOM3 Core. [DOM3CORE]
The interface DOMTimeStamp is
defined in DOM3 Core. [DOM3CORE]
The term activation behavior is used as defined in the DOM3 Events specification. [DOM3EVENTS] At the time of writing, DOM3 Events hadn't yet been updated to define that phrase.
The rules for handling alternative style sheets are defined in the CSS object model specification. [CSSOM]
This section will eventually be removed in favour of WebIDL.
A lot of arrays/lists/collections in this spec assume zero-based indexes but use the term "indexth" liberally. We should define those to be zero-based and be clearer about this.
Unless otherwise specified, if a DOM attribute that is a floating point
number type (float) is assigned an Infinity or
Not-a-Number value, a NOT_SUPPORTED_ERR
exception must be raised.
Unless otherwise specified, if a method with an argument that is a
floating point number type (float) is passed an
Infinity or Not-a-Number value, a NOT_SUPPORTED_ERR exception must be raised.
Unless otherwise specified, if a method is passed fewer arguments than
is defined for that method in its IDL definition, a NOT_SUPPORTED_ERR exception must be raised.
Unless otherwise specified, if a method is passed more arguments than is defined for that method in its IDL definition, the excess arguments must be ignored.
この仕様書は文字列に対する比較演算子をいくつか定義します。
2つの文字列を大文字・小文字を区別する方法で比較するとは、 両者を正確に、符号位置それぞれについて比較することを意味します。
2つの文字列を ASCII 大文字・小文字を区別しない方法で比較するとは、 両者を正確に、符号位置それぞれについて比較しますが、範囲 U+0041 ~ U+005A (つまり LATIN CAPITAL LETTER A から LATIN CAPITAL LETTER Z) の文字と範囲 U+0061 ~ U+007A (つまり LATIN SMALL LETTER A から LATIN SMALL LETTER Z) の対応する文字も一致するものと考えることを意味します。
2つの文字列を大文字・小文字互換性不区別な方法で比較するとは、 2つの文字列の比較に Unicode 大文字・小文字互換性不区別演算を使うことを意味します。 [UNICODECASE]
文字列を大文字に変換するとは、 範囲 U+0061 ~ U+007A (つまり LATIN SMALL LETTER A から LATIN SMALL LETTER Z) の文字をすべて範囲 U+0041 ~ U+005A (つまり LATIN CAPITAL LETTER A から LATIN CAPITAL LETTER Z) の対応する文字に置き換えることを意味します。
文字列を小文字に変換するとは、範囲 U+0041 ~ U+005A (つまり LATIN CAPITAL LETTER A から LATIN CAPITAL LETTER Z) の文字をすべて範囲 U+0061 ~ U+007A (つまり LATIN SMALL LETTER A から LATIN SMALL LETTER Z) の対応する文字に置き換えることを意味します。
HTML 中のいろいろな場所で、日付や数値のような特定のデータ型を使うことができます。 この節では、そのような書式の内容の適合基準は何か、 どう構文解析するかを説明します。
仕様書全体について、すべての属性値がマイクロ構文を使ってか他の仕様書を使ってか「文章」などとして定義されるようにする必要があります。
間隔文字は、 この仕様書においては、 U+0020 SPACE, U+0009 CHARACTER TABULATION (tab)、U+000A LINE FEED (LF)、U+000C FORM FEED (FF)、 U+000D CARRIAGE RETURN (CR) です。
The White_Space characters are those that have the Unicode property "White_Space". [UNICODE]
これ以降で説明するマイクロ構文解析器のいくつかは、構文解析される文字列を保持する input 変数を持ち、 input 中で次に構文解析する文字を指す position 変数を持つというパターンに従っています。
このパターンに従う構文解析器において、利用者エージェントが文字列を集めることを要求している段階は、 次の算法を、 characters が収集できる文字の集合であるとして実行しなければならないことを意味しています。
input と position を、これらの段階を呼び出した算法中の同名の変数と同じものとします。
result を空文字列とします。
position が input の終わりの更に先を指しておらず、 position の文字が characters のうちの1つである間、 その文字を result の終わりに追加し、 position を input の次の文字に進めます。
result を返します。
The step skip whitespace means that the user agent must collect a sequence of characters that are space characters. The step skip White_Space characters means that the user agent must collect a sequence of characters that are White_Space characters. In both cases, the collected characters are not used. [UNICODE]
HTML5 の数々の属性はブール型属性です。要素にブール型属性が存在すると真の値を表し、 存在しないと偽の値を表します。
属性が存在する場合、その値は空文字列か、または ASCII 大文字・小文字不区別で属性の正準名と一致するような (先頭にも末尾にも空白がない) 値のいずれかでなければなりません。
文字列は、範囲 U+0030 DIGIT ZERO (0) ~ U+0039 DIGIT NINE (9) の文字1文字以上で構成される場合、妥当な非負整数です。
非負整数を構文解析する規則は次の算法で与えられるものです。 この算法が呼び出された時には、与えられた順に段階に従い、 値を返す最初の段階で中断しなければなりません。 この算法は零か正整数か誤りを返します。 先頭の間隔は無視されます。末尾の空白、というかごみ文字列はすべて無視されます。
input を構文解析される文字列とします。
position を input 中の指示子とし、初期位置を文字列の始めとします。
value を値 0 にします。
position が input の終わりを過ぎていれば、誤りを返します。
次の文字が U+0030 DIGIT ZERO (0) 〜 U+0039 DIGIT NINE (9) のうちの1つでない場合、誤りを返します。
次の文字が U+0030 DIGIT ZERO (0) 〜 U+0039 DIGIT NINE (9) のうちの1つである場合:
value を返します。
文字列は、範囲 U+0030 DIGIT ZERO (0) ~ U+0039 DIGIT NINE (9) の文字1文字以上で構成され、任意選択で接頭辞として U+002D HYPHEN-MINUS ("-") 文字がある場合、妥当な整数です。
整数を構文解析する規則は、非負整数用の規則と似ており、 次の算法により与えられます。これらの段階は、呼び出された場合、 与えられた順序に従い実行し、初めて値を返す段階で停止しなければなりません。 この算法は整数か誤りのいずれかを返します。先頭の間隔は無視されます。 末尾の間隔や末尾のごみ文字は無視されます。
input を構文解析される文字列とします。
position を input 中の指示子とし、初期位置を文字列の始めとします。
value を値 0 にします。
sign を、「正」という値を持つようにします。
position が input の終わりを過ぎていれば、誤りを返します。
position が示す文字 (最初の文字) が U+002D HYPHEN-MINUS ("-") 文字である場合、
次の文字が U+0030 DIGIT ZERO (0) 〜 U+0039 DIGIT NINE (9) のうちの1つでない場合、誤りを返します。
次の文字が U+0030 DIGIT ZERO (0) 〜 U+0039 DIGIT NINE (9) のうちの1つである場合:
sign が「正」の場合、 value を返します。そうでない場合、 0-value を返します。
文字列は、範囲 U+0030 DIGIT ZERO (0) ~ U+0039 DIGIT NINE (9) の文字1文字以上で構成され、 任意選択で U+002E FULL STOP (".") 文字1文字がどこか (数字の前か、 2つの数字の間か、数字の後のいずれか) を含み、その全体について任意選択で接頭辞として U+002D HYPHEN-MINUS ("-") 文字がある場合、妥当な浮動小数点数です。
浮動小数点数値を構文解析する規則は次の算法により与えられる通りです。 前述の算法と同様で、この算法が呼び出された時も、 与えられた順序に従い実行し、値を返す最初の段階で停止しなければなりません。 この算法は、数か誤りのいずれかを返します。先頭の間隔は無視されます。 末尾の間隔とごみ文字は無視されます。
input を構文解析される文字列とします。
position を input 中の指示子とし、初期位置を文字列の始めとします。
value を値 0 にします。
sign を、「正」という値を持つようにします。
position が input の終わりを過ぎていれば、誤りを返します。
position が示す文字 (最初の文字) が U+002D HYPHEN-MINUS ("-") 文字である場合、
次の文字が U+0030 DIGIT ZERO (0) ~ U+0039 DIGIT NINE (9) か U+002E FULL STOP (".") のいずれかでなければ、 誤りを返します。
次の文字が U+002E FULL STOP (".") でありながら、 これが最後の文字であるか、またはその次の文字が U+0030 DIGIT ZERO (0) ~ U+0039 DIGIT NINE (9) のいずれかではない場合、 誤りを返します。
次の文字が U+0030 DIGIT ZERO (0) 〜 U+0039 DIGIT NINE (9) のうちの1つである場合:
そうでない場合、次の文字が U+002E FULL STOP (".") でない場合には、 sign が「正」であるなら value を返し、そうでないなら 0-value を返します。
次の文字は U+002E FULL STOP (".") です。 position をその次の文字に進めます。
divisor を 1 とします。
次の文字が U+0030 DIGIT ZERO (0) 〜 U+0039 DIGIT NINE (9) のうちの1つである場合:
そうでない場合、 sign が「正」であるなら value を返し、そうでないなら 0-value を返します。
この節で説明する算法は、 progress 要素と
meter 要素で使います。
妥当な分母句読点文字は、 次の表の文字のいずれかです。次の表に示すように、各分母句読点文字には関連付けられた値があります。
| 分母句読点文字 | 値 | |
|---|---|---|
| U+0025 PERCENT SIGN | % | 100 |
| U+066A ARABIC PERCENT SIGN | ٪ | 100 |
| U+FE6A SMALL PERCENT SIGN | ﹪ | 100 |
| U+FF05 FULLWIDTH PERCENT SIGN | % | 100 |
| U+2030 PER MILLE SIGN | ‰ | 1000 |
| U+2031 PER TEN THOUSAND SIGN | ‱ | 10000 |
文字列中の比率の1つか2つの数字を探す段階は、次の通りです。
数を探すための算法は次の通りです。 この算法は、文字列と開始位置を与えられ、 何も返さないか、数を返すか、誤り条件を返すかのいずれかです。
valid positive non-zero integers rules for parsing dimension values (only used by height/width on img, embed, object — lengths in css pixels or percentages)
妥当な整数の並びは、 U+002C COMMA 文字で分離された数々の妥当な整数であって、 他の文字を含まない (例えば間隔文字を含まない) ものです。 加えて、与えられる整数の数や認められる値の範囲に制限が設けられることがあります。
整数のリストを構文解析する規則は次の通りです。
input を構文解析される文字列とします。
position を input 中の指示子とし、初期位置を文字列の始めとします。
numbers を、初期状態として、空の整数のリストとします。 このリストは、この算法の結果となります。
文字列 input の位置 position に文字があり、これが U+0020 SPACE、U+002C COMMA、 U+003B SEMICOLON のいずれかの文字であれば、 position を input 中の次の文字に進めるか、それ以上文字がないのであれば文字列の終わりを過ぎたとします。
position が input の終わりを過ぎた先を指していれば、 numbers を返し、停止します。
文字列 input の位置 position が U+0020 SPACE、U+002C COMMA、U+003B SEMICOLON のいずれかの文字であれば、段階 4 に戻ります。
negated を偽とします。
value を 0 とします。
started を偽とします。この変数は、
構文解析器が数か「-」文字を見たときに真に設定されます。
got number を偽とします。この変数は構文解析器が数を見たときに真に設定されます。
finished を偽とします。この変数は構文解析器が次の分離子まで文字を無視するモードに切り替わったとき真に設定されます。
bogus を偽とします。
構文解析器: 文字列 input 位置 position の文字が、
次の部分段階に従います。
次の部分段階に従います。
次の部分段階に従います。
1,2,x,4」のようにリスト中の項目が数字を持たない場合に起こります。次の部分段階に従います。
次の部分段階に従います。
position を input 中の次の文字に進めるか、それ以上文字がないのであれば文字列の終わりを過ぎたとします。
position が文字を指す場合 (で input の終わりを過ぎていない場合)、 先の大段階構文解析器に飛びます。
negated が真の場合、 value を負にします。
got number が真の場合、 value を numbers リストの最後に追加します。
numbers リストを返し、停止します。
後述の算法において、年 year の月 month の日の数は、 month が 1、3、5、7、8、10、12 のいずれかであれば 31、 month が 4、6、9、11 のいずれかであれば 30、 month が 2 で year が 400 で割り切れる数であるか、 year が 4 で割り切れるものの 100 では割り切れない数であれば 29、 いずれでもなければ 28 です。これはグレゴリオ暦の閏年を考慮しています。 [GREGORIAN]
文字列が妥当な日時であるとは、4つの数字 (年を表します。)、ハイフン文字、2つの数字 (月を表します。)、 ハイフン文字、2つの数字 (日を表します。)、任意選択でいくらかの間隔、 文字 T または間隔、任意選択でいくらかの間隔、 2つの数字 (時)、コロン、2つの数字 (分)、 任意選択で秒 (これが含まれる場合、再度コロンの後に2つの数字 (秒の整数部)、任意選択で小数点の後に1つ以上の数字 (秒の小数部) で構成されなければなりません。)、 任意選択でいくらかの間隔、そして最後に Z 文字 (時間帯が UTC であることを示します。) か、または正符号か負符号、2つの数字、コロン、2つの数字 (それぞれ時差の符号、 時、分) の並びのいずれか、これらを持つことをいいます。 ただし、月と日の組み合わせが当該年のグレゴリオ暦に照らして妥当な日付であり、 時の値 (h) が範囲 0 ≤ h ≤ 23 に、分の値 (m) が範囲 0 ≤ m ≤ 59 に、秒の値 (s) が範囲 0 ≤ h < 60 にあることとします。 [GREGORIAN]
数字は範囲 U+0030 DIGIT ZERO (0) ~ U+0039 DIGIT NINE (9) の文字でなければならず、ハイフンは U+002D HYPHEN-MINUS 文字でなければならず、 T は U+0054 LATIN CAPITAL LETTER T でなければならず、 コロンは U+003A COLON 文字でなければならず、 小数点は U+002E FULL STOP でなければならず、 Z は U+005A LATIN CAPITAL LETTER Z でなければならず、 正符号は U+002B PLUS SIGN、負符号は U+002D (ハイフンと同じ) でなければなりません。
次に示すのは、妥当な日時として書かれた日付の例です。
0037-12-13 00:00 Z」1979-10-14T12:00:00.001-04:00」8592-01-01 T 02:09 +02:09」これらの日付に関して、いくつか注意点があります。
適合性検査器は時刻が妥当な時刻かどうかを決定するために後述の算法を使うことができます。
利用者エージェントは、 文字列を日時値として構文解析する際に文字列に次の算法を適用しなければなりません。 この算法は UTC での時刻と往復変換や表示のための関連付けられた時間帯の情報を返すか、 何も返さないことによって値が妥当な日時でないことを示すかのいずれかです。 算法が「失敗」といった時点で、何も返さないことを意味します。
input を構文解析される文字列とします。
position を input 中の指示子とし、初期位置を文字列の始めとします。
範囲 U+0030 DIGIT ZERO (0) ~ U+0039 DIGIT NINE (9) の文字の列を集めます。 集めた列が丁度4文字の長さでない場合は、失敗です。 そうでない場合、得られた列を十進整数として解釈します。 この数を year とします。
position が input の終わりを過ぎている場合や position の位置の文字が U+002D HYPHEN-MINUS 文字でない場合、 失敗です。そうでない場合、 position を1文字先へ進めます。
範囲 U+0030 DIGIT ZERO (0) ~ U+0039 DIGIT NINE (9) の文字の列を集めます。 集めた列が丁度2文字の長さでない場合、失敗です。 そうでない場合、得られた列を十進整数として解釈します。 この数を month とします。
maxday を、年 year の月 month の日の数とします。
position が input の終わりを過ぎている場合や position の位置の文字が U+002D HYPHEN-MINUS 文字でない場合、 失敗です。そうでない場合、 position を1文字先へ進めます。
範囲 U+0030 DIGIT ZERO (0) ~ U+0039 DIGIT NINE (9) の文字の列を集めます。 集めた列が丁度2文字の長さでない場合、失敗です。 そうでない場合、得られた列を十進整数として解釈します。 この数を day とします。
day が範囲 1 ≤ month ≤ maxday の数でない場合、失敗します。
U+0054 LATIN CAPITAL LETTER T 文字であるか、または間隔文字である文字の列を集めます。 集めた列が零文字長の場合、または複数の U+0054 LATIN CAPITAL LETTER T 文字を含む場合、失敗します。
範囲 U+0030 DIGIT ZERO (0) ~ U+0039 DIGIT NINE (9) の文字の列を集めます。 集めた列が丁度2文字の長さでない場合、失敗です。 そうでない場合、得られた列を十進整数として解釈します。 この数を hour とします。
position が input の終わりを過ぎている場合、 または position の文字が U+003A COLON 文字でない場合、失敗します。 そうでない場合、 position を1文字先へ進めます。
範囲 U+0030 DIGIT ZERO (0) ~ U+0039 DIGIT NINE (9) の文字の列を集めます。 集めた列が丁度2文字の長さでない場合、失敗です。 そうでない場合、得られた列を十進整数として解釈します。 この数を minute とします。
second を、値「0」の文字列とします。
position が input の終わりを過ぎている場合、失敗します。
position の文字が U+003A COLON の場合、
position を input 中の次の文字へ進めます。
position が input の終わりを過ぎている場合や、 input の最後の文字の位置にある場合や、 input 中の position から始まる次の2つの文字が共に範囲 U+0030 DIGIT ZERO (0) ~ U+0039 DIGIT NINE (9) の文字2つではない場合、失敗します。
Collect a sequence of characters that are either characters in the range U+0030 DIGIT ZERO (0) to U+0039 DIGIT NINE (9) or U+002E FULL STOP characters. If the collected sequence has more than one U+002E FULL STOP characters, or if the last character in the sequence is a U+002E FULL STOP character, then fail. Otherwise, let the collected string be second instead of its previous value.
Interpret second as a base-ten number (possibly with a fractional part). Let that number be second instead of the string version.
position が input の終わりを過ぎている場合、失敗します。
If the character at position is a U+005A LATIN CAPITAL LETTER Z, then:
Let timezonehours be 0.
Let timezoneminutes be 0.
position を input 中の次の文字へ進めます。
Otherwise, if the character at position is either a U+002B PLUS SIGN ("+") or a U+002D HYPHEN-MINUS ("-"), then:
If the character at position is a U+002B PLUS SIGN ("+"), let sign be "positive". Otherwise, it's a U+002D HYPHEN-MINUS ("-"); let sign be "negative".
position を input 中の次の文字へ進めます。
範囲 U+0030 DIGIT ZERO (0) ~ U+0039 DIGIT NINE (9) の文字の列を集めます。 集めた列が丁度2文字の長さでない場合、失敗です。 そうでない場合、得られた列を十進整数として解釈します。 この数を timezonehours とします。
position が input の終わりを過ぎている場合、 または position の文字が U+003A COLON 文字でない場合、失敗します。 そうでない場合、 position を1文字先へ進めます。
範囲 U+0030 DIGIT ZERO (0) ~ U+0039 DIGIT NINE (9) の文字の列を集めます。 集めた列が丁度2文字の長さでない場合、失敗です。 そうでない場合、得られた列を十進整数として解釈します。 この数を timezoneminutes とします。
If position is not beyond the end of input, then fail.
Let time be the moment in time at year year, month month, day day, hours hour, minute minute, second second, subtracting timezonehours hours and timezoneminutes minutes. That moment in time is a moment in the UTC timezone.
Let timezone be timezonehours hours and timezoneminutes minutes from UTC.
Return time and timezone.
この節は日付か時刻の文字列を定義します。 これは2種類あり、1つは内容中の日付か時刻の文字列で、 もう1つは属性中の日付か時刻の文字列です。 違いは空白文字の取扱いだけです。
利用者エージェントは、日付か時刻の文字列を構文解析する際、 次の算法を使わなければなりません。日付か時刻の文字列は、 次の算法を文字列上で走らせた時に文字列が非妥当であると言われなければ、 妥当な日付か時刻の文字列です。
算法は何も返さないかもしれません (その場合文字列は非妥当です) し、日付や時刻や日付と時刻や日付と時刻と時間帯を返すかもしれません。 算法がいくつかの値を返した場合であっても、 文字列は非妥当であることもあります。
input を構文解析される文字列とします。
position を input 中の指示子とし、初期位置を文字列の始めとします。
results を、 返される結果 (日付、時刻、時間帯の1つ以上) の集成で、 はじめは空とします。 算法が途中で停止した場合、その時点で results に入っているものが何であれ算法の結果として返されなければなりません。
For the "in content" variant: skip White_Space characters; for the "in attributes" variant: skip whitespace.
Collect a sequence of characters in the range U+0030 DIGIT ZERO (0) to U+0039 DIGIT NINE (9). If the collected sequence is empty, then the string is invalid; abort these steps.
Let the sequence of characters collected in the last step be s.
If position is past the end of input, the string is invalid; abort these steps.
If the character at position is not a U+003A COLON character, then:
If the character at position is not a U+002D HYPHEN-MINUS ("-") character either, then the string is invalid, abort these steps.
If the sequence s is not exactly four digits long, then the string is invalid. (This does not stop the algorithm, however.)
Interpret the sequence of characters collected in step 5 as a base-ten integer, and let that number be year.
Advance position past the U+002D HYPHEN-MINUS ("-") character.
Collect a sequence of characters in the range U+0030 DIGIT ZERO (0) to U+0039 DIGIT NINE (9). If the collected sequence is empty, then the string is invalid; abort these steps.
If the sequence collected in the last step is not exactly two digits long, then the string is invalid.
Interpret the sequence of characters collected two steps ago as a base-ten integer, and let that number be month.
maxday を、年 year の月 month の日の数とします。
If position is past the end of input, or if the character at position is not a U+002D HYPHEN-MINUS ("-") character, then the string is invalid, abort these steps. Otherwise, advance position to the next character.
Collect a sequence of characters in the range U+0030 DIGIT ZERO (0) to U+0039 DIGIT NINE (9). If the collected sequence is empty, then the string is invalid; abort these steps.
If the sequence collected in the last step is not exactly two digits long, then the string is invalid.
Interpret the sequence of characters collected two steps ago as a base-ten integer, and let that number be day.
If day is not a number in the range 1 ≤ day ≤ maxday, then the string is invalid, abort these steps.
Add the date represented by year, month, and day to the results.
For the "in content" variant: skip White_Space characters; for the "in attributes" variant: skip whitespace.
If the character at position is a U+0054 LATIN CAPITAL LETTER T, then move position forwards one character.
For the "in content" variant: skip White_Space characters; for the "in attributes" variant: skip whitespace.
Collect a sequence of characters in the range U+0030 DIGIT ZERO (0) to U+0039 DIGIT NINE (9). If the collected sequence is empty, then the string is invalid; abort these steps.
Let s be the sequence of characters collected in the last step.
If s is not exactly two digits long, then the string is invalid.
Interpret the sequence of characters collected two steps ago as a base-ten integer, and let that number be hour.
If hour is not a number in the range 0 ≤ hour ≤ 23, then the string is invalid, abort these steps.
If position is past the end of input, or if the character at position is not a U+003A COLON character, then the string is invalid, abort these steps. Otherwise, advance position to the next character.
Collect a sequence of characters in the range U+0030 DIGIT ZERO (0) to U+0039 DIGIT NINE (9). If the collected sequence is empty, then the string is invalid; abort these steps.
If the sequence collected in the last step is not exactly two digits long, then the string is invalid.
Interpret the sequence of characters collected two steps ago as a base-ten integer, and let that number be minute.
If minute is not a number in the range 0 ≤ minute ≤ 59, then the string is invalid, abort these steps.
Let second be 0. It might be changed to another value in the next step.
If position is not past the end of input and the character at position is a U+003A COLON character, then:
Collect a sequence of characters that are either characters in the range U+0030 DIGIT ZERO (0) to U+0039 DIGIT NINE (9) or are U+002E FULL STOP. If the collected sequence is empty, or contains more than one U+002E FULL STOP character, then the string is invalid; abort these steps.
If the first character in the sequence collected in the last step is not in the range U+0030 DIGIT ZERO (0) to U+0039 DIGIT NINE (9), then the string is invalid.
Interpret the sequence of characters collected two steps ago as a base-ten number (possibly with a fractional part), and let that number be second.
If second is not a number in the range 0 ≤ minute < 60, then the string is invalid, abort these steps.
Add the time represented by hour, minute, and second to the results.
If results has both a date and a time, then:
For the "in content" variant: skip White_Space characters; for the "in attributes" variant: skip whitespace.
If position is past the end of input, then skip to the next step in the overall set of steps.
Otherwise, if the character at position is a U+005A LATIN CAPITAL LETTER Z, then:
Add the timezone corresponding to UTC (zero offset) to the results.
position を input 中の次の文字へ進めます。
Skip to the next step in the overall set of steps.
Otherwise, if the character at position is either a U+002B PLUS SIGN ("+") or a U+002D HYPHEN-MINUS ("-"), then:
If the character at position is a U+002B PLUS SIGN ("+"), let sign be "positive". Otherwise, it's a U+002D HYPHEN-MINUS ("-"); let sign be "negative".
position を input 中の次の文字へ進めます。
Collect a sequence of characters in the range U+0030 DIGIT ZERO (0) to U+0039 DIGIT NINE (9). If the collected sequence is not exactly two characters long, then the string is invalid.
Interpret the sequence collected in the last step as a base-ten number, and let that number be timezonehours.
If position is beyond the end of input or if the character at position is not a U+003A COLON character, then the string is invalid; abort these steps. Otherwise, move position forwards one character.
Collect a sequence of characters in the range U+0030 DIGIT ZERO (0) to U+0039 DIGIT NINE (9). If the collected sequence is not exactly two characters long, then the string is invalid.
Interpret the sequence collected in the last step as a base-ten number, and let that number be timezoneminutes.
Add the timezone corresponding to an offset of timezonehours hours and timezoneminutes minutes to the results.
Skip to the next step in the overall set of steps.
Otherwise, the string is invalid; abort these steps.
For the "in content" variant: skip White_Space characters; for the "in attributes" variant: skip whitespace.
If position is not past the end of input, then the string is invalid.
Abort these steps (the string is parsed).
valid time offset, rules for parsing time offsets, time offset serialization rules; in the format "5d4h3m2s1ms" or "3m 9.2s" or "00:00:00.00" or similar.
A set of space-separated tokens is a set of zero or more words separated by one or more space characters, where words consist of any string of one or more characters, none of which are space characters.
A string containing a set of space-separated tokens may have leading or trailing space characters.
An unordered set of unique space-separated tokens is a set of space-separated tokens where none of the words are duplicated.
An ordered set of unique space-separated tokens is a set of space-separated tokens where none of the words are duplicated but where the order of the tokens is meaningful.
Sets of space-separated tokens sometimes have a defined set of allowed values. When a set of allowed values is defined, the tokens must all be from that list of allowed values; other values are non-conforming. If no such set of allowed values is provided, then all values are conforming.
When a user agent has to split a string on spaces, it must use the following algorithm:
input を構文解析される文字列とします。
position を input 中の指示子とし、初期位置を文字列の始めとします。
Let tokens be a list of tokens, initially empty.
While position is not past the end of input:
Collect a sequence of characters that are not space characters.
Add the string collected in the previous step to tokens.
Return tokens.
When a user agent has to remove a token from a string, it must use the following algorithm:
Let input be the string being modified.
Let token be the token being removed. It will not contain any space characters.
Let output be the output string, initially empty.
position を input 中の指示子とし、初期位置を文字列の始めとします。
If position is beyond the end of input, set the string being modified to output, and abort these steps.
If the character at position is a space character:
Append the character at position to the end of output.
Increment position so it points at the next character in input.
手順 5 in the overall set of steps に戻ります。
Otherwise, the character at position is the first character of a token. Collect a sequence of characters that are not space characters, and let that be s.
If s is exactly equal to token, then:
Skip whitespace (in input).
Remove any space characters currently at the end of output.
If position is not past the end of input, and output is not the empty string, append a single U+0020 SPACE character at the end of output.
Otherwise, append s to the end of output.
手順 6 in the overall set of steps に戻ります。
This causes any occurrences of the token to be removed from the string, and any spaces that were surrounding the token to be collapsed to a single space, except at the start and end of the string, where such spaces are removed.
Some attributes are defined as taking one of a finite set of keywords. Such attributes are called enumerated attributes. The keywords are each defined to map to a particular state (several keywords might map to the same state, in which case some of the keywords are synonyms of each other; additionally, some of the keywords can be said to be non-conforming, and are only in the specification for historical reasons). In addition, two default states can be given. The first is the invalid value default, the second is the missing value default.
If an enumerated attribute is specified, the attribute's value must be an ASCII case-insensitive match for one of the given keywords that are not said to be non-conforming, with no leading or trailing whitespace.
When the attribute is specified, if its value is an ASCII case-insensitively match for one of the given keywords then that keyword's state is the state that the attribute represents. If the attribute value matches none of the given keywords, but the attribute has an invalid value default, then the attribute represents that state. Otherwise, if the attribute value matches none of the keywords but there is a missing value default state defined, then that is the state represented by the attribute. Otherwise, there is no default, and invalid values must be ignored.
When the attribute is not specified, if there is a missing value default state defined, then that is the state represented by the (missing) attribute. Otherwise, the absence of the attribute means that there is no state represented.
The empty string can be one of the keywords in some cases.
For example the contenteditable attribute has two
states: true, matching the true keyword and
the empty string, false, matching false and
all other keywords (it's the invalid value default). It could
further be thought of as having a third state inherit, which
would be the default when the attribute is not specified at all (the
missing value default), but for various reasons that isn't the
way this specification actually defines it.
A valid hash-name reference to an element of type
type is a string consisting of a U+0023 NUMBER SIGN
(#) character followed by a string which exactly
matches the value of the name attribute of an
element in the document with type type.
The rules for parsing a hash-name reference to an element of type type are as follows:
If the string being parsed does not contain a U+0023 NUMBER SIGN character, or if the first such character in the string is the last character in the string, then return null and abort these steps.
Let s be the string from the character immediately after the first U+0023 NUMBER SIGN character in the string being parsed up to the end of that string.
Return the first element of type type that has an
id or name attribute whose value is a compatibility caseless match for s.
この仕様書は、用語 URL を定義し、 URL を処理する各種算法を定義します。というのは、歴史的理由により、 URI や IRI の仕様書で定義されている規則は Web 内容との互換性のために HTML 利用者エージェントが実装する必要があるものの完全な説明となっていないからです。
URL は資源を識別するために使われる文字列です。URL は常に Document
と関連付けられています。この関連付けは URL が作成されるか定義される時に明示的になされるか、
または DOM 節点を通じてなされる (この場合、関連付けられた Document
は節点の Document です。) か、スクリプトを通じてなされます
(この場合、関連付けられた Document
はスクリプトのスクリプト文書文脈です。)。
URL は、次の条件の最低1つが満たされる場合、 妥当な URL です。
この仕様書中の用語「URL」は、 RFC 3986 で与えられている正確な技術的な意味と異なった形で使われています。 RFC 3986 に精通した読者にとっては、ここでの用語「URL」が何か全く別の呼ばれ方をしたものであると思った方がこの仕様書を読むのが楽になるでしょう。
利用者エージェントは、 url という URL を構文解析して各部品部分に分ける際に、 次の段階を使わなければなりません。
url から先頭と末尾の間隔文字を除去します。
url を RFC 3986 で定義された方法で構文解析します。 ただし、次の例外に従います。
ABNF 定義に前述の変更を加えた後であっても url が <URI-reference> 生成規則に一致しない場合は、 URL の構文解析は誤りにより失敗とします。 [RFC3986]
そうでない場合、 url の構文解析は成功です。 URL の部品は次の通り定義される url の各部分文字列です。
<scheme> 生成規則に一致する部分文字列 (あれば)。
<host> 生成規則に一致する部分文字列 (あれば)。
<port> 生成規則に一致する部分文字列 (あれば)。
<scheme> 部品と <port> 部品があり、 <port> 部品により与えられるポートが <scheme> 部品により与えられるプロトコルに対して定義された既定のポートと異なる場合、 <hostport> は <host> 生成規則に一致する部分文字列で始まり、 <port> 生成規則に一致する部分文字列で終わり、両者の間のコロンを含む部分文字列です。 そうでない場合、 <host> 部品と同じです。
次の生成規則のいずれかに一致する部分文字列 (いずれかが一致する場合)。
<query> 生成規則に一致する部分文字列 (あれば)。
<fragment> 生成規則に一致する部分文字列 (あれば)。
相対 URL は基底 URL に対して相対的に解決されます。 URL の基底 URLは、次のようにして得られる絶対 URL です。
基底 URL は、 XML 基底仕様書によって定義される、その属性の属する要素の基底 URI
です。ここで、文書実体の基底 URI は、その要素を所有する Document
の文書基底 URL
として定義されます。
利用者エージェントは、 XML 基底仕様書の範囲に関しては、すべての
Document オブジェクトが XML 文書を表現するかのように作用しなければなりません。
xml:base 属性は、 HTML
素片中であっても出現することがあります。なぜなら、スクリプトを作って動的にこの属性を追加することができるからです。
(しかし、 xml:base
属性は HTML 文書中では認められていないので、
そのようなスクリプトは適合しません。)
基底 URL は、 アプリケーション・キャッシュ・マニフェストの URL です。
Document の文書基底 URL
は、次の段階を走らせて得られる絶対 URL
です。
文書 head 要素の子供であり、かつ
href
属性を持つ base 要素がない場合、
文書基底 URL は文書の番地です。
そうでない場合、 url をそのような最初の要素の href 属性の値とします。
url URL を、文書の番地を基底
URL として解決します
(ですので、 base href
属性は xml:base 属性に影響されません)。
文書基底 URL は前の段階が成功した場合にはその結果、 そうでない場合には文書の番地です。
利用者エージェントは、URL を解決して絶対 URL にするために次の段階を使わなければなりません。 URL の解決は誤りに終わるかもしれませんが、その場合 URL は解決可能ではありません。
url を、解決する URL とします。
document を、url
と関連付けられている Document
とします。
encoding を、 document の文字符号化とします。
encoding が UTF-16 の場合、これを UTF-8 に変更します。
url を各部分部品に構文解析します。
url の構文解析の結果 <host> 部品が得られた場合、 url 中のそれに一致した部分文字列を、その部品中で百分率符号化されたオクテット列であって妥当な UTF-8 列である部分を UTF-8 で定義されているようにして Unicode 文字に置き換えた文字列によって置き換えます。
この部品中の百分率符号化されたオクテットが妥当な UTF-8 列でない場合は、 誤りを返し、これらの段階を停止します。
IDNA ToASCII 算法を、 AllowUnassigned 旗と UseSTD3ASCIIRules 旗の両方を設定した上で、一致した部分文字列に適用します。一致した部分文字列を、 ToASCII 算法の結果により置き換えます。
ToASCIIが文字列の部品のいずれかの変換に失敗した場合 (例えば部品が長すぎる場合や非妥当な文字を含む場合)、 誤りを返し、これらの段階を停止します。 [RFC3490]
url の構文解析の結果 <path> 部品が得られた場合、 url の一致した部分文字列を、 RFC 3986 で定義されている元々の <path> 生成規則に一致しない U+0025 PERCENT SIGN (%) 以外の文字それぞれに次の段階を適用した結果の文字列により置き換えます。
例えば、 url が「//example.com/a^b☺c%FFd%z/?e」である場合、 <path>
部品の部分文字列は「/a^b☺c%FFd%z/」で、
逃避されなければならない2つの文字は「^」と「☺」です。
従って、この段階を適用した結果、url は「//example.com/a%5Eb%E2%98%BAc%FFd%z/?e」となります。
url の構文解析の結果 <query> 部品が得られた場合、 url の一致した部分文字列を、 RFC 3986 で定義されている元々の <path> 生成規則に一致しない U+0025 PERCENT SIGN (%) 以外の文字それぞれに次の段階を適用した結果の文字列により置き換えます。
RFC 3986 5.2 節 相対解決で説明されている算法を適用します。ここで、 url を潜在的相対 URI 参照 (R)、 base を基底 URI (Base) とします。 [RFC3986]
RFC 3986 と RFC 3987 の関係する適合性基準を適用し、 適切であれば、誤りを返し、これらの段階を停止します。 [RFC3986] [RFC3987]
例えば、前述の算法で返される絶対 URI がその scheme に特有の制限に違反している場合、
具体例としては data: URI が「//」鯖型命名局構文を使っている場合、
利用者エージェントは代わりにこれを誤りとして扱うことになります。
result を、相対解決算法で返される対象 URI (T) とします。
result が鯖型命名局の scheme を使っている場合、 result 中のすべての U+005C REVERSE SOLIDUS (\) 文字を U+002F SOLIDUS (/) 文字に置き換えます。
result を返します。
URL は、これを解決しても誤りとならずに同じ URL が得られる場合、絶対 URL です。
xml:base
属性が変化した時、その属性の要素と、すべての子孫要素は、
基底 URL の変更に影響されます。
文書の文書基底 URL が変化した時、 文書中のすべての要素は基底 URL の変更に影響されます。
要素がある文書から別の文書へと移動された時、 2つの文書が異なる基底 URL を持つ場合、 その要素とすべての子孫は基底 URL の変更に影響されます。
要素が基底 URL の変更に影響される時、 次の並びで説明するように作用しなければなりません。
当該ハイパーリンクにより識別される絶対 URL
が利用者に示される場合に、あるいはその URL に由来する何らかのデータが表示に影響する場合に、 href
属性は再解決され、
利用者界面は適切に更新されるべきです。
例えば、 CSS :link/:visited
擬似クラスが影響を受けるかもしれません。
ハイパーリンクが ping 属性を持ち、その絶対 URL (群) が利用者に示される場合に、
ping
属性の字句は再解決され、
利用者界面は適切に更新されるべきです。
blockquote、
q、ins、
del のいずれかの要素であって、 cite 属性を持つ場合cite 属性により識別される絶対 URL
が利用者に示される場合に、あるいはその URL に由来する何らかのデータが表示に影響する場合に、
再解決され、
利用者界面は適切に更新されるべきです。
要素は直接影響されません。
基底 URL を変更しても img 要素が表示する画像には影響しません。
ただし、以後スクリプトから src
属性にアクセスすると表示中の画像とは対応しなくなった新しい絶対
URL が返されるようになります。
URL 分解属性を持つ界面は、 次の定義による7つの属性を持ちます。
attribute DOMString protocol;
attribute DOMString host;
attribute DOMString hostname;
attribute DOMString port;
attribute DOMString pathname;
attribute DOMString search;
attribute DOMString hash;
URL 分解属性として定義される属性は、この節の中の同じ対応する名前の属性について説明されているように作用しなければなりません。
加えて、 URL 分解属性を実装する界面は入力と共通設定器作用を定義しますが、 前者はこれは属性が作用する対象の URL で、 後者はいずれかの属性の設定器が呼び出された時に呼び出される段階の集合です。
7つの URL 分解属性は似た要件を持ちます。
取得時、利用者エージェントは、 入力が後述の表の該当属性に対応する「取得器条件」の列に与えられた条件を満たす場合、 「部品」の列で与えられる入力 URL の一部分を、「接頭辞」の列で指定された接頭辞をその文字列のはじめに適切に追加し、 「接尾辞」の列で指定された接尾辞をその文字列の終わりに適切に追加した上で、 返さなければなりません。 そうでない場合、属性は空文字列を返さなければなりません。
設定時、新しい値はまず「設定器前処理器」の列で説明されるように変異し、 次に新しい値の中の文字で「部品」の列で与えられる関係する部品において妥当でないものをすべて %逃避により変異しなければなりません。その後、 変異結果の新しい値が「設定器条件」の列に与えられた条件を満たす場合、利用者エージェントは、 入力 URL 中の、 「部品」の列で与えられる URL 中の部品を、 新しい値によって置き換えた新しい文字列 output を作らなければなりません。 そうでない場合、利用者エージェントは、 output を入力と等しくしなければなりません。 最後に、利用者エージェントは、値 output により共通設定器作用を呼び出さなければなりません。
URL 中の部品を置き換える時、その部品が URL 構文中で1文字の後にその部品が続くような任意選択の群の一部である場合には、 その部品 (と接頭辞文字) は、新しい値が空文字列であっても含めなければなりません。
前の段落は、特に <port> 部品の前の「:」、 <query> 部品の前の「?」、 <fragment> 部品の前の「#」に適用されます。
先の定義に関しては、 URL はこの仕様書で定義する URL 構文解析規則を使って構文解析されなければなりません。
| 属性 | 部品 | 取得器条件 | 接頭辞 | 接尾辞 | 設定器前処理器 | 設定器条件 |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
protocol
| <scheme> | — | — | U+003A COLON (":")
| 末尾のすべての U+003A COLON (":") 文字を削除 | 新しい値は空文字列ではない |
host
| <hostport> | 入力は階層的で、 鯖型命名局を使っている | — | — | — | — |
hostname
| <host> | 入力は階層的で、 鯖型命名局を使っている | — | — | 先頭のすべての U+002F SOLIDUS ("/") 文字を削除 | — |
port
| <port> | 入力は階層的で、 鯖型命名局を使っており、 <port> 部品を (空であったとしても) 含んでいる | — | — | 新しい値の中の範囲 U+0030 DIGIT ZERO ~ U+0039 DIGIT NINE 以外の文字をすべて削除。 その結果の文字列が空の場合、単一の U+0030 DIGIT ZERO character ('0' に設定。 | — |
pathname
| <path> | 入力が階層的 | — | — | 先頭が U+002F SOLIDUS ("/") 文字ではない場合、
新しい値の前に U+002F SOLIDUS ("/")
文字を追加 | — |
search
| <query> | 入力は階層的で、 <query> 部品を (空であったとしても) 含んでいる | U+003F QUESTION MARK ("?")
| — | 先頭に U+003F QUESTION MARK ("?")
文字があれば、これを1つ削除 | — |
hash
| <fragment> | 入力は階層的で、 <fragment> 部品を (空であったとしても) 含んでいる | U+0023 NUMBER SIGN ("#")
| — | 先頭に U+0023 NUMBER SIGN ("#") 文字があれば、
これを1つ削除 | — |
次の表は、 search
の取得器条件が元々の URL の正確な構文の違いによってどのように結果が変化するかを示しています。
| 入力 URL | search 値 | 説明 |
|---|---|---|
http://example.com/
| 空文字列 | 入力中に <query> 部品がありません。 |
http://example.com/?
| ?
| <query> 部品がありますが、 空です。結果の値の疑問符は接頭辞です。 |
http://example.com/?test
| ?test
| <query>
部品は値「test」を持ちます。 |
http://example.com/?test#
| ?test
| (空の) <fragment> 部品は <query> 部品の一部ではありません。 |
When a user agent is to fetch a resource, the following steps must be run:
If the resource is identified by a URL, then immediately resolve that URL.
If the resulting absolute URL is about:blank, then return the empty
string and abort these steps.
Perform the remaining steps asynchronously.
If the resource identified by the resulting absolute URL is already being downloaded for other reasons (e.g. another invocation of this algorithm), and the resource is to be obtained using a idempotent action (such as an HTTP GET or equivalent), and the user agent is configured such that it is to reuse the data from the existing download instead of initiating a new one, then use the results of the existing download instead of starting a new one.
Otherwise, at a time convenient to the user and the user agent,
download the resource, applying the semantics of the relevant
specifications (e.g. performing an HTTP GET or POST operation, or
reading the file from disk, following redirects, dereferencing javascript: URLs, etc).
When the resource is available, queue a task that uses the resource as appropriate. If the resource can be processed incrementally, as, for instance, with a progressively interlaced JPEG or an HTML file, multiple tasks may be queued to process the data as it is downloaded. The task source for these tasks is the networking task source.
The offline application cache processing model introduces some changes to the networking model to handle the returning of cached resources.
The navigation processing model handles redirects itself, overriding the redirection handling that would be done by the fetching algorithm.
Whether the type sniffing rules apply to the fetched resource depends on the algorithm that invokes the rules — they are not always applicable.
It is imperative that the rules in this section be followed exactly. When a user agent uses different heuristics for content type detection than the server expects, security problems can occur. For example, if a server believes that the client will treat a contributed file as an image (and thus treat it as benign), but a Web browser believes the content to be HTML (and thus execute any scripts contained therein), the end user can be exposed to malicious content, making the user vulnerable to cookie theft attacks and other cross-site scripting attacks.
What explicit Content-Type metadata is associated with the resource (the resource's type information) depends on the protocol that was used to fetch the resource.
For HTTP resources, only the first Content-Type HTTP header, if any, contributes any type information; the explicit type of the resource is then the value of that header, interpreted as described by the HTTP specifications. If the Content-Type HTTP header is present but the value of the first such header cannot be interpreted as described by the HTTP specifications (e.g. because its value doesn't contain a U+002F SOLIDUS ('/') character), then the resource has no type information (even if there are multiple Content-Type HTTP headers and one of the other ones is syntactically correct). [HTTP]
For resources fetched from the file system, user agents should use platform-specific conventions, e.g. operating system extension/type mappings.
Extensions must not be used for determining resource types for resources fetched over HTTP.
For resources fetched over most other protocols, e.g. FTP, there is no type information.
The algorithm for extracting an encoding from a Content-Type, given a string s, is as follows. It either returns an encoding or nothing.
Find the first seven characters in s that are an ASCII case-insensitive match for the word "charset". If no such match is found, return nothing.
Skip any U+0009, U+000A, U+000C, U+000D, or U+0020 characters that immediately follow the word 'charset' (there might not be any).
If the next character is not a U+003D EQUALS SIGN ('='), return nothing.
Skip any U+0009, U+000A, U+000C, U+000D, or U+0020 characters that immediately follow the equals sign (there might not be any).
Process the next character as follows:
Return the string between this character and the next earliest occurrence of this character.
Return nothing.
Return the string from this character to the first U+0009, U+000A, U+000C, U+000D, U+0020, or U+003B character or the end of s, whichever comes first.
The above algorithm is a willful violation of the HTTP specification. [RFC2616]
The sniffed type of a resource must be found as follows:
If the user agent is configured to strictly obey Content-Type headers for this resource, then jump to the last step in this set of steps.
If the resource was fetched over an HTTP protocol and there is an HTTP Content-Type header and the value of the first such header has bytes that exactly match one of the following lines:
| Bytes in Hexadecimal | Textual representation |
|---|---|
| 74 65 78 74 2f 70 6c 61 69 6e | text/plain
|
| 74 65 78 74 2f 70 6c 61 69 6e 3b 20 63 68 61 72 73 65 74 3d 49 53 4f 2d 38 38 35 39 2d 31 | text/plain; charset=ISO-8859-1
|
| 74 65 78 74 2f 70 6c 61 69 6e 3b 20 63 68 61 72 73 65 74 3d 69 73 6f 2d 38 38 35 39 2d 31 | text/plain; charset=iso-8859-1
|
| 74 65 78 74 2f 70 6c 61 69 6e 3b 20 63 68 61 72 73 65 74 3d 55 54 46 2d 38 | text/plain; charset=UTF-8
|
...then jump to the text or binary section below.
Let official type be the type given by the Content-Type metadata for the resource, ignoring parameters. If there is no such type, jump to the unknown type step below. Comparisons with this type, as defined by MIME specifications, are done in an ASCII case-insensitive manner. [RFC2046]
If official type is "unknown/unknown" or "application/unknown", jump to the unknown type step below.
If official type ends in "+xml", or if it is either "text/xml" or "application/xml", then the sniffed type of the resource is official type; return that and abort these steps.
If official type is an image type supported by the user agent (e.g. "image/png", "image/gif", "image/jpeg", etc), then jump to the images section below, passing it the official type.
If official type is "text/html", then jump to the feed or HTML section below.
The sniffed type of the resource is official type.
The user agent may wait for 512 or more bytes of the resource to be available.
Let n be the smaller of either 512 or the number of bytes already available.
If n is 4 or more, and the first bytes of the resource match one of the following byte sets:
| Bytes in Hexadecimal | Description |
|---|---|
| FE FF | UTF-16BE BOM |
| FF FE | UTF-16LE BOM |
| EF BB BF | UTF-8 BOM |
...then the sniffed type of the resource is "text/plain". Abort these steps.
If none of the first n bytes of the resource are binary data bytes then the sniffed type of the resource is "text/plain". Abort these steps.
If the first bytes of the resource match one of the byte sequences in the "pattern" column of the table in the unknown type section below, ignoring any rows whose cell in the "security" column says "scriptable" (or "n/a"), then the sniffed type of the resource is the type given in the corresponding cell in the "sniffed type" column on that row; abort these steps.
It is critical that this step not ever return a scriptable type (e.g. text/html), as otherwise that would allow a privilege escalation attack.
Otherwise, the sniffed type of the resource is "application/octet-stream".
Bytes covered by the following ranges are binary data bytes:
The user agent may wait for 512 or more bytes of the resource to be available.
Let stream length be the smaller of either 512 or the number of bytes already available.
For each row in the table below:
Let indexpattern be an index into the mask and pattern byte strings of the row.
Let indexstream be an index into the byte stream being examined.
Loop: If indexstream points beyond the end of the byte stream, then this row doesn't match, skip this row.
Examine the indexstreamth byte of the byte stream as follows:
If the "and" operator, applied to the indexstreamth byte of the stream and the indexpatternth byte of the mask, yield a value different that the indexpatternth byte of the pattern, then skip this row.
Otherwise, increment indexpattern to the next byte in the mask and pattern and indexstream to the next byte in the byte stream.
"WS" means "whitespace", and allows insignificant whitespace to be skipped when sniffing for a type signature.
If the indexstreamth byte of the stream is one of 0x09 (ASCII TAB), 0x0A (ASCII LF), 0x0C (ASCII FF), 0x0D (ASCII CR), or 0x20 (ASCII space), then increment only the indexstream to the next byte in the byte stream.
Otherwise, increment only the indexpattern to the next byte in the mask and pattern.
If indexpattern does not point beyond the end of the mask and pattern byte strings, then jump back to the loop step in this algorithm.
Otherwise, the sniffed type of the resource is the type given in the cell of the third column in that row; abort these steps.
If none of the first n bytes of the resource are binary data bytes then the sniffed type of the resource is "text/plain". Abort these steps.
Otherwise, the sniffed type of the resource is "application/octet-stream".
The table used by the above algorithm is:
| Bytes in Hexadecimal | Sniffed type | Security | Comment | |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Mask | Pattern | |||
| FF FF DF DF DF DF DF DF DF FF DF DF DF DF | 3C 21 44 4F 43 54 59 50 45 20 48 54 4D 4C | text/html | Scriptable | The string "<!DOCTYPE HTML" in US-ASCII or
compatible encodings, case-insensitively.
|
| FF FF DF DF DF DF | WS 3C 48 54 4D 4C | text/html | Scriptable | The string "<HTML" in US-ASCII or
compatible encodings, case-insensitively, possibly with leading spaces.
|
| FF FF DF DF DF DF | WS 3C 48 45 41 44 | text/html | Scriptable | The string "<HEAD" in US-ASCII or
compatible encodings, case-insensitively, possibly with leading spaces.
|
| FF FF DF DF DF DF DF DF | WS 3C 53 43 52 49 50 54 | text/html | Scriptable | The string "<SCRIPT" in US-ASCII or
compatible encodings, case-insensitively, possibly with leading spaces.
|
| FF FF FF FF FF | 25 50 44 46 2D | application/pdf | Scriptable | The string "%PDF-", the PDF signature.
|
| FF FF FF FF FF FF FF FF FF FF FF | 25 21 50 53 2D 41 64 6F 62 65 2D | application/postscript | Safe | The string "%!PS-Adobe-", the PostScript
signature.
|
| FF FF 00 00 | FE FF 00 00 | text/plain | n/a | UTF-16BE BOM |
| FF FF 00 00 | FF FF 00 00 | text/plain | n/a | UTF-16LE BOM |
| FF FF FF 00 | EF BB BF 00 | text/plain | n/a | UTF-8 BOM |
| FF FF FF FF FF FF | 47 49 46 38 37 61 | image/gif | Safe | The string "GIF87a", a GIF signature.
|
| FF FF FF FF FF FF | 47 49 46 38 39 61 | image/gif | Safe | The string "GIF89a", a GIF signature.
|
| FF FF FF FF FF FF FF FF | 89 50 4E 47 0D 0A 1A 0A | image/png | Safe | The PNG signature. |
| FF FF FF | FF D8 FF | image/jpeg | Safe | A JPEG SOI marker followed by the first byte of another marker. |
| FF FF | 42 4D | image/bmp | Safe | The string "BM", a BMP signature.
|
| FF FF FF FF | 00 00 01 00 | image/vnd.microsoft.icon | Safe | A 0 word following by a 1 word, a Windows Icon file format signature. |
I'd like to add types like MPEG, AVI, Flash, Java, etc, to the above table.
User agents may support further types if desired, by implicitly adding to the above table. However, user agents should not use any other patterns for types already mentioned in the table above, as this could then be used for privilege escalation (where, e.g., a server uses the above table to determine that content is not HTML and thus safe from XSS attacks, but then a user agent detects it as HTML anyway and allows script to execute).
The column marked "security" is used by the algorithm in the "text or
binary" section, to avoid sniffing text/plain
content as a type that can be used for a privilege escalation attack.
If the resource's official type is "image/svg+xml", then the sniffed type of the resource is its official type (an XML type).
Otherwise, if the first bytes of the resource match one of the byte sequences in the first column of the following table, then the sniffed type of the resource is the type given in the corresponding cell in the second column on the same row:
| Bytes in Hexadecimal | Sniffed type | Comment |
|---|---|---|
| 47 49 46 38 37 61 | image/gif | The string "GIF87a", a GIF signature.
|
| 47 49 46 38 39 61 | image/gif | The string "GIF89a", a GIF signature.
|
| 89 50 4E 47 0D 0A 1A 0A | image/png | The PNG signature. |
| FF D8 FF | image/jpeg | A JPEG SOI marker followed by the first byte of another marker. |
| 42 4D | image/bmp | The string "BM", a BMP signature.
|
| 00 00 01 00 | image/vnd.microsoft.icon | A 0 word following by a 1 word, a Windows Icon file format signature. |
Otherwise, the sniffed type of the resource is the same as its official type.
The user agent may wait for 512 or more bytes of the resource to be available.
Let s be the stream of bytes, and let s[i] represent the byte in s with position i, treating s as zero-indexed (so the first byte is at i=0).
If at any point this algorithm requires the user agent to determine the value of a byte in s which is not yet available, or which is past the first 512 bytes of the resource, or which is beyond the end of the resource, the user agent must stop this algorithm, and assume that the sniffed type of the resource is "text/html".
User agents are allowed, by the first step of this algorithm, to wait until the first 512 bytes of the resource are available.
Initialise pos to 0.
If s[0] is 0xEF, s[1] is 0xBB, and s[2] is 0xBF, then set pos to 3. (This skips over a leading UTF-8 BOM, if any.)
Loop start: Examine s[pos].
<")
If the bytes with positions pos to pos+2 in s are exactly equal
to 0x21, 0x2D, 0x2D respectively (ASCII for "!--"), then:
-->"), then increase pos by 3
and jump back to the previous step (the step labeled loop start)
in the overall algorithm in this section.
If s[pos] is 0x21
(ASCII "!"):
If s[pos] is 0x3F
(ASCII "?"):
Otherwise, if the bytes in s starting at pos match any of the sequences of bytes in the first column of the following table, then the user agent must follow the steps given in the corresponding cell in the second column of the same row.
| Bytes in Hexadecimal | Requirement | Comment |
|---|---|---|
| 72 73 73 | The sniffed type of the resource is "application/rss+xml"; abort these steps | The three ASCII characters "rss"
|
| 66 65 65 64 | The sniffed type of the resource is "application/atom+xml"; abort these steps | The four ASCII characters "feed"
|
| 72 64 66 3A 52 44 46 | Continue to the next step in this algorithm | The ASCII characters "rdf:RDF"
|
If none of the byte sequences above match the bytes in s starting at pos, then the sniffed type of the resource is "text/html". Abort these steps.
If, before the next ">", you find two xmlns* attributes with http://www.w3.org/1999/02/22-rdf-syntax-ns# and http://purl.org/rss/1.0/ as the namespaces, then the sniffed type of the resource is "application/rss+xml", abort these steps. (maybe we only need to check for http://purl.org/rss/1.0/ actually)
Otherwise, the sniffed type of the resource is "text/html".
For efficiency reasons, implementations may wish to implement this algorithm and the algorithm for detecting the character encoding of HTML documents in parallel.
Some DOM attributes are defined to reflect a particular content attribute. This means that on getting, the DOM attribute returns the current value of the content attribute, and on setting, the DOM attribute changes the value of the content attribute to the given value.
If a reflecting DOM attribute is a DOMString attribute
whose content attribute is defined to contain a URL,
then on getting, the DOM attribute must resolve the value of the content attribute and return the
resulting absolute URL if that was successful, or
the empty string otherwise; and on setting, must set the content attribute
to the specified literal value. If the content attribute is absent, the
DOM attribute must return the default value, if the content attribute has
one, or else the empty string.
If a reflecting DOM attribute is a DOMString attribute
whose content attribute is defined to contain one or more URLs, then on getting, the DOM attribute must split the content attribute on
spaces and return the concatenation of resolving each token URL to an absolute URL, with a single U+0020 SPACE character
between each URL, ignoring any tokens that did not resolve successfully.
If the content attribute is absent, the DOM attribute must return the
default value, if the content attribute has one, or else the empty string.
On setting, the DOM attribute must set the content attribute to the
specified literal value.
If a reflecting DOM attribute is a DOMString whose content
attribute is an enumerated attribute, and the
DOM attribute is limited to only known values, then,
on getting, the DOM attribute must return the conforming value associated
with the state the attribute is in (in its canonical case), or the empty
string if the attribute is in a state that has no associated keyword
value; and on setting, if the new value is an ASCII
case-insensitive match for one of the keywords given for that
attribute, then the content attribute must be set to the conforming value
associated with the state that the attribute would be in if set to the
given new value, otherwise, if the new value is the empty string, then the
content attribute must be removed, otherwise, the setter must raise a
SYNTAX_ERR exception.
If a reflecting DOM attribute is a DOMString but doesn't
fall into any of the above categories, then the getting and setting must
be done in a transparent, case-preserving manner.
If a reflecting DOM attribute is a boolean attribute, then on getting the DOM attribute must return true if the attribute is set, and false if it is absent. On setting, the content attribute must be removed if the DOM attribute is set to false, and must be set to have the same value as its name if the DOM attribute is set to true. (This corresponds to the rules for boolean content attributes.)
If a reflecting DOM attribute is a signed integer type
(long) then, on getting, the content attribute must be parsed
according to the
rules for parsing signed integers, and if that is successful, the
resulting value must be returned. If, on the other hand, it fails, or if
the attribute is absent, then the default value must be returned instead,
or 0 if there is no default value. On setting, the given value must be
converted to the shortest possible string representing the number as a valid integer in base ten and then that string must be
used as the new content attribute value.
If a reflecting DOM attribute is an unsigned integer type
(unsigned long) then, on getting, the content attribute must
be parsed according to the rules for parsing unsigned integers, and if
that is successful, the resulting value must be returned. If, on the other
hand, it fails, or if the attribute is absent, the default value must be
returned instead, or 0 if there is no default value. On setting, the given
value must be converted to the shortest possible string representing the
number as a valid non-negative integer in base ten
and then that string must be used as the new content attribute value.
If a reflecting DOM attribute is an unsigned integer type
(unsigned long) that is limited to only
positive non-zero numbers, then the behavior is similar to the
previous case, but zero is not allowed. On getting, the content attribute
must first be parsed according to the rules for parsing unsigned
integers, and if that is successful, the resulting value must be
returned. If, on the other hand, it fails, or if the attribute is absent,
the default value must be returned instead, or 1 if there is no default
value. On setting, if the value is zero, the user agent must fire an
INDEX_SIZE_ERR exception. Otherwise, the given value must be
converted to the shortest possible string representing the number as a valid non-negative integer in base ten and then that
string must be used as the new content attribute value.
If a reflecting DOM attribute is a floating point number type
(float) and the content attribute is defined to contain a
time offset, then, on getting, the content attribute must be parsed
according to the
rules for parsing time offsets, and if that is successful, the
resulting value, in seconds, must be returned. If that fails, or if the
attribute is absent, the default value must be returned, or the
not-a-number value (NaN) if there is no default value. On setting, the
given value, interpreted as a time offset in seconds, must be converted to
a string using the time offset serialization
rules, and that string must be used as the new content attribute
value.
If a reflecting DOM attribute is a floating point number type
(float) and it doesn't fall into one of the earlier
categories, then, on getting, the content attribute must be parsed
according to the rules for parsing floating point number values, and
if that is successful, the resulting value must be returned. If, on the
other hand, it fails, or if the attribute is absent, the default value
must be returned instead, or 0.0 if there is no default value. On setting,
the given value must be converted to the shortest possible string
representing the number as a valid floating point
number in base ten and then that string must be used as the new
content attribute value.
If a reflecting DOM attribute is of the type DOMTokenList, then on getting it must
return a DOMTokenList object
whose underlying string is the element's corresponding content attribute.
When the DOMTokenList object
mutates its underlying string, the content attribute must itself be
immediately mutated. When the attribute is absent, then the string
represented by the DOMTokenList
object is the empty string; when the object mutates this empty string, the
user agent must first add the corresponding content attribute, and then
mutate that attribute instead. DOMTokenList attributes are always
read-only. The same DOMTokenList
object must be returned every time for each attribute.
If a reflecting DOM attribute has the type HTMLElement, or an interface that descends
from HTMLElement, then, on
getting, it must run the following algorithm (stopping at the first point
where a value is returned):
document.getElementById() method would find if it was
passed as its argument the current value of the corresponding content
attribute.
On setting, if the given element has an id attribute, then the content attribute must be set
to the value of that id
attribute. Otherwise, the DOM attribute must be set to the empty string.
The HTMLCollection, HTMLFormControlsCollection,
and HTMLOptionsCollection interfaces
represent various lists of DOM nodes. Collectively, objects implementing
these interfaces are called collections.
When a collection is created, a filter and a root are associated with the collection.
For example, when the HTMLCollection object for the document.images
attribute is created, it is associated with a filter that selects only
img elements, and rooted at the root of
the document.
The collection then represents a live view of the subtree rooted at the collection's root, containing only nodes that match the given filter. The view is linear. In the absence of specific requirements to the contrary, the nodes within the collection must be sorted in tree order.
The rows list is not in tree order.
An attribute that returns a collection must return the same object every time it is retrieved.
HTMLCollection
界面は、一般的な要素の集成を表します。
interface HTMLCollection {
readonly attribute unsigned long length;
[IndexGetter] Element item(in unsigned long index);
[NameGetter] Element namedItem(in DOMString name);
};
length
属性は集成が表現する節点の数を返さなければなりません。
item(index) メソッドは集成中の index 番目の節点を返さなければなりません。
集成中の index 番目の節点が存在しない場合は、
メソッドは null を返さなければなりません。
namedItem(key) メソッドは、
集成中で次のいずれかの要件に一致する最初の節点を返さなければなりません。
a、applet、area、
form、 img、 object のいずれかの要素であって、 name 属性が key
と等しいものid 属性が key
と等しいもの。 (非 HTML 要素は、 ID を有していたとしても、
namedItem() では検索されません。)そのような要素が存在しない場合、メソッドは null を返さなければなりません。
HTMLFormControlsCollection
界面はフォーム制御子の集成を表します。
interface HTMLFormControlsCollection {
readonly attribute unsigned long length;
[IndexGetter] HTMLElement item(in unsigned long index);
[NameGetter] Object namedItem(in DOMString name);
};
length
属性は集成が表現する節点の数を返さなければなりません。
item(index) メソッドは集成中の index 番目の節点を返さなければなりません。集成中に
index 番目の節点が存在しなければ、メソッドは null
を返さなければなりません。
namedItem(key) メソッドは次の算法に従って動作しなければなりません。
id 属性または name
属性のいずれかが key と等しい節点が丁度1つ存在するなら、
その節点を返し、算法を停止します。id
属性または name 属性が key
と等しい節点が存在しない場合は、 null を返し、算法を停止します。HTMLFormControlsCollection
オブジェクトの生きた表示であって、 id 属性または name 属性のいずれかが key
と等しい節点だけが含まれるような NodeList
オブジェクトを作成します。この NodeList
オブジェクトに含まれる節点は木順で整列されていなければなりません。NodeList オブジェクトを返します。The HTMLOptionsCollection interface
represents a list of option elements.
interface HTMLOptionsCollection {
attribute unsigned long length;
[IndexGetter] HTMLOptionElement item(in unsigned long index);
[NameGetter] Object namedItem(in DOMString name);
};
On getting, the length attribute
must return the number of nodes represented by the
collection.
On setting, the behavior depends on whether the new value is equal to,
greater than, or less than the number of nodes represented by the collection at that time. If the
number is the same, then setting the attribute must do nothing. If the new
value is greater, then n new option
elements with no attributes and no child nodes must be appended to the
select element on which the HTMLOptionsCollection is rooted,
where n is the difference between the two numbers (new
value minus old value). If the new value is lower, then the last n nodes in the collection must be removed from their parent
nodes, where n is the difference between the two
numbers (old value minus new value).
Setting length never removes or adds any
optgroup elements, and never adds new children to existing
optgroup elements (though it can remove children from them).
The item(index) method must return the indexth node in the collection. If there is no indexth node in the collection, then the method must return
null.
The namedItem(key) method must act according to the
following algorithm:
id 属性または name
属性のいずれかが key と等しい節点が丁度1つ存在するなら、
その節点を返し、算法を停止します。id
属性または name 属性が key
と等しい節点が存在しない場合は、 null を返し、算法を停止します。NodeList object representing a live
view of the HTMLOptionsCollection object,
further filtered so that the only nodes in the NodeList
object are those that have either an id attribute or a name attribute equal to key. The nodes in the NodeList object must be
sorted in tree order.
NodeList オブジェクトを返します。We may want to add add() and
remove() methods here too because IE implements
HTMLSelectElement and HTMLOptionsCollection on the same object, and so
people use them almost interchangeably in the wild.
The DOMTokenList interface
represents an interface to an underlying string that consists of an unordered set of unique space-separated tokens.
Which string underlies a particular DOMTokenList object is defined when the
object is created. It might be a content attribute (e.g. the string that
underlies the classList object is the class attribute), or it might
be an anonymous string (e.g. when a DOMTokenList object is passed to an
author-implemented callback in the datagrid APIs).
[Stringifies] interface DOMTokenList {
readonly attribute unsigned long length;
[IndexGetter] DOMString item(in unsigned long index);
boolean has(in DOMString token);
void add(in DOMString token);
void remove(in DOMString token);
boolean toggle(in DOMString token);
};
The length
attribute must return the number of unique tokens that result
from splitting the
underlying string on spaces.
The item(index) method must split the underlying string on
spaces, sort the resulting list of tokens by Unicode
codepoint,
remove exact duplicates, and then return the indexth
item in this list. If index is equal to or greater
than the number of tokens, then the method must return null.
The has(token) method must run the following
algorithm:
INVALID_CHARACTER_ERR exception and stop the algorithm.
The add(token) method must run the following
algorithm:
INVALID_CHARACTER_ERR exception and stop the algorithm.
DOMTokenList object's
underlying string then stop the algorithm.
DOMTokenList object's underlying string
is not the empty string and the last character of that string is not a space character, then append a U+0020 SPACE character
to the end of that string.
DOMTokenList object's
underlying string.
The remove(token) method must run the following
algorithm:
INVALID_CHARACTER_ERR exception and stop the algorithm.
The toggle(token) method must run the following
algorithm:
INVALID_CHARACTER_ERR exception and stop the algorithm.
DOMTokenList object's
underlying string then remove the given token from the underlying
string, and stop the algorithm, returning false.
DOMTokenList object's underlying string
is not the empty string and the last character of that string is not a space character, then append a U+0020 SPACE character
to the end of that string.
DOMTokenList object's
underlying string.
Objects implementing the DOMTokenList interface must stringify to the object's
underlying string representation.
The DOMStringMap interface
represents a set of name-value pairs. When a DOMStringMap object is instanced, it is
associated with three algorithms, one for getting values from names, one
for setting names to certain values, and one for deleting names.
The names of the methods on this interface are temporary and will be fixed when the Web IDL / "Language Bindings for DOM Specifications" spec is ready to handle this case.
interface DOMStringMap {
[NameGetter] DOMString XXX1(in DOMString name);
[NameSetter] void XXX2(in DOMString name, in DOMString value);
[XXX] boolean XXX3(in DOMString name);
};
The XXX1(name) method must call the algorithm for
getting values from names, passing name as the name,
and must return the corresponding value, or null if name has no corresponding value.
The XXX2(name, value) method must
call the algorithm for setting names to certain values, passing name as the name and value as the
value.
The XXX3(name) method must call the algorithm for
deleting names, passing name as the name, and must
return true.
DOM3 Core defines mechanisms for checking for interface support, and for obtaining implementations of interfaces, using feature strings. [DOM3CORE]
A DOM application can use the hasFeature(feature, version) method of the
DOMImplementation interface with parameter values "HTML" and "5.0" (respectively) to determine
whether or not this module is supported by the implementation. In addition
to the feature string "HTML", the feature string
"XHTML" (with version string "5.0") can
be used to check if the implementation supports XHTML. User agents should
respond with a true value when the hasFeature method is queried with these
values. Authors are cautioned, however, that UAs returning true might not
be perfectly compliant, and that UAs returning false might well have
support for features in this specification; in general, therefore, use of
this method is discouraged.
The values "HTML" and "XHTML" (both with version "5.0") should also
be supported in the context of the getFeature() and
isSupported() methods, as defined by DOM3 Core.
The interfaces defined in this specification are not always
supersets of the interfaces defined in DOM2 HTML; some features that were
formerly deprecated, poorly supported, rarely used or considered
unnecessary have been removed. Therefore it is not guaranteed that an
implementation that supports "HTML"
"5.0" also supports "HTML"
"2.0".
この節は規定の一部ではありません。
An introduction to marking up a document.
HTML 利用者エージェントにおけるすべての XML や HTML の文書は
Document オブジェクトにより表現されます。 [DOM3CORE]
Document オブジェクトは、作成された時に
HTML 文書であると旗付けされていなければ、 XML 文書であると見なします。
文書が HTML 文書であるか XML 文書であるかは、
いくつかの API の動作や CSS のレンダリング規則の一部に影響します。 [CSS21]
DOMImplementation 上の createDocument() API により作成された Document
オブジェクトははじめ XML
文書ですが、 document.open()
を呼び出すことにより HTML 文書にすることができます。
(この仕様書を実装する利用書エージェントにおける) すべての
Document
オブジェクトは、 HTMLDocument 界面をも実装し、
束縛規定の方式により利用可能としなければなりません。
(これは当該文書が HTML 文書であるか否かや、
そもそも HTML
要素を含んでいるか否かによらずのことです。)
Document オブジェクトは、文書中に現れ、利用者エージェントが対応している、
他の名前空間の文書水準の界面をも実装しなければなりません。
例えば、 HTML 実装が SVG にも対応している場合、 Document
オブジェクトは HTMLDocument と
SVGDocument を実装しなければなりません。
HTMLDocument
界面は現在では単純に文書オブジェクトの主たる界面であるとするのではなく、
束縛規定の型変換方式を使って得るものとしているので、
最早 Document から継承するとは定義していません。
interface HTMLDocument {
// resource metadata management
[PutForwards=href] readonly attribute Location location;
readonly attribute DOMString URL;
attribute DOMString domain;
readonly attribute DOMString referrer;
attribute DOMString cookie;
readonly attribute DOMString lastModified;
readonly attribute DOMString compatMode;
attribute DOMString charset;
readonly attribute DOMString characterSet;
readonly attribute DOMString defaultCharset;
readonly attribute DOMString readyState;
// DOM tree accessors
attribute DOMString title;
attribute DOMString dir;
attribute HTMLElement body;
readonly attribute HTMLCollection images;
readonly attribute HTMLCollection embeds;
readonly attribute HTMLCollection plugins;
readonly attribute HTMLCollection links;
readonly attribute HTMLCollection forms;
readonly attribute HTMLCollection anchors;
readonly attribute HTMLCollection scripts;
NodeList getElementsByName(in DOMString elementName);
NodeList getElementsByClassName(in DOMString classNames);
// dynamic markup insertion
attribute DOMString innerHTML;
HTMLDocument open();
HTMLDocument open(in DOMString type);
HTMLDocument open(in DOMString type, in DOMString replace);
Window open(in DOMString url, in DOMString name, in DOMString features);
Window open(in DOMString url, in DOMString name, in DOMString features, in boolean replace);
void close();
void write([Variadic] in DOMString text);
void writeln([Variadic] in DOMString text);
// user interaction
Selection getSelection();
readonly attribute Element activeElement;
boolean hasFocus();
attribute boolean designMode;
boolean execCommand(in DOMString commandId);
boolean execCommand(in DOMString commandId, in boolean showUI);
boolean execCommand(in DOMString commandId, in boolean showUI, in DOMString value);
boolean queryCommandEnabled(in DOMString commandId);
boolean queryCommandIndeterm(in DOMString commandId);
boolean queryCommandState(in DOMString commandId);
boolean queryCommandSupported(in DOMString commandId);
DOMString queryCommandValue(in DOMString commandId);
readonly attribute HTMLCollection commands;
};
HTMLDocument
界面は色々な機能に関係するメソッドや属性を持っていますので、
この界面の構成員はそれぞれの節で説明します。
利用者エージェントは、 HTMLDocument
オブジェクトの構成員のいずれかが、
実効スクリプト起源が Document
の実効スクリプト起源と同じではないスクリプトからアクセスされる場合に、
常に、
保安性例外を発生させなければなりません。
URL
属性は文書の番地を返さなければなりません。
referrer
属性は、操縦が開始された時点での原始閲覧文脈の活性文書
(閲覧文脈を現在の文書に操縦した頁)
の番地か、
または、そのような元々の頁がない場合、利用者エージェントがこの場合に参照子を報告しないように設定されている場合、
操縦が noreferrer
キーワードのあるハイパーリンクについて初期化された場合には空文字列、
このいずれかを返さなければなりません。
HTTP の場合、 referrer DOM 属性は現在の頁を取ってくる時に送られた Referer (ママ) 頭部と一致します。
通常、利用者エージェントは、参照子が暗号化プロトコルを使っており、
現在の頁がそうではない場合 (例えば https:
頁から http: 頁へと操縦した時)
には参照子を報告しないように設定されています。
cookie
属性は、資源のクッキーを表します。
取得時、砂箱起源閲覧文脈旗が文書の閲覧文脈に設定されている場合には、
利用者エージェントは保安性例外を発生させなければなりません。
そうでない場合、文書の番地で示される資源を HTTP
によって取ってくる場合に RFC 2109
4.3.4 節やより新しい仕様書に従って含まれるであろう Cookie HTTP 頭部の値と同じ文字列を返さなければなりません。 [RFC2109] [RFC2965]
設定時、砂箱起源閲覧文脈旗が文書の閲覧文脈に設定されている場合には、
利用者エージェントは保安性例外を発生させなければなりません。
そうでない場合、利用者エージェントは、
文書の番地で示される資源を HTTP
によって取ってこようとし、
値が指定された値である Set-Cookie
頭部がある応答を受信した場合にクッキーを処理する時と同じように、
RFC 2109 4.3.1 節、4.3.2 節、4.3.3. 節やより新しい仕様書に従い作用しなければなりません。 [RFC2109] [RFC2965]
cookie 属性はフレームをまたいでアクセス可能ですので、
クッキーの経路制限はクッキーがサイト上のどの部分に送られるかを管理することを助けるための道具に過ぎず、
保安性のための機能では決してありません。
lastModified
属性は、取得時、 Document の原始ファイルの最終修正の日時を、
利用者の地方時において、次の書式で返さなければなりません。
前述の数値の部品のうち年以外のすべては、範囲 U+0030 DIGIT ZERO ~ U+0039 DIGIT NINE の2つの数字によって十進数を表す、 必要なら零埋めしたものとして与えなければなりません。
Document の原始ファイルの最終修正日時は、
使用されているネットワークのプロトコルの関係する機能、例えば文書の HTTP Last-Modified 頭部から、または局所ファイルのファイル・システムのメタデータから得たものでなければなりません。
最終修正日時がわからない場合は、この属性は文字列 01/01/1970 00:00:00
を返さなければなりません。
Document は常に3つのモードのいずれかに設定されています。無奇癖モードは既定値です。奇癖モードは、
普通、遺物文書に使われます。制限奇癖モードは、「ほぼ標準」モードとも呼ばれます。
このモードは
HTML 構文解析器によってのみ、
DOCTYPE 文字列が存在するか存在しないかやその値に基づいて既定値から変更されます。
compatMode DOM
属性は、生の文字列「CSS1Compat」を返さなければなりません。
ただし、文書が HTML 構文解析器により奇癖モードに設定されている場合には、
代わりに名前の文字列「BackCompat」を返さなければなりません。
As far as parsing goes, the quirks I know of are:
文書は文字符号化と関連付けられています。
Document オブジェクトが作成された時、文書の文字符号化は
UTF-16 に初期化されなければなりません。
頁の読み込みの間の色々な算法や charset 設定子がこの値を変化させます。 [IANACHARSET]
charset DOM
属性は、取得時、文書の文字符号化の優先 MIME
名を返さなければなりません。設定時、
新しい値がある文字符号化の IANA に登録された別名である場合、文書の文字符号化をその文字符号化に設定しなければなりません。
(それ以外の場合、何も起きません。)
characterSet DOM
属性は、取得時、文書の文字符号化の優先 MIME 名を返さなければなりません。
defaultCharset
DOM 属性は、取得時、文字符号化の優先 MIME 名を返さなければなりません。
この文字符号化は利用者の既定の符号化でもいいですし、
利用者の現在の地理的位置に関連付けられた符号化でもいいですし、
その他任意の符号化名でもあり得ます。
Each document has a current document readiness.
When a Document object is created, it must have its current document readiness set to the string
"loading". Various algorithms during page loading affect this value. When
the value is set, the user agent must fire a simple
event called readystatechanged at the
Document object.
The readyState DOM attribute
must, on getting, return the current document
readiness.
文書の文書 html 要素は、
その文書の根要素があり、それが html 要素である場合はその要素、それ以外の場合には
null です。
文書の文書 head 要素は、
文書 html 要素の子供である最初の
head 要素がある場合はその要素、
そうでない場合は null です。
文書の文書 title 要素は文書の (木順で)
最初の title 要素がある場合はその要素、
そうでない場合は null です。
title 属性は、
取得時、次の算法を走らせなければなりません。
根要素が
「http://www.w3.org/2000/svg」名前空間の svg
要素であり、利用者エージェントが SVG に対応している場合、取得器は SVGDocument
界面の同名の DOM 属性が返す値を返さなければなりません。
そうでない場合、文書 title 要素のすべての子供テキスト節点のデータを木順に連結したものを返すか、
文書 title 要素が null
の場合には殻文字列を返さなければなりません。
設定時、次の算法を走らせなければなりません。
根要素が
「http://www.w3.org/2000/svg」名前空間の
svg 要素で利用者エージェントが SVG に対応している場合、
設定器は SVGDocument 界面の同名の DOM 属性の設定器に委ねなければなりません
(それが読み取り専用である場合、例外を発生させることとなります)。算法をここで停止します。
title 要素が null
で文書 head 要素が null
の場合、属性は何もしてはなりません。算法をここで停止します。title 要素が null
の場合、新しい title 要素を作成し、
文書 head
要素の最後に追加しなければなりません。title
要素の子供を (あれば) すべて削除しなければなりません。Text 節点を
文書 title
要素の最後に追加しなければなりません。利用者エージェントが HTML と SVG の両方に対応する時には、
HTMLDocument 界面の
title 属性が
SVGDocument 界面の同名の属性を隠すべきです。
The body element of a document is the first
child of the html element that is
either a body element or a
frameset element. If there is no such element, it is null. If
the body element is null, then when the specification requires that events
be fired at "the body element", they must instead be fired at the
Document object.
The body
attribute, on getting, must return the body
element of the document (either a body element, a frameset element, or
null). On setting, the following algorithm must be run:
body or
frameset element, then raise a
HIERARCHY_REQUEST_ERR exception and abort these steps.
replaceChild() method had been called
with the new value and the
incumbent body element as its two arguments respectively, then abort
these steps.
The images
attribute must return an HTMLCollection rooted at the
Document node, whose filter matches only img elements.
The embeds
attribute must return an HTMLCollection rooted at the
Document node, whose filter matches only embed elements.
The plugins attribute must
return the same object as that returned by the embeds attribute.
The links
attribute must return an HTMLCollection rooted at the
Document node, whose filter matches only a elements with href attributes and area elements with href attributes.
The forms
attribute must return an HTMLCollection rooted at the
Document node, whose filter matches only form
elements.
The anchors attribute must
return an HTMLCollection
rooted at the Document node, whose filter matches only
a elements with name attributes.
The scripts attribute must
return an HTMLCollection
rooted at the Document node, whose filter matches only
script elements.
The getElementsByName(name) method takes a string name, and must return a live NodeList
containing all the a, applet, button, form,
iframe,
img, input, map, meta,
object,
select, and textarea elements in that document
that have a name attribute whose value is equal to
the name argument (in a case-sensitive manner), in tree order.
The getElementsByClassName(classNames) method takes a string that
contains an unordered set of unique space-separated
tokens representing classes. When called, the method must return a
live NodeList object containing all the elements in the
document, in tree order, that have all the
classes specified in that argument, having obtained the classes by splitting a string on
spaces. If there are no tokens specified in the argument, then the
method must return an empty NodeList. If the document is in
quirks mode, then the comparisons for the classes
must be done in an ASCII case-insensitive manner,
otherwise, the comparisons must be done in a case-sensitive manner.
The getElementsByClassName()
method on the HTMLElement
interface must return a live NodeList with the nodes that the
HTMLDocument getElementsByClassName() method
would return when passed the same argument(s), excluding any elements that
are not descendants of the HTMLElement object on which the method was
invoked.
HTML, SVG, and MathML elements define which classes they are in by
having an attribute in the per-element partition with the name class containing a space-separated list of classes to
which the element belongs. Other specifications may also allow elements in
their namespaces to be labeled as being in specific classes.
Given the following XHTML fragment:
<div id="example"> <p id="p1" class="aaa bbb"/> <p id="p2" class="aaa ccc"/> <p id="p3" class="bbb ccc"/> </div>
A call to
document.getElementById('example').getElementsByClassName('aaa')
would return a NodeList with the two paragraphs
p1 and p2 in it.
A call to getElementsByClassName('ccc bbb') would
only return one node, however, namely p3. A call to
document.getElementById('example').getElementsByClassName('bbb ccc ')
would return the same thing.
A call to getElementsByClassName('aaa,bbb') would return
no nodes; none of the elements above are in the "aaa,bbb" class.
The dir attribute on the HTMLDocument interface is defined along
with the dir content
attribute.
Elements, attributes, and attribute values in HTML are defined (by this
specification) to have certain meanings (semantics). For example, the
ol element represents an ordered list, and
the lang attribute
represents the language of the content.
Authors must not use elements, attributes, and attribute values for purposes other than their appropriate intended semantic purpose.
For example, the following document is non-conforming, despite being syntactically correct:
<!DOCTYPE html>
<html lang="en-GB">
<head> <title> Demonstration </title> </head>
<body>
<table>
<tr> <td> My favourite animal is the cat. </td> </tr>
<tr>
<td>
—<a href="http://example.org/~ernest/"><cite>Ernest</cite></a>,
in an essay from 1992
</td>
</tr>
</table>
</body>
</html>
...because the data placed in the cells is clearly not tabular data
(and the cite element mis-used). A
corrected version of this document might be:
<!DOCTYPE html> <html lang="en-GB"> <head> <title> Demonstration </title> </head> <body> <blockquote> <p> My favourite animal is the cat. </p> </blockquote> <p> —<a href="http://example.org/~ernest/">Ernest</a>, in an essay from 1992 </p> </body> </html>
This next document fragment, intended to represent the heading of a corporate site, is similarly non-conforming because the second line is not intended to be a heading of a subsection, but merely a subheading or subtitle (a subordinate heading for the same section).
<body> <h1>ABC Company</h1> <h2>Leading the way in widget design since 1432</h2> ...
The header element should be used in
these kinds of situations:
<body> <header> <h1>ABC Company</h1> <h2>Leading the way in widget design since 1432</h2> </header> ...
Through scripting and using other mechanisms, the values of attributes, text, and indeed the entire structure of the document may change dynamically while a user agent is processing it. The semantics of a document at an instant in time are those represented by the state of the document at that instant in time, and the semantics of a document can therefore change over time. User agents must update their presentation of the document as this occurs.
HTML has a progress
element that describes a progress bar. If its "value" attribute is
dynamically updated by a script, the UA would update the rendering to show
the progress changing.
The nodes representing HTML elements in the DOM must implement, and expose to scripts, the interfaces listed for them in the relevant sections of this specification. This includes HTML elements in XML documents, even when those documents are in another context (e.g. inside an XSLT transform).
Elements in the DOM represent things; that is, they have intrinsic meaning, also known as semantics.
For example, an ol element
represents an ordered list.
basic interface, from which all the HTML elements' interfaces inherit, and which must be used by elements that have no additional requirements, is the HTMLElement 界面。
interface HTMLElement : Element { // DOM tree accessors NodeList getElementsByClassName(in DOMString classNames); // dynamic markup insertion attribute DOMString innerHTML; attribute DOMString outerHTML; void insertAdjacentHTML(in DOMString position, in DOMString text); // metadata attributes attribute DOMString id; attribute DOMString title; attribute DOMString lang; attribute DOMString dir; attribute DOMString className; readonly attribute DOMTokenList classList; readonly attribute DOMStringMap dataset; // user interaction attribute boolean irrelevant; void click(); void scrollIntoView(); void scrollIntoView(in boolean top); attribute long tabIndex; void focus(); void blur(); attribute boolean draggable; attribute DOMString contentEditable; readonly attribute boolean isContentEditable; attribute HTMLMenuElement contextMenu; // styling readonly attribute CSSStyleDeclaration style; // data templates attribute DOMString template; readonly attribute HTMLDataTemplateElement templateElement; attribute DOMString ref; readonly attribute Node refNode; attribute DOMString registrationMark; readonly attribute DocumentFragment originalContent; // event handler DOM attributes attribute EventListener onabort; attribute EventListener onbeforeunload; attribute EventListener onblur; attribute EventListener onchange; attribute EventListener onclick; attribute EventListener oncontextmenu; attribute EventListener ondblclick; attribute EventListener ondrag; attribute EventListener ondragend; attribute EventListener ondragenter; attribute EventListener ondragleave; attribute EventListener ondragover; attribute EventListener ondragstart; attribute EventListener ondrop; attribute EventListener onerror; attribute EventListener onfocus; attribute EventListener onhashchange; attribute EventListener onkeydown; attribute EventListener onkeypress; attribute EventListener onkeyup; attribute EventListener onload; attribute EventListener onmessage; attribute EventListener onmousedown; attribute EventListener onmousemove; attribute EventListener onmouseout; attribute EventListener onmouseover; attribute EventListener onmouseup; attribute EventListener onmousewheel; attribute EventListener onresize; attribute EventListener onscroll; attribute EventListener onselect; attribute EventListener onstorage; attribute EventListener onsubmit; attribute EventListener onunload; };
The HTMLElement interface holds
methods and attributes related to a number of disparate features, and the
members of this interface are therefore described in various different
sections of this specification.
The following attributes are common to and may be specified on all HTML elements (even those not defined in this specification):
class
contenteditable
contextmenu
dir
draggable
id
irrelevant
lang
ref
registrationmark
style
tabindex
template
title
In addition, the following event handler content attributes may be specified on any HTML element:
onabort
onbeforeunload
onblur
onchange
onclick
oncontextmenu
ondblclick
ondrag
ondragend
ondragenter
ondragleave
ondragover
ondragstart
ondrop
onerror
onfocus
onhashchange
onkeydown
onkeypress
onkeyup
onload
onmessage
onmousedown
onmousemove
onmouseout
onmouseover
onmouseup
onmousewheel
onresize
onscroll
onselect
onstorage
onsubmit
onunload
Also, custom data
attributes (e.g. data-foldername or data-msgid) can be specified on any HTML
element, to store custom data specific to the page.
In HTML documents, elements in the HTML namespace may have an xmlns attribute specified, if, and only if, it has the
exact value "http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml". This does not
apply to XML documents.
In HTML, the xmlns attribute has
absolutely no effect. It is basically a talisman. It is allowed merely to
make migration to and from XHTML mildly easier. When parsed by an HTML parser, the attribute ends up in no namespace, not
the "http://www.w3.org/2000/xmlns/" namespace like namespace
declaration attributes in XML do.
In XML, an xmlns attribute is part of
the namespace declaration mechanism, and an element cannot actually have
an xmlns attribute in no namespace specified.
id 属性id 属性は、
その要素の固有識別子を表します。値はその要素が現れる部分木中で固有でなければならず、
最低1文字含まなければなりません。
値は間隔文字を含んではなりません。
利用者エージェントは、値が空文字列でない場合、
その要素が現れる部分木中で ID 一致を行うために
(例えば CSS の選択子や DOM の getElementById()
メソッドのために)、
その要素に指定された値を (間隔文字も含めてそのまま)
関連付けなければなりません。
識別子は不透明な文字列です。特定の意味を id 属性の値から見出すべきではありません。
この仕様書は、他の仕組み (例えば DOM 中核のメソッド) によって
id 属性と矛盾しない形で要素の ID
を設定することができる場合に、要素が複数の ID を持つことを禁じていません。
id DOM 属性は id 内容属性を反映しなければなりません。
title 属性title 属性は、
要素に関する助言情報、例えばツールチップとして適切なものなどを表します。
例えば、リンクにおいては、対象資源の題名や説明とすることができます。
画像では、画像のクレジットや説明とすることができます。
段落では、出典に関する追加情報とすることができます。
値は文章です。
ある要素でこの属性が省略されている場合、最も近い title 属性が設定された祖先
HTML 要素の
title 属性がその要素にも関係することを暗示しています。
属性を設定することでこれが上書きされ、祖先の助言情報がこの要素に関係しないと明示することとなります。
この属性を空文字列に設定すると、その要素が助言情報を持たないことが示されます。
title
属性の値が U+000A LINE FEED (LF) 文字を含んでいる場合、
内容は複数行に分割されます。 U+000A LINE FEED (LF)
文字それぞれが改行を表します。
link 要素や
abbr 要素など、いくつかの要素は、
title 属性について、
前述のような意味以上の追加の意味を定義しています。
title DOM
属性は title 内容属性を反映しなければなりません。
lang and xml:lang (XML only) attributeslang 属性は、
その要素の内容と文章を含むその要素の属性についての主たる言語を指定します。
値は妥当な RFC 3066 言語符号または空文字列でなければなりません。[RFC3066]
The xml:lang
attribute (that is, the lang attribute with the
xml prefix in the http://www.w3.org/XML/1998/namespace namespace) is defined
in XML. [XML]
これらの属性が要素から省略されている場合、その要素の言語は親要素の言語と同じであることを暗示しています。 これらの属性を空文字列に設定することは、 主たる言語が不明であることを示します。
The lang attribute may
be used on any HTML
element.
The xml:lang
attribute may be used on HTML elements in XML documents, as well as elements in other
namespaces if the relevant specifications allow it (in particular, MathML
and SVG allow xml:lang attributes to be specified on their
elements). If both the lang attribute and the xml:lang attribute are
specified on the same element, they must have exactly the same value when
compared in an ASCII case-insensitive manner.
Authors must not use the xml:lang attribute (that is, the lang attribute with the xml prefix
in the http://www.w3.org/XML/1998/namespace
namespace) in HTML documents. To ease migration to
and from XHTML, authors may specify an attribute in no namespace with no
prefix and with the localname xml:lang on HTML elements in HTML
documents, but such attributes must only be specified if a lang attribute is also
specified, and both attributes must have the same value when compared in
an ASCII case-insensitive manner.
利用者エージェントは、ある節点の言語を決定する場合、
xml:lang 属性が設定されているか、 HTML 要素であって
lang 属性が設定されている直近の祖先要素
(当該節点が要素である場合、その要素自体を含みます。)
を見なければなりません。その属性が、当該節点の言語を指定します。
利用者エージェントは、 xml:lang 属性と lang
属性が共にある要素に設定されている場合、 xml:lang 属性を使用しなければならず、
lang 属性は要素の言語の決定においては無視しなければなりません。
If no explicit language is given for the root element, but there is a document-wide default language set, then that is the language of the node.
If there is no document-wide default language, then language information from a higher-level protocol (such as HTTP), if any, must be used as the final fallback language. In the absence of any language information, the default value is unknown (the empty string).
If the resulting value is not a recognised language code, then it must be treated as an unknown language (as if the value was the empty string).
利用者エージェントは、要素の言語情報を適切な処理やレンダリングの決定 (例えば適切なフォントや句読点の選択や辞書の選択) のために使って構いません。
lang DOM 属性は lang 内容属性を反映しなければなりません。
xml:base 属性 (XML のみ)xml:base
属性は XML 基底で定義されています。 [XMLBASE]
xml:base
属性は XML 文書の要素で使って構いません。
著者は xml:base 属性を HTML
文書で使用してはなりません。
dir 属性The dir attribute
specifies the element's text directionality. The attribute is an enumerated attribute with the keyword ltr mapping to the state ltr, and the keyword
rtl mapping to the state rtl. The attribute
has no defaults.
The processing of this attribute is primarily performed by the presentation layer. For example, CSS 2.1 defines a mapping from this attribute to the CSS 'direction' and 'unicode-bidi' properties, and defines rendering in terms of those properties.
The directionality of an element, which
is used in particular by the canvas
element's text rendering API, is either 'ltr' or 'rtl'. If the user agent
supports CSS and the 'direction' property on this element has a computed
value of either 'ltr' or 'rtl', then that is the directionality of the element.
Otherwise, if the element is being rendered, then the directionality of the element is the
directionality used by the presentation layer, potentially determined from
the value of the dir
attribute on the element. Otherwise, if the element's dir attribute has the state
ltr, the element's directionality is 'ltr' (left-to-right); if
the attribute has the state rtl, the element's directionality is
'rtl' (right-to-left); and oherwise, the element's directionality is the
same as its parent element, or 'ltr' if there is no parent element.
The dir DOM attribute on
an element must reflect the dir content attribute of that element, limited to only known values.
The dir DOM
attribute on HTMLDocument objects
must reflect the dir content attribute of the
html element, if any, limited to only
known values. If there is no such element, then the attribute must
return the empty string and do nothing on setting.
class 属性Every HTML element
may have a class
attribute specified.
The attribute, if specified, must have a value that is an unordered set of unique space-separated tokens representing the various classes that the element belongs to.
The classes that an HTML
element has assigned to it consists of all the classes returned when
the value of the class
attribute is split on
spaces.
Assigning classes to an element affects class matching in
selectors in CSS, the getElementsByClassName() method
in the DOM, and other such features.
Authors may use any value in the class attribute, but are encouraged to use the
values that describe the nature of the content, rather than values that
describe the desired presentation of the content.
The className
and classList DOM
attributes must both reflect the class content attribute.
style 属性All elements may have the style content attribute set. If specified, the
attribute must contain only a list of zero or more semicolon-separated (;)
CSS declarations. [CSS21]
The attribute, if specified, must be parsed and treated as the body (the part inside the curly brackets) of a declaration block in a rule whose selector matches just the element on which the attribute is set. For the purposes of the CSS cascade, the attribute must be considered to be a 'style' attribute at the author level.
Documents that use style attributes on any of their elements must
still be comprehensible and usable if those attributes were removed.
In particular, using the style attribute to hide and show content, or to
convey meaning that is otherwise not included in the document, is
non-conforming.
The style DOM
attribute must return a CSSStyleDeclaration whose value
represents the declarations specified in the attribute, if present.
Mutating the CSSStyleDeclaration object must create a style attribute on the element (if there
isn't one already) and then change its value to be a value representing
the serialized form of the CSSStyleDeclaration object. [CSSOM]
In the following example, the words that refer to colors are marked up
using the span element and the style attribute to make
those words show up in the relevant colors in visual media.
<p>My sweat suit is <span style="color: green; background: transparent">green</span> and my eyes are <span style="color: blue; background: transparent">blue</span>.</p>
A custom data attribute is an attribute whose name
starts with the string "data-", has at least one character
after the hyphen, is XML-compatible, has no
namespace, and contains no characters in the range U+0041 .. U+005A (LATIN
CAPITAL LETTER A LATIN CAPITAL LETTER Z).
All attributes in HTML documents get lowercased automatically, so the restriction on uppercase letters doesn't affect such documents.
カスタム・データ属性は、 より適切な要素や属性がないような頁や応用の私的なカスタム・データを蓄積することを想定しています。
すべての HTML 要素には、 任意の値のカスタム・データ属性を任意の個数指定して構いません。
dataset DOM
属性は、要素のすべての data-* 属性の便宜アクセス子を提供します。
dataset DOM 属性は、取得時、
次の3つの算法 (要素のすべての data-* 属性を露出させます。)
と関連付けられた DOMStringMap
オブジェクトを返さなければなりません。
data- and the name passed to the algorithm, converted to lowercase.
data- and the name passed to the algorithm, converted to lowercase.
setAttribute() が名前 name
の属性を設定しようとした時に例外を発生させるような場合には、
これも同じ例外を発生させなければなりません。data- and the name passed to the algorithm, converted to lowercase.
Web 頁に宇宙船を表す要素が必要な場合 (例えばゲーム中で)、
class
属性と共に data-*
属性を使う必要が生じることでしょう。
<div class="spaceship" data-id="92432"
data-weapons="laser 2" data-shields="50%"
data-x="30" data-y="10" data-z="90">
<button class="fire"
onclick="spaceships[this.parentNode.dataset.id].fire()">
Fire
</button>
</div>
著者は、このような拡張を設計する際、この属性が無視され、関連付けられた CSS が除去されたとしても、なおその頁が利用可能であるよう、注意するべきです。
利用者エージェントは、これらの属性や値によって実装の動作を決めてはなりません。 利用者エージェントを想定した仕様書は、 これらの属性が意味のある値を持つように定義してはなりません。
All the elements in this specification have a defined content model, which describes what nodes are allowed inside the elements, and thus what the structure of an HTML document or fragment must look like.
As noted in the conformance and terminology sections, for the
purposes of determining if an element matches its content model or not, CDATASection nodes in the
DOM are treated as equivalent to Text nodes, and entity reference nodes are treated as if they
were expanded in place.
The space characters are always allowed between elements. User agents represent these characters between elements in the source markup as text nodes in the DOM. Empty text nodes and text nodes consisting of just sequences of those characters are considered inter-element whitespace.
Inter-element whitespace, comment nodes, and processing instruction nodes must be ignored when establishing whether an element matches its content model or not, and must be ignored when following algorithms that define document and element semantics.
An element A is said to be preceded or followed by a second element B if A and B have the same parent node and there are no other element nodes or text nodes (other than inter-element whitespace) between them.
Authors must not use elements in the HTML namespace anywhere except where they are explicitly allowed, as defined for each element, or as explicitly required by other specifications. For XML compound documents, these contexts could be inside elements from other namespaces, if those elements are defined as providing the relevant contexts.
The SVG specification defines the SVG foreignObject
element as allowing foreign namespaces to be included, thus allowing
compound documents to be created by inserting subdocument content under
that element. This specification defines the XHTML html element as being allowed where subdocument
fragments are allowed in a compound document. Together, these two
definitions mean that placing an XHTML html element as a child of an SVG
foreignObject element is conforming. [SVG]
The Atom specification defines the Atom content
element, when its type attribute has the value
xhtml, as requiring that it contains a single HTML
div element. Thus, a div element is allowed in that context, even
though this is not explicitly normatively stated by this specification.
[ATOM]
In addition, elements in the HTML namespace may be orphan nodes (i.e. without a parent node).
For example, creating a td element and
storing it in a global variable in a script is conforming, even though
td elements are otherwise only supposed to
be used inside tr elements.
var data = {
name: "Banana",
cell: document.createElement('td'),
};
Each element in HTML falls into zero or more categories that group elements with similar characteristics together. The following categories are used in this specification:
Some elements have unique requirements and do not fit into any particular category.
Metadata content is content that sets up the presentation or behavior of the rest of the content, or that sets up the relationship of the document with other documents, or that conveys other "out of band" information.
Elements from other namespaces whose semantics are primarily metadata-related (e.g. RDF) are also metadata content.
Most elements that are used in the body of documents and applications are categorized as flow content.
As a general rule, elements whose content model allows any flow content should have either at least one
descendant text node that is not inter-element
whitespace, or at least one descendant element node that is embedded content. For the purposes of this
requirement, del elements and their
descendants must not be counted as contributing to the ancestors of the
del element.
This requirement is not a hard requirement, however, as there are many cases where an element can be empty legitimately, for example when it is used as a placeholder which will later be filled in by a script, or when the element is part of a template and would on most pages be filled in but on some pages is not relevant.
Sectioning content is content that defines the scope of headers, footers, and contact information.
Each sectioning content element potentially has a heading. See the section on headings and sections for further details.
Heading content defines the header of a section (whether explicitly marked up using sectioning content elements, or implied by the heading content itself).
Phrasing content is the text of the document, as well as elements that mark up that text at the intra-paragraph level. Runs of phrasing content form paragraphs.
All phrasing content is also flow content. Any content model that expects flow content also expects phrasing content.
As a general rule, elements whose content model allows any phrasing content should have either at least one
descendant text node that is not inter-element
whitespace, or at least one descendant element node that is embedded content. For the purposes of this
requirement, nodes that are descendants of del elements must not be counted as contributing to
the ancestors of the del element.
Most elements that are categorized as phrasing content can only contain elements that are themselves categorized as phrasing content, not any flow content.
Text nodes that are not inter-element whitespace are phrasing content.
Embedded content is content that imports another resource into the document, or content from another vocabulary that is inserted into the document.
All embedded content is also phrasing content (and flow content). Any content model that expects phrasing content (or flow content) also expects embedded content.
Elements that are from namespaces other than the HTML namespace and that convey content but not metadata, are embedded content for the purposes of the content models defined in this specification. (For example, MathML, or SVG.)
Some embedded content elements can have fallback content: content that is to be used when the external resource cannot be used (e.g. because it is of an unsupported format). The element definitions state what the fallback is, if any.
Parts of this section should eventually be moved to DOM3 Events.
Interactive content is content that is specifically intended for user interaction.
Certain elements in HTML can be activated, for instance a elements, button elements, or
input elements when their type attribute is set
to radio. Activation of those elements can happen in various
(UA-defined) ways, for instance via the mouse or keyboard.
When activation is performed via some method other than clicking the
pointing device, the default action of the event that triggers the
activation must, instead of being activating the element directly, be to
fire a click event on the same
element.
The default action of this click event,
or of the real click event if the element
was activated by clicking a pointing device, must be to fire a further DOMActivate event at the same
element, whose own default action is to go through all the elements the
DOMActivate event bubbled through
(starting at the target node and going towards the Document
node), looking for an element with an activation
behavior; the first element, in reverse tree order, to have one, must
have its activation behavior executed.
The above doesn't happen for arbitrary synthetic events
dispatched by author script. However, the click() method can be used to make it happen
programmatically.
For certain form controls, this process is complicated further by changes that must happen around the click event. [WF2]
Some elements are described as transparent; they have "transparent" as their content model. Some elements are described as semi-transparent; this means that part of their content model is "transparent" but that is not the only part of the content model that must be satisfied.
When a content model includes a part that is "transparent", those parts must not contain content that would not be conformant if all transparent and semi-transparent elements in the tree were replaced, in their parent element, by the children in the "transparent" part of their content model, retaining order.
When a transparent or semi-transparent element has no parent, then the part of its content model that is "transparent" must instead be treated as accepting any flow content.
A paragraph is typically a block of text with one or more sentences that discuss a particular topic, as in typography, but can also be used for more general thematic grouping. For instance, an address is also a paragraph, as is a part of a form, a byline, or a stanza in a poem.
Paragraphs in flow content are defined
relative to what the document looks like without the a, ins and del elements complicating matters, since those
elements, with their hybrid content models, can straddle paragraph
boundaries.
Let view be a view of the DOM that replaces all
a, ins and
del elements in the document with their
contents. Then, in view, for each run of phrasing content uninterrupted by other types of
content, in an element that accepts content other than phrasing content, let first be
the first node of the run, and let last be the last
node of the run. For each run, a paragraph exists in the original DOM from
immediately before first to immediately after last. (Paragraphs can thus span across a, ins and del elements.)
A paragraph is also formed explicitly by
p elements.
The p element can be used to
wrap individual paragraphs when there would otherwise not be any content
other than phrasing content to separate the paragraphs from each other.
In the following example, there are two paragraphs in a section. There is also a header, which contains phrasing content that is not a paragraph. Note how the comments and intra-element whitespace do not form paragraphs.
<section> <h1>Example of paragraphs</h1> This is the <em>first</em> paragraph in this example. <p>This is the second.</p> <!-- This is not a paragraph. --> </section>
The following example takes that markup and puts ins and del
elements around some of the markup to show that the text was changed
(though in this case, the changes don't really make much sense,
admittedly). Notice how this example has exactly the same paragraphs as
the previous one, despite the ins and
del elements.
<section> <ins><h1>Example of paragraphs</h1> This is the <em>first</em> paragraph in</ins> this example<del>. <p>This is the second.</p></del> <!-- This is not a paragraph. --> </section>
In the following example, the link spans half of the first paragraph, all of the header separating the two paragraphs, and half of the second paragraph.
<aside> Welcome! <a href="about.html"> This is home of... <h1>The Falcons!</h1> The Lockheed Martin multirole jet fighter aircraft! </a> This page discusses the F-16 Fighting Falcon's innermost secrets. </aside>
Here is another way of marking this up, this time showing the paragraphs explicitly, and splitting the one link element into three:
<aside> <p>Welcome! <a href="about.html">This is home of...</a></p> <h1><a href="about.html">The Falcons!</a></h1> <p><a href="about.html">The Lockheed Martin multirole jet fighter aircraft!</a> This page discusses the F-16 Fighting Falcon's innermost secrets.</p> </aside>
Generally, having elements straddle paragraph boundaries is best avoided. Maintaining such markup can be difficult.
For HTML documents, and for HTML elements in HTML documents, certain APIs defined in DOM3 Core become case-insensitive or case-changing, as sometimes defined in DOM3 Core, and as summarized or required below. [DOM3CORE].
This does not apply to XML documents or to elements that are not in the HTML namespace despite being in HTML documents.
Element.tagName and Node.nodeName
These attributes must return element names converted to uppercase, regardless of the case with which they were created.
Document.createElement()
The canonical form of HTML markup is all-lowercase; thus, this method will lowercase the argument before creating the requisite element. Also, the element created must be in the HTML namespace.
This doesn't apply to Document.createElementNS(). Thus, it is possible, by
passing this last method a tag name in the wrong case, to create an
element that claims to have the tag name of an element defined in this
specification, but doesn't support its interfaces, because it really has
another tag name not accessible from the DOM APIs.
Element.setAttributeNode()
When an Attr node is set on an HTML element, it must have its name converted to lowercase before the element is
affected.
This doesn't apply to Document.setAttributeNodeNS().
Element.setAttribute()
When an attribute is set on an HTML element, the name argument must be converted to lowercas before the element is affected.
This doesn't apply to Document.setAttributeNS().
Document.getElementsByTagName() and Element.getElementsByTagName()
These methods (but not their namespaced counterparts) must compare the given argument in an ASCII case-insensitive manner when looking at HTML elements, and in a case-sensitive manner otherwise.
Thus, in an HTML document with nodes in multiple namespaces, these methods will be both case-sensitive and case-insensitive at the same time.
Document.renameNode()
If the new namespace is the HTML namespace, then the new qualified name must be converted to lowercase before the rename takes place.
APIs for dynamically inserting markup into the document interact with the parser, and thus their behavior varies depending on whether they are used with HTML documents (and the HTML parser) or XHTML in XML documents (and the XML parser). The following table cross-references the various versions of these APIs.
| For documents that are HTML documents | For documents that are XML documents | |
|---|---|---|
document.open()
| document.open()
| |
document.write()
| document.write() in HTML
| not supported |
innerHTML
| innerHTML in HTML
| innerHTML
in XML
|
outerHTML
| outerHTML in HTML
| not supported |
insertAdjacentHTML()
| insertAdjacentHTML() in
HTML
| not supported |
Regardless of the parsing mode, the document.writeln(...) method
must call the document.write() method with the same
argument(s), plus an extra argument consisting of a string containing a
single line feed character (U+000A).
The innerHTML attribute applies to both
Element nodes as well as Document nodes. The
outerHTML and
insertAdjacentHTML() members, on the
other hand, only apply to Element nodes.
When inserted using the document.write() method, script elements execute (typically
synchronously), but when inserted using innerHTML and outerHTML
attributes, they do not execute at all.
The open()
method comes in several variants with different numbers of arguments.
When called with two or fewer arguments, the method must act as follows:
Let type be the value of the first argument, if
there is one, or "text/html" otherwise.
Let replace be true if there is a second argument and it is an ASCII case-insensitive match for the value "replace", and false otherwise.
If the document has an active parser
that isn't a script-created parser, and
the insertion point associated with that
parser's input stream is not undefined (that is,
it does point to somewhere in the input stream), then the
method does nothing. Abort these steps and return the
Document object on which the method was invoked.
This basically causes document.open() to be ignored when it's called
in an inline script found during the parsing of data sent over the
network, while still letting it have an effect when called
asynchronously or on a document that is itself being spoon-fed using
these APIs.
onbeforeunload, onunload, reset timers, empty event queue, kill any pending transactions, XMLHttpRequests, etc
If the document has an active parser, then stop that parser, and throw away any pending content in the input stream. what about if it doesn't, because it's either like a text/plain, or Atom, or PDF, or XHTML, or image document, or something?
Remove all child nodes of the document.
Change the document's character encoding to UTF-16.
Create a new HTML parser and associate it with
the document. This is a script-created
parser (meaning that it can be closed by the document.open() and
document.close() methods, and that the
tokeniser will wait for an explicit call to document.close()
before emitting an end-of-file token).
If the type string contains a U+003B SEMICOLON (;) character, remove the first such character and all characters from it up to the end of the string.
Strip all leading and trailing space characters from type.
If type is not now an ASCII case-insensitive match for the string
"text/html", then act as if the tokeniser had emitted a
start tag token with the tag name "pre", then set the HTML parser's tokenization stage's content model flag to PLAINTEXT.
All other values are treated as text/html.
If replace is false, then:
Document's
History object
Document
Document object, as well as the state of the document at
the start of these steps. (This allows the user to step backwards in
the session history to see the page before it was blown away by the
document.open() call.)
Finally, set the insertion point to point at just before the end of the input stream (which at this point will be empty).
Return the Document on which the method was invoked.
When called with three or more arguments, the open() method on the
HTMLDocument object must call the
open() method on the
Window interface of the object returned
by the defaultView attribute
of the DocumentView interface of the HTMLDocument object, with the same
arguments as the original call to the open() method, and return whatever that method
returned. If the defaultView
attribute of the DocumentView interface of the HTMLDocument object is null, then the
method must raise an INVALID_ACCESS_ERR exception.
The close()
method must do nothing if there is no script-created parser associated with the
document. If there is such a parser, then, when the method is called, the
user agent must insert an explicit "EOF"
character at the insertion point of the
parser's input stream.
In HTML, the document.write(...)
method must act as follows:
If the insertion point is undefined, the
open() method
must be called (with no arguments) on the document object. The insertion point will point at just before the end
of the (empty) input stream.
The string consisting of the concatenation of all the arguments to the method must be inserted into the input stream just before the insertion point.
If there is a pending external script, then the method must now return without further processing of the input stream.
Otherwise, the tokeniser must process the characters that were
inserted, one at a time, processing resulting tokens as they are
emitted, and stopping when the tokeniser reaches the insertion point or
when the processing of the tokeniser is aborted by the tree construction
stage (this can happen if a script
start tag token is emitted by the tokeniser).
If the document.write() method was called
from script executing inline (i.e. executing because the parser parsed a
set of script tags), then this is a
reentrant invocation of the parser.
Finally, the method must return.
On getting, the innerHTML DOM attribute must
return the result of running the HTML fragment
serialization algorithm on the node.
On setting, if the node is a document, the innerHTML DOM
attribute must run the following algorithm:
If the document has an active parser, then stop that parser, and throw away any pending content in the input stream. what about if it doesn't, because it's either like a text/plain, or Atom, or PDF, or XHTML, or image document, or something?
Remove the children nodes of the Document whose innerHTML
attribute is being set.
Create a new HTML parser, in its initial state,
and associate it with the Document node.
Place into the input stream for the HTML parser just created the string being assigned
into the innerHTML attribute.
Start the parser and let it run until it has consumed all the
characters just inserted into the input stream. (The
Document node will have been populated with elements and a
load event will have
fired on its body
element.)
Otherwise, if the node is an element, then setting the innerHTML DOM
attribute must cause the following algorithm to run instead:
Invoke the HTML fragment parsing
algorithm, with the element whose innerHTML attribute is being set as the
context element, and the string being assigned into
the innerHTML attribute as the input. Let new children be the result
of this algorithm.
Remove the children of the element whose innerHTML
attribute is being set.
Let target document be the ownerDocument of the Element node whose
innerHTML attribute is being set.
Set the ownerDocument of all the nodes in new children to the target document.
Append all the new children nodes to the node
whose innerHTML attribute is being set,
preserving their order.
On getting, the outerHTML DOM attribute must
return the result of running the HTML fragment
serialization algorithm on a fictional node whose only child is the
node on which the attribute was invoked.
On setting, the outerHTML DOM attribute must cause the
following algorithm to run:
Let target be the element whose outerHTML
attribute is being set.
If target has no parent node, then abort these steps. There would be no way to obtain a reference to the nodes created even if the remaining steps were run.
If target's parent node is a Document
object, throw a NO_MODIFICATION_ALLOWED_ERR exception and
abort these steps.
Let parent be target's parent
node, unless that is a DocumentFragment node, in which case
let parent be an arbitrary body element.
Invoke the HTML fragment parsing
algorithm, with parent as the context element and the string being assigned into the
outerHTML attribute as the input. Let new children be the result
of this algorithm.
Let target document be the ownerDocument of target.
Set the ownerDocument of all the nodes in new children to the target document.
Remove target from its parent node and insert in its place all the new children nodes, preserving their order.
The insertAdjacentHTML(position, text) method,
when invoked, must run the following steps:
Let position and text be the method's first and second arguments, respectively.
Let target be the element on which the method was invoked.
Use the first matching item from this list:
If target has no parent node, then abort these steps.
If target's parent node is a
Document object, then throw a
NO_MODIFICATION_ALLOWED_ERR exception and abort these
steps.
Otherwise, let context be the parent node of target.
Let context be the same as target.
Throw a SYNTAX_ERR exception.
Invoke the HTML fragment parsing algorithm, with the context element being that selected by the previous step, and input being the method's text argument. Let new children be the result of this algorithm.
Let target document be the ownerDocument of target.
Set the ownerDocument of all the nodes in new children to the target document.
Use the first matching item from this list:
Insert all the new children nodes immediately before target, preserving their order.
Insert all the new children nodes before the first child of target, if there is one, preserving their order. If there is no such child, append them all to target, preserving their order.
Append all the new children nodes to target, preserving their order.
Insert all the new children nodes immediately after target, preserving their order.
In an XML context, the innerHTML DOM attribute on
HTMLElements must return a string
in the form of an internal
general parsed entity, and on HTMLDocuments must return a string in the
form of a document
entity. The string returned must be XML namespace-well-formed and must
be an isomorphic serialization of all of that node's child nodes, in
document order. User agents may adjust prefixes and namespace declarations
in the serialization (and indeed might be forced to do so in some cases to
obtain namespace-well-formed XML). For the innerHTML
attribute on HTMLElement objects,
if any of the elements in the serialization are in no namespace, the
default namespace in scope for those elements must be explicitly declared
as the empty string.
(This doesn't apply to the innerHTML attribute on HTMLDocument objects.) [XML] [XMLNS]
If any of the following cases are found in the DOM being serialized, the
user agent must raise an INVALID_STATE_ERR exception:
Document node with no child element nodes.
DocumentType node that has an external subset public
identifier or an external subset system identifier that contains both a
U+0022 QUOTATION MARK ('"') and a U+0027 APOSTROPHE ("'").
Attr node, Text node,
CDATASection node, Comment node, or
ProcessingInstruction node whose data contains characters
that are not matched by the XML Char production. [XML]
CDATASection node whose data contains the string "]]>".
Comment node whose data contains two adjacent U+002D
HYPHEN-MINUS (-) characters or ends with such a character.
ProcessingInstruction node whose target name is an ASCII case-insensitive match for the string "xml".
ProcessingInstruction node whose target name contains a
U+003A COLON (":").
ProcessingInstruction node whose data contains the
string "?>".
These are the only ways to make a DOM unserializable. The DOM
enforces all the other XML constraints; for example, trying to set an
attribute with a name that contains an equals sign (=) will raised an
INVALID_CHARACTER_ERR exception.
On setting, in an XML context, the innerHTML DOM attribute on HTMLElements and HTMLDocuments must run the following
algorithm:
The user agent must create a new XML parser.
If the innerHTML attribute is being set on an
element, the user agent must feed the parser just created
the string corresponding to the start tag of that element, declaring all
the namespace prefixes that are in scope on that element in the DOM, as
well as declaring the default namespace (if any) that is in scope on
that element in the DOM.
The user agent must feed the parser just created the
string being assigned into the innerHTML attribute.
If the innerHTML attribute is being set on an
element, the user agent must feed the parser the string
corresponding to the end tag of that element.
If the parser found a well-formedness error, the attribute's setter
must raise a SYNTAX_ERR exception and abort these steps.
The user agent must remove the children nodes of the node whose innerHTML
attribute is being set.
If the attribute is being set on a Document node, let
new children be the children of the document,
preserving their order. Otherwise, the attribute is being set on an
Element node; let new children be the
children of the document's root element, preserving their order.
If the attribute is being set on a Document node, let
target document be that Document node.
Otherwise, the attribute is being set on an Element node;
let target document be the ownerDocument of that Element.
Set the ownerDocument of all the nodes in new children to the target document.
Append all the new children nodes to the node
whose innerHTML attribute is being set,
preserving their order.
In an XML context, the document.write() and insertAdjacentHTML()
methods, and the outerHTML attribute on both
getting and setting, must raise an INVALID_ACCESS_ERR
exception.
html 要素head 要素と、その後に body 要素。manifest
HTMLElement を使用。html 要素は HTML 文書の根を表します。
manifest 属性は、
文書のアプリケーション・キャッシュ・マニフェストがある場合、その番地を与えます。
この属性がある場合、その属性値は妥当な URL
でなければなりません。
manifest
属性は文書の読み込みの早い段階でのみ影響を持ちます。
この属性を動的に変更しても、影響はありません (ので、 DOM API
はこの属性には提供しません)。
後の base 要素は、それが見られるよりも前に manifest
属性が処理されるので、相対 URL
の解決には影響しません。
head 要素html 要素の最初の要素として。title 要素。HTMLElement を使用。head 要素は文書のメタデータを集めています。
title 要素title
要素を含まない head 要素の中。HTMLElement を使用。title 要素は文書の題や名前を表します。
著者は、文書が文脈外、例えば利用者の履歴や栞、あるいは検索結果で使われた場合であっても、
その文書を識別できるような題名を使うべきです。
文書の題は最初の見出しと異なることもよくあります。
最初の見出しは文脈外で単独で使えるものでなくてもよいからです。
文書中に複数の title
要素があってはなりません。
title 要素は要素を含んではなりません。
次に示すのは、適切な題名の例です。 同じ頁の最上位で使い得る見出しと比べてください。
<title>Introduction to The Mating Rituals of Bees</title>
...
<h1>Introduction</h1>
<p>This companion guide to the highly successful
<cite>Introduction to Medieval Bee-Keeping</cite> book is...
次の頁は同じサイトの中にありそうなものです。 題名が話題を曖昧なく説明している一方で、 最初の見出しは読者が文脈をわかっていることを前提にしていて、 踊りがサルサなのかワルツなのか困らないものと思っていることに注意してください。
<title>Dances used during bee mating rituals</title>
...
<h1>The Dances</h1>
string to use as the document's title is given by the document.title DOM attribute. User agents should use the document's title when referring to the document in their user 界面。
base 要素base 要素を含まない
head 要素の中で。href
target
interface HTMLBaseElement : HTMLElement {
attribute DOMString href;
attribute DOMString target;
};
base 要素を使うと、
著者は相対 URL を解決する際の文書基底 URL
やハイパーリンクをたどる際の既定の閲覧文脈の名前を指定することができます。
文書中に複数の base
要素があってはなりません。
base 要素は href 属性と
target
属性のいずれか、または両方を持たなければなりません。
href
内容属性は、指定された場合、妥当な URL を含まなければなりません。
base 要素は、href
属性を持つ場合、 URL
を取ると定義されている属性を持つ他の要素のうち、 html 要素以外より木上で前に来なければなりません
(html 要素の manifest
属性は base
要素に影響されません)。
href
属性のある base
要素が複数存在する場合、最初の要素以外はすべて無視されます。
target 属性は、
指定された場合、妥当な閲覧文脈の名前かキーワードを含まなければなりません。
利用者エージェントはハイパーリンクをたどる際にこの名前を使います。
base 要素は、 target
属性を持つ場合、ハイパーリンクを表す要素よりも木上で前に来なければなりません。
target
属性を持つ base 要素が複数存在する場合、
最初の要素以外はすべて無視されます。
DOM 属性 href, target は同じ名前の内容属性を反映しなければなりません。
link 要素head 要素の子供である
noscript 要素の中。href
rel
media
hreflang
type
sizes
title 属性はこの要素では特別な意味を持ちます。interface HTMLLinkElement : HTMLElement {
attribute boolean disabled;
attribute DOMString href;
attribute DOMString rel;
readonly attribute DOMTokenList relList;
attribute DOMString media;
attribute DOMString hreflang;
attribute DOMString type;
attribute DOMString sizes;
};
LinkStyle 界面もこの要素に実装されなければなりません。
その方法はスタイル付け処理モデルで定義します。
[CSSOM]
link 要素を使うと、
文書から他の資源へリンクすることができます。
リンクの終点は href
属性により与えられます。この属性は存在しなければならず、
妥当な URL を含まなければなりません。
href
属性が存在しない場合、その要素はリンクを定義しません。
示されたリンクの型 (関係) は rel
属性の値により与えられます。この属性は存在しなければならず、 間隔区切字句集合であるような値を持たなければなりません。 認められている値とその意味は後の節で定義します。 rel 属性が存在しないか、
この仕様書の定義に照らして認められていない値である場合は、
その要素はリンクを定義しません。
link 要素を使って作成できるリンクは2種類あります。
外部資源へのリンクは、現在の文書を補うために使われる資源へのリンクで、 ハイパーリンク・リンクは 他の文書へのリンクです。 リンク型の節で、あるリンク型が外部資源なのかハイパーリンクなのかを定義します。
ある要素は複数のリンクを作成できます (そのうちいくつかは外部資源リンクで、
いくつかはハイパーリンクであっても構いません)。どのリンクが何個作成されるかは rel 属性に与えられたキーワードに依存します。
利用者エージェントはリンクを、要素毎ではなく、リンク毎に処理しなければなりません。
外部資源へのリンクの正確な動作は、関係がどうであるかに依存し、 各リンク型についてそれぞれ定義します。いくつかの属性は外部資源が適用されるかどうかを制御します (後で定義します)。 DOM で表される外部資源 (例えばスタイル・シート) については、 資源が適用されない場合であっても、 DOM 表現が利用可能とされなければなりません。 (しかし、利用者エージェントは適用されない外部資源をすべて予め取ってくる必要はなく、 必要になった時にだけそのような資源を取ってくることとしても構いません。)
外部資源を取ってくる際には、使用されるプロトコル (例えば HTTP) の意味に従わなければなりません。 (例えば、リダイレクトに従わなければなりませんし、 404 応答があると外部資源は適用されなくしなければなりません。)
Interactive user agents should provide users with a means to follow the hyperlinks
created using the link element, somewhere
within their user interface. The exact interface is not defined by this
specification, but it should include the following information (obtained
from the element's attributes, again as defined below), in some form or
another (possibly simplified), for each hyperlink created with each
link element in the document:
rel attribute)
title attribute).
href attribute).
hreflang
attribute).
media attribute).
User agents may also include other information, such as the type of the
resource (as given by the type attribute).
Hyperlinks created with the link element and its rel attribute apply to the whole page. This
contrasts with the rel attribute of a
and area elements, which indicates the
type of a link whose context is given by the link's location within the
document.
The media
attribute says which media the resource applies to. The value must be a
valid media query. [MQ]
If the link is a hyperlink then the media attribute is purely advisory, and
describes for which media the document in question was designed.
However, if the link is an external resource link,
then the media
attribute is prescriptive. The user agent must apply the external resource
to views while their state match the listed
media and the other relevant conditions apply, and must not apply them
otherwise.
The default, if the media attribute is omitted, is all,
meaning that by default links apply to all media.
The hreflang attribute on the
link element has the same semantics as
the hreflang attribute on hyperlink
elements.
The type attribute
gives the MIME type of the linked resource. It is purely advisory. The
value must be a valid MIME type, optionally with parameters. [RFC2046]
For external resource
links, the type
attribute is used as a hint to user agents so that they can avoid fetching
resources they do not support. If the attribute is present, then the user
agent must assume that the resource is of the given type. If the attribute
is omitted, but the external resource link type has a default type
defined, then the user agent must assume that the resource is of that
type. If the UA does not support the given MIME type for the given link
relationship, then the UA should not fetch the resource; if the UA does
support the given MIME type for the given link relationship, then the UA
should fetch the resource. If the attribute is
omitted, and the external resource link type does not have a default type
defined, but the user agent would fetch the resource if the type was known
and supported, then the user agent should fetch the
resource under the assumption that it will be supported.
User agents must not consider the type attribute authoritative — upon fetching
the resource, user agents must not use the type attribute to determine its actual type. Only
the actual type (as defined in the next paragraph) is used to determine
whether to apply the resource, not the aforementioned assumed
type.
If the resource is expected to be an image, user agents may apply the image sniffing rules, with the official type being the type determined from the resource's Content-Type metadata, and use the resulting sniffed type of the resource as if it was the actual type. Otherwise, if the resource is not expected to be an image, or if the user agent opts not to apply those rules, then the user agent must use the resource's Content-Type metadata to determine the type of the resource. If there is no type metadata, but the external resource link type has a default type defined, then the user agent must assume that the resource is of that type.
Once the user agent has established the type of the resource, the user agent must apply the resource if it is of a supported type and the other relevant conditions apply, and must ignore the resource otherwise.
If a document contains style sheet links labeled as follows:
<link rel="stylesheet" href="A" type="text/plain"> <link rel="stylesheet" href="B" type="text/css"> <link rel="stylesheet" href="C">
...then a compliant UA that supported only CSS style sheets would fetch
the B and C files, and skip the A file (since text/plain is
not the MIME type for CSS style sheets).
For files B and C, it would then check the actual types returned by the
server. For those that are sent as text/css, it would apply
the styles, but for those labeled as text/plain, or any
other type, it would not.
If one the two files was returned without a Content-Type metadata, or with a syntactically
incorrect type like Content-Type: "null", then
the default type for stylesheet links would kick in. Since that
default type is text/css, the style sheet
would nonetheless be applied.
The title
attribute gives the title of the link. With one exception, it is purely
advisory. The value is text. The exception is for style sheet links, where
the title
attribute defines alternative style sheet sets.
The title attribute on link elements differs from the global title attribute of most other
elements in that a link without a title does not inherit the title of the
parent element: it merely has no title.
The sizes
attribute is used with the icon link type. The attribute must not be
specified on link elements that do not
have a rel attribute
that specifies the icon
keyword.
Some versions of HTTP defined a Link: header, to
be processed like a series of link
elements. If supported, for the purposes of ordering links defined by HTTP
headers must be assumed to come before any links in the document, in the
order that they were given in the HTTP entity header. (URIs in these
headers are to be processed and resolved according to the rules given in
HTTP; the rules of this specification don't apply.) [RFC2616] [RFC2068]
The DOM attributes href, rel, media, hreflang, and type, and sizes each must reflect the respective content attributes of the same
name.
The DOM attribute relList must reflect the rel content attribute.
The DOM attribute disabled only applies to style
sheet links. When the link element
defines a style sheet link, then the disabled attribute behaves as defined for the alternative style
sheets DOM. For all other link
elements it always return false and does nothing on setting.
meta 要素charset attribute is present, or if the
element is in the Encoding declaration state:
as the first element in a head element.
http-equiv attribute is present, and the
element is not in the Encoding declaration state:
in a head element.
http-equiv attribute is present, and the
element is not in the Encoding declaration state:
in a noscript element that is a
child of a head element.
name
attribute is present: where metadata content is
expected.
name
http-equiv
content
charset
(HTML only)
interface HTMLMetaElement : HTMLElement {
attribute DOMString content;
attribute DOMString name;
attribute DOMString httpEquiv;
};
The meta element represents various
kinds of metadata that cannot be expressed using the title, base,
link, style, and script elements.
The meta element can represent
document-level metadata with the name attribute, pragma directives with the http-equiv
attribute, and the file's character encoding
declaration when an HTML document is serialized to string form (e.g.
for transmission over the network or for disk storage) with the charset attribute.
Exactly one of the name, http-equiv, and charset attributes
must be specified.
If either name or
http-equiv is specified, then the content attribute
must also be specified. Otherwise, it must be omitted.
The charset
attribute specifies the character encoding used by the document. This is
called a character encoding declaration.
The charset
attribute may be specified in HTML
documents only, it must not be used in XML documents. If the charset attribute is specified, the element
must be the first element in the head
element of the file.
The content
attribute gives the value of the document metadata or pragma directive
when the element is used for those purposes. The allowed values depend on
the exact context, as described in subsequent sections of this
specification.
If a meta element has a name attribute, it sets document
metadata. Document metadata is expressed in terms of name/value pairs, the
name attribute on
the meta element giving the name, and
the content
attribute on the same element giving the value. The name specifies what
aspect of metadata is being set; valid names and the meaning of their
values are described in the following sections. If a meta element has no content attribute,
then the value part of the metadata name/value pair is the empty string.
If a meta element has the http-equiv
attribute specified, it must be either in a head element or in a noscript element that itself is in a head element. If a meta element does not have the http-equiv
attribute specified, it must be in a head
element.
The DOM attributes name and content must reflect the respective content attributes of the same
name. The DOM attribute httpEquiv must reflect the content attribute http-equiv.
This specification defines a few names for the name attribute of the
meta element.
The value must be a short free-form string that giving the name of the
Web application that the page represents. If the page is not a Web
application, the application-name metadata name must
not be used. User agents may use the application name in UI in
preference to the page's title, since
the title might include status messages and the like relevant to the
status of the page at a particular moment in time instead of just being
the name of the application.
The value must be a free-form string that describes the page. The value must be appropriate for use in a directory of pages, e.g. in a search engine.
The value must be a free-form string that identifies the software used to generate the document. This value must not be used on hand-authored pages.
Extensions to the predefined set of metadata names may be registered in the WHATWG Wiki MetaExtensions page.
Anyone is free to edit the WHATWG Wiki MetaExtensions page at any time to add a type. These new names must be specified with the following information:
The actual name being defined. The name should not be confusingly similar to any other defined name (e.g. differing only in case).
A short description of what the metadata name's meaning is, including the format the value is required to be in.
A list of other names that have exactly the same processing requirements. Authors should not use the names defined to be synonyms, they are only intended to allow user agents to support legacy content.
One of the following:
If a metadata name is added with the "proposal" status and found to be redundant with existing values, it should be removed and listed as a synonym for the existing value.
Conformance checkers must use the information given on the WHATWG Wiki MetaExtensions page to establish if a value not explicitly defined in this specification is allowed or not. When an author uses a new type not defined by either this specification or the Wiki page, conformance checkers should offer to add the value to the Wiki, with the details described above, with the "proposal" status.
This specification does not define how new values will get approved. It is expected that the Wiki will have a community that addresses this.
Metadata names whose values are to be URLs
must not be proposed or accepted. Links must be represented using the
link element, not the meta element.
When the http-equiv attribute is
specified on a meta element, the element
is a pragma directive.
The http-equiv attribute is an enumerated attribute. The following table lists the
keywords defined for this attribute. The states given in the first cell of
the rows with keywords give the states to which those keywords
map.
| State | Keywords |
|---|---|
| Content Language | Content-Language
|
| Encoding declaration | Content-Type
|
| Default style | default-style
|
| Refresh | refresh
|
When a meta element is inserted into
the document, if its http-equiv attribute is present and
represents one of the above states, then the user agent must run the
algorithm appropriate for that state, as described in the following list:
This pragma sets the document-wide default language. Until the pragma is successfully processed, there is no document-wide default language.
If another meta element in the Content
Language state has already been successfully processed (i.e. when
it was inserted the user agent processed it and reached the last step
of this list of steps), then abort these steps.
If the meta element has no content
attribute, or if that attribute's value is the empty string, then
abort these steps.
Let input be the value of the element's content
attribute.
Let position point at the first character of input.
Collect a sequence of characters that are neither space characters nor a U+002C COMMA character (",").
Let the document-wide default language be the string that resulted from the previous step.
For meta elements in the Content
Language state, the content attribute must have a value
consisting of a valid RFC 3066 language code. [RFC3066]
This pragma is not exactly equivalent to the HTTP
Content-Language header, for instance it only supports one
language. [RFC2616]
The Encoding declaration state's
user agent requirements are all handled by the parsing section of the
specification. The state is just an alternative form of setting the
charset attribute: it is a character encoding declaration.
For meta elements in the Encoding
declaration state, the content attribute must have a value that is
an ASCII case-insensitive match for a string that
consists of: the literal string "text/html;",
optionally followed by any number of space characters, followed by the literal string "charset=", followed by the character encoding name of the character encoding declaration.
If the document contains a meta
element in the Encoding declaration state
then that element must be the first element in the document's head element, and the document must not contain
a meta element with the charset attribute
present.
The Encoding declaration state may be used in HTML documents only, elements in that state must not be used in XML documents.
If another meta element in the Refresh state
has already been successfully processed (i.e. when it was inserted the
user agent processed it and reached the last step of this list of
steps), then abort these steps.
If the meta element has no content
attribute, or if that attribute's value is the empty string, then
abort these steps.
Let input be the value of the element's content
attribute.
Let position point at the first character of input.
Collect a sequence of characters in the range U+0030 DIGIT ZERO to U+0039 DIGIT NINE, and parse the resulting string using the rules for parsing non-negative integers. If the sequence of characters collected is the empty string, then no number will have been parsed; abort these steps. Otherwise, let time be the parsed number.
Collect
a sequence of characters in the range U+0030 DIGIT ZERO to U+0039
DIGIT NINE and U+002E FULL STOP ("."). Ignore
any collected characters.
Let url be the address of the current page.
If the character in input pointed to by position is a U+003B SEMICOLON (";"), then advance position to the
next character. Otherwise, jump to the last step.
If the character in input pointed to by position is one of U+0055 LATIN CAPITAL LETTER U or U+0075 LATIN SMALL LETTER U, then advance position to the next character. Otherwise, jump to the last step.
If the character in input pointed to by position is one of U+0052 LATIN CAPITAL LETTER R or U+0072 LATIN SMALL LETTER R, then advance position to the next character. Otherwise, jump to the last step.
If the character in input pointed to by position is one of U+004C LATIN CAPITAL LETTER L or U+006C LATIN SMALL LETTER L, then advance position to the next character. Otherwise, jump to the last step.
If the character in input pointed to by position is a U+003D EQUALS SIGN ("="), then advance position to the
next character. Otherwise, jump to the last step.
Let url be equal to the substring of input from the character at position to the end of the string.
Strip any trailing space characters from the end of url.
Strip any U+0009 CHARACTER TABULATION, U+000A LINE FEED (LF), and U+000D CARRIAGE RETURN (CR) characters from url.
Resolve the url value to an absolute URL.
(For the purposes of determining the base URL,
the url value comes from the value of a content
attribute of the meta element.) If
this fails, abort these steps.
Perform one or more of the following steps:
Set a timer so that in time seconds, adjusted to take into account user or user agent preferences, if the user has not canceled the redirect, the user agent navigates the document's browsing context to url, with replacement enabled, and with the document's browsing context as the source browsing context.
Provide the user with an interface that, when selected, navigates a browsing context to url, with the document's browsing context as the source browsing context.
Do nothing.
In addition, the user agent may, as with anything, inform the user of any and all aspects of its operation, including the state of any timers, the destinations of any timed redirects, and so forth.
For meta elements in the Refresh state,
the content
attribute must have a value consisting either of:
;), followed by one or more space characters, followed by
either a U+0055 LATIN CAPITAL LETTER U or a U+0075 LATIN SMALL LETTER
U, a U+0052 LATIN CAPITAL LETTER R or a U+0072 LATIN SMALL LETTER R, a
U+004C LATIN CAPITAL LETTER L or a U+006C LATIN SMALL LETTER L, a
U+003D EQUALS SIGN (=), and then a valid URL.
In the former case, the integer represents a number of seconds before the page is to be reloaded; in the latter case the integer represents a number of seconds before the page is to be replaced by the page at the given URL.
There must not be more than one meta
element with any particular state in the document at a time.
A character encoding declaration is a mechanism by which the character encoding used to store or transmit a document is specified.
The following restrictions apply to character encoding declarations:
If the document does not start with a BOM, and if its encoding is not
explicitly given by Content-Type metadata, then the character encoding
used must be an ASCII-compatible character
encoding, and, in addition, if that encoding isn't US-ASCII itself,
then the encoding must be specified using a meta element with a charset attribute
or a meta element in the Encoding
declaration state.
If the document contains a meta
element with a charset attribute or a meta element in the Encoding declaration state,
then the character encoding used must be an ASCII-compatible character encoding.
An ASCII-compatible character encoding is one that is a superset of US-ASCII (specifically, ANSI_X3.4-1968) for bytes in the set 0x09, 0x0A, 0x0C, 0x0D, 0x20 - 0x22, 0x26, 0x27, 0x2C - 0x3F, 0x41 - 0x5A, and 0x61 - 0x7A.
Authors should not use JIS_X0212-1990, x-JIS0208, and encodings based on EBCDIC. Authors should not use UTF-32. Authors must not use the CESU-8, UTF-7, BOCU-1 and SCSU encodings. [CESU8] [UTF7] [BOCU1] [SCSU]
Authors are encouraged to use UTF-8. Conformance checkers may advise against authors using legacy encodings.
In XHTML, the XML declaration should be used for inline character encoding information, if necessary.
style 要素scoped attribute is present: flow content.
scoped attribute is absent: where metadata content is expected.
scoped attribute is absent: in a noscript element that is a child of a
head element.
scoped attribute is present: where flow content is expected, but before any other
flow content other than other style elements and inter-element whitespace.
type attribute.
media
type
scoped
title attribute has special semantics on this
element.
interface HTMLStyleElement : HTMLElement {
attribute boolean disabled;
attribute DOMString media;
attribute DOMString type;
attribute boolean scoped;
};
LinkStyle 界面もこの要素に実装されなければなりません。
その方法はスタイル付け処理モデルで定義します。
[CSSOM]
The style element allows authors to
embed style information in their documents. The style element is one of several inputs to the styling processing model.
If the type
attribute is given, it must contain a valid MIME type, optionally with
parameters, that designates a styling language. [RFC2046] If the attribute is absent, the type
defaults to text/css. [RFC2138]
When examining types to determine if they support the language, user agents must not ignore unknown MIME parameters — types with unknown parameters must be assumed to be unsupported.
The media
attribute says which media the styles apply to. The value must be a valid
media query. [MQ] User agents must
apply the styles to views while their state match the listed
media, and must not apply them otherwise. [DOM3VIEWS]
The default, if the media attribute is
omitted, is all, meaning that by default styles apply to all
media.
The scoped
attribute is a boolean attribute. If the attribute
is present, then the user agent must apply the specified style information
only to the style element's parent
element (if any), and that element's child nodes. Otherwise, the specified
styles must, if applied, be applied to the entire document.
The title attribute on style elements defines alternative style sheet sets. If the style element has no title attribute, then
it has no title; the title attribute of ancestors does not apply to
the style element.
The title attribute on style elements, like the title attribute on
link elements, differs from the global
title attribute in that
a style block without a title does not
inherit the title of the parent element: it merely has no title.
All descendant elements must be processed, according to their semantics,
before the style element itself is
evaluated. For styling languages that consist of pure text, user agents
must evaluate style elements by passing
the concatenation of the contents of all the text nodes that are direct children of the style element (not any other nodes such as
comments or elements), in tree order, to the
style system. For XML-based styling languages, user agents must pass all
the children nodes of the style element
to the style system.
This specification does not specify a style system, but CSS is expected to be supported by most Web browsers. [CSS21]
The media, type and scoped DOM attributes must reflect the respective content attributes of the same
name.
The DOM disabled attribute behaves as
defined for the
alternative style sheets DOM.
The link and style elements can provide styling information
for the user agent to use when rendering the document. The DOM Styling
specification specifies what styling information is to be used by the user
agent and how it is to be used. [CSSOM]
The style and link elements implement the LinkStyle
interface. [CSSOM]
For style elements, if the user agent
does not support the specified styling language, then the sheet attribute of the element's
LinkStyle interface must return null. Similarly, link elements that do not represent external resource links that
contribute to the styling processing model (i.e. that do not have a
stylesheet
keyword in their rel
attribute), and link elements whose
specified resource has not yet been fetched, or is not in a supported
styling language, must have their LinkStyle interface's sheet attribute return null.
Otherwise, the LinkStyle interface's sheet attribute must return a
StyleSheet object with the attributes implemented as follows:
[CSSOM]
type DOM
attribute)
The content type must be the same as the style's specified type. For
style elements, this is the same as
the type content
attribute's value, or text/css if that is omitted.
For link elements, this is the Content-Type metadata of the
specified resource.
href DOM
attribute)
For link elements, the location must
be the result of resolving
the URL given by the element's href content attribute,
or the empty string if that fails. For style elements, there is no location.
media DOM attribute)
The media must be the same as the value of the element's media content attribute.
title
DOM attribute)
The title must be the same as the value of the element's title content attribute. If the attribute is absent,
then the style sheet does not have a title. The title is used for
defining alternative style sheet sets.
The disabled DOM attribute on
link and style elements must return false and do nothing
on setting, if the sheet attribute
of their LinkStyle interface is null. Otherwise, it must
return the value of the StyleSheet interface's disabled attribute on getting, and
forward the new value to that same attribute on setting.
Some elements, for example address elements, are scoped to their nearest
ancestor sectioning content. For such elements
x, the elements that apply to a sectioning content element e
are all the x elements whose nearest sectioning content ancestor is e.
body 要素html
element.
interface HTMLBodyElement : HTMLElement {};
The body element represents the main
content of the document.
In conforming documents, there is only one body element. The document.body DOM
attribute provides scripts with easy access to a document's body element.
Some DOM operations (for example, parts of the drag and drop model) are defined in terms of "the body element". This refers to a particular
element in the DOM, as per the definition of the term, and not any
arbitrary body element.
section 要素HTMLElement を使用。The section element represents a
generic document or application section. A section, in this context, is a
thematic grouping of content, typically with a header, possibly with a
footer.
Examples of sections would be chapters, the various tabbed pages in a tabbed dialog box, or the numbered sections of a thesis. A Web site's home page could be split into sections for an introduction, news items, contact information.
nav 要素HTMLElement を使用。The nav element represents a section of
a page that links to other pages or to parts within the page: a section
with navigation links. Not all groups of links on a page need to be in a
nav element — only sections that
consist of primary navigation blocks are appropriate for the nav element. In particular, it is common for
footers to have a list of links to various key parts of a site, but the
footer element is more appropriate in
such cases.
In the following example, the page has several places where links are present, but only one of those places is considered a navigation section.
<body>
<header>
<h1>Wake up sheeple!</h1>
<p><a href="news.html">News</a> -
<a href="blog.html">Blog</a> -
<a href="forums.html">Forums</a></p>
</header>
<nav>
<h1>Navigation</h1>
<ul>
<li><a href="articles.html">Index of all articles</a><li>
<li><a href="today.html">Things sheeple need to wake up for today</a><li>
<li><a href="successes.html">Sheeple we have managed to wake</a><li>
</ul>
</nav>
<article>
<p>...page content would be here...</p>
</article>
<footer>
<p>Copyright © 2006 The Example Company</p>
<p><a href="about.html">About</a> -
<a href="policy.html">Privacy Policy</a> -
<a href="contact.html">Contact Us</a></p>
</footer>
</body>
article 要素HTMLElement を使用。The article element represents a
section of a page that consists of a composition that forms an independent
part of a document, page, or site. This could be a forum post, a magazine
or newspaper article, a Web log entry, a user-submitted comment, or any
other independent item of content.
An article element is
"independent" in that its contents could stand alone, for example in
syndication. However, the element is still associated with its ancestors;
for instance, contact information that applies to a parent body element still covers the article as well.
When article elements are nested,
the inner article elements represent
articles that are in principle related to the contents of the outer
article. For instance, a Web log entry on a site that accepts
user-submitted comments could represent the comments as article elements nested within the article element for the Web log entry.
Author information associated with an article element (q.v. the address element) does not apply to nested
article elements.
aside 要素HTMLElement を使用。The aside element represents a section
of a page that consists of content that is tangentially related to the
content around the aside element, and
which could be considered separate from that content. Such sections are
often represented as sidebars in printed typography.
The following example shows how an aside is used to mark up background material on Switzerland in a much longer news story on Europe.
<aside> <h1>Switzerland</h1> <p>Switzerland, a land-locked country in the middle of geographic Europe, has not joined the geopolitical European Union, though it is a signatory to a number of European treaties.</p> </aside>
The following example shows how an aside is used to mark up a pull quote in a longer article.
... <p>He later joined a large company, continuing on the same work. <q>I love my job. People ask me what I do for fun when I'm not at work. But I'm paid to do my hobby, so I never know what to answer. Some people wonder what they would do if they didn't have to work... but I know what I would do, because I was unemployed for a year, and I filled that time doing exactly what I do now.</q></p> <aside> <q> People ask me what I do for fun when I'm not at work. But I'm paid to do my hobby, so I never know what to answer. </q> </aside> <p>Of course his work — or should that be hobby? — isn't his only passion. He also enjoys other pleasures.</p> ...
h1、h2、h3、h4、h5、h6 要素HTMLElement を使用。これらの要素は、その章節の見出しを定義します。
これらの要素の意味は見出しと章節の節で定義します。
これらの要素は、その名前中の数字により与えられる階数を持ちます。
h1 要素は最高の階数を持つといい、
h6 要素は最低の階数を持ち、
同じ名前の2つの要素は等しい階数を持ちます。
header 要素header 要素である子孫、footer 要素である子孫を含まない。HTMLElement を使用。header 要素は、
章節の見出しを表します。この要素は、普通、
h1–h6
要素の集合を群化し、頁の題名と副題や謳い文句をマーク付けするために使います。しかし、
header 要素は純粋に章節の見出しや副見出しではないものも含んで構いません。
例えば、版履歴情報も見出しに含めるのが適当かもしれません。
For the purposes of document summaries, outlines, and the like, the text
of header elements is defined to be the
text of the highest ranked h1–h6 element
descendant of the header element, if
there are any such elements, and the first such element if there are
multiple elements with that rank. If there are no such
elements, then the text of the header
element is the empty string.
header 要素中の他の見出し要素は副見出しや副題を表します。
header 要素の階数は、
h1 要素のものと同じ (最高の階数) です。
見出しと章節の節で、
header 要素が個々の章節にどう割り当てられるかを定義します。
次に示すのは、妥当な見出しの例です。それぞれの場合で、 強調した文章が、見出しデータを取り出し、副見出しを無視する応用で見出しとして使われる文章を表します。
<header> <h1>The reality dysfunction</h1> <h2>Space is not the only void</h2> </header>
<header> <h1>Dr. Strangelove</h1> <h2>Or: How I Learned to Stop Worrying and Love the Bomb</h2> </header>
<header> <p>Welcome to...</p> <h1>Voidwars!</h1> </header>
<header> <h1>Scalable Vector Graphics (SVG) 1.2</h1> <h2>W3C Working Draft 27 October 2004</h2> <dl> <dt>This version:</dt> <dd><a href="http://www.w3.org/TR/2004/WD-SVG12-20041027/">http://www.w3.org/TR/2004/WD-SVG12-20041027/</a></dd> <dt>Previous version:</dt> <dd><a href="http://www.w3.org/TR/2004/WD-SVG12-20040510/">http://www.w3.org/TR/2004/WD-SVG12-20040510/</a></dd> <dt>Latest version of SVG 1.2:</dt> <dd><a href="http://www.w3.org/TR/SVG12/">http://www.w3.org/TR/SVG12/</a></dd> <dt>Latest SVG Recommendation:</dt> <dd><a href="http://www.w3.org/TR/SVG/">http://www.w3.org/TR/SVG/</a></dd> <dt>Editor:</dt> <dd>Dean Jackson, W3C, <a href="mailto:dean@w3.org">dean@w3.org</a></dd> <dt>Authors:</dt> <dd>See <a href="#authors">Author List</a></dd> </dl> <p class="copyright"><a href="http://www.w3.org/Consortium/Legal/ipr-notic ... </header>
footer 要素footer 要素である子孫を含まない。HTMLElement を使用。footer
要素は、それが適用される章節の足部を表します。
足部は、一般的に、その章節に関する情報、例えば誰が書いたか、
関係する文書へのリンク、著作権データなどを含みます。
footer 中で与えられる章節の連絡先情報は、 address 要素を使ってマーク付けするべきです。
足部は、通常は章節の終わりに現れますが、必ずしもそうである必要はありません。
次に示すのは、2つの足部がある頁です。2つは同じ内容で、1つは上にあり、 もう1つは下にあります。
<body> <footer><a href="../">Back to index...</a></footer> <h1>Lorem ipsum</h1> <p>A dolor sit amet, consectetur adipisicing elit, sed do eiusmod tempor incididunt ut labore et dolore magna aliqua. Ut enim ad minim veniam, quis nostrud exercitation ullamco laboris nisi ut aliquip ex ea commodo consequat. Duis aute irure dolor in reprehenderit in voluptate velit esse cillum dolore eu fugiat nulla pariatur. Excepteur sint occaecat cupidatat non proident, sunt in culpa qui officia deserunt mollit anim id est laborum.</p> <footer><a href="../">Back to index...</a></footer> </body>
address 要素footer element descendants, and no address element descendants.
HTMLElement を使用。The address element represents the
contact information for the section it applies to. If it applies to the body element, then it instead
applies to the document as a whole.
For example, a page at the W3C Web site related to HTML might include the following contact information:
<ADDRESS> <A href="../People/Raggett/">Dave Raggett</A>, <A href="../People/Arnaud/">Arnaud Le Hors</A>, contact persons for the <A href="Activity">W3C HTML Activity</A> </ADDRESS>
The address element must not be used
to represent arbitrary addresses (e.g. postal addresses), unless those
addresses are contact information for the section. (The p element is the appropriate element for marking up
such addresses.)
The address element must not contain
information other than contact information.
For example, the following is non-conforming use of the address element:
<ADDRESS>Last Modified: 1999/12/24 23:37:50</ADDRESS>
Typically, the address element would
be included with other information in a footer element.
To determine the contact information for a sectioning content element (such as a document's
body element, which would give the
contact information for the page), UAs must collect all the address elements that apply to that sectioning
content element and its ancestor sectioning
content elements. The contact information is the collection of all the
information given by those elements.
Contact information for one sectioning
content element, e.g. an aside
element, does not apply to its ancestor elements, e.g. the page's body.
The h1–h6 elements and the header element are headings.
The first element of heading content in an element of sectioning content gives the header for that section. Subsequent headers of equal or higher rank start new (implied) sections, headers of lower rank start subsections that are part of the previous one.
Sectioning content elements are always considered subsections of their nearest ancestor element of sectioning content, regardless of what implied sections other headings may have created.
Certain elements are said to be sectioning roots, including blockquote and td elements. These elements can have their own
outlines, but the sections and headers inside these elements do not
contribute to the outlines of their ancestors.
For the following fragment:
<body> <h1>Foo</h1> <h2>Bar</h2> <blockquote> <h3>Bla</h3> </blockquote> <p>Baz</p> <h2>Quux</h2> <section> <h3>Thud</h3> </section> <p>Grunt</p> </body>
...the structure would be:
body
section, containing the "Grunt" paragraph)
section section)
Notice how the section ends the
earlier implicit section so that a later paragraph ("Grunt") is back at
the top level.
Sections may contain headers of any rank, but
authors are strongly encouraged to either use only h1 elements, or to use elements of the appropriate
rank for the section's nesting level.
Authors are also encouraged to explicitly wrap sections in elements of sectioning content, instead of relying on the implicit sections generated by having multiple heading in one element of sectioning content.
For example, the following is correct:
<body> <h4>Apples</h4> <p>Apples are fruit.</p> <section> <h2>Taste</h2> <p>They taste lovely.</p> <h6>Sweet</h6> <p>Red apples are sweeter than green ones.</p> <h1>Color</h1> <p>Apples come in various colors.</p> </section> </body>
However, the same document would be more clearly expressed as:
<body> <h1>Apples</h1> <p>Apples are fruit.</p> <section> <h2>Taste</h2> <p>They taste lovely.</p> <section> <h3>Sweet</h3> <p>Red apples are sweeter than green ones.</p> </section> </section> <section> <h2>Color</h2> <p>Apples come in various colors.</p> </section> </body>
Both of the documents above are semantically identical and would produce the same outline in compliant user agents.
This section defines an algorithm for creating an outline for a sectioning content element or a sectioning root element. It is defined in terms of a walk over the nodes of a DOM tree, in tree order, with each node being visited when it is entered and when it is exited during the walk.
The outline for a sectioning content element or a sectioning root element consists of a list of one
or more potentially nested sections. A section is a container that corresponds to
some nodes in the original DOM tree. Each section can have one heading
associated with it, and can contain any number of further nested sections.
The algorithm for the outline also associates each node in the DOM tree
with a particular section and potentially a heading. (The sections in the
outline aren't section elements,
though some may correspond to such elements — they are merely
conceptual sections.)
The following markup fragment:
<body> <h1>A</h1> <p>B</p> <h2>C</h2> <p>D</p> <h2>E</h2> <p>F</p> </body>
...results in the following outline being created for the body node (and thus the entire document):
Section created for body node.
Associated with heading "A".
Also associated with paragraph "B".
Nested sections:
The algorithm that must be followed during a walk of a DOM subtree rooted at a sectioning content element or a sectioning root element to determine that element's outline is as follows:
Let current outlinee be null. (It holds the element whose outline is being created.)
Let current section be null. (It holds a pointer to a section, so that elements in the DOM can all be associated with a section.)
Create a stack to hold elements, which is used to handle nesting. Initialize this stack to empty.
As you walk over the DOM in tree order, trigger the first relevant step below for each element as you enter and exit it.
The element being exited is a heading content element.
Pop that element from the stack.
Do nothing.
If current outlinee is not null, push current outlinee onto the stack.
Let current outlinee be the element that is being entered.
Let current section be a newly created section for the current outlinee element.
Let there be a new outline for the new current outlinee, initialized with just the new current section as the only section in the outline.
Pop the top element from the stack, and let the current outlinee be that element.
Let current section be the last section in the outline of the current outlinee element.
Append the outline of the sectioning content element being exited to the current section. (This does not change which section is the last section in the outline.)
Run these steps:
Pop the top element from the stack, and let the current outlinee be that element.
Let current section be the last section in the outline of the current outlinee element.
Finding the deepest child: If current section has no child sections, stop these steps.
Let current section be the last child section of the current current section.
Go back to the substep labeled finding the deepest child.
The current outlinee is the element being exited.
Let current section be the first section in the outline of the current outlinee element.
Skip to the next step in the overall set of steps. (The walk is over.)
Do nothing.
If the current section has no heading, let the element being entered be the heading for the current section.
Otherwise, if the element being entered has a rank equal to or greater than the heading of the last section of the outline of the current outlinee, then create a new section and append it to the outline of the current outlinee element, so that this new section is the new last section of that outline. Let current section be that new section. Let the element being entered be the new heading for the current section.
Otherwise, run these substeps:
Let candidate section be current section.
If the element being entered has a rank lower than the rank of the heading of the candidate section, then create a new section, and append it to candidate section. (This does not change which section is the last section in the outline.) Let current section be this new section. Let the element being entered be the new heading for the current section. Abort these substeps.
Let new candidate section be the section that contains candidate section in the outline of current outlinee.
Let candidate section be new candidate section.
手順 2 に戻ります。
Push the element being entered onto the stack. (This causes the algorithm to skip any descendants of the element.)
Recall that h1 has the
highest rank, and h6 has the
lowest rank.
Do nothing.
In addition, whenever you exit a node, after doing the steps above, if current section is not null, associate the node with the section current section.
If the current outlinee is null, then there was no sectioning content element or sectioning root element in the DOM. There is no outline. Abort these steps.
Associate any nodes that were not associated a section in the steps above with current outlinee as their section.
Associate all nodes with the heading of the section with which they are associated, if any.
If current outlinee is the
body element, then the outline created for that element
is the outline of the entire document.
The tree of sections created by the algorithm above, or a proper subset thereof, must be used when generating document outlines, for example when generating tables of contents.
When creating an interactive table of contents, entries should jump the user to the relevant sectioning content element, if the section was created for a real element in the original document, or to the relevant heading content element, if the section in the tree was generated for a heading in the above process.
Selecting the first section of the document therefore always takes
the user to the top of the document, regardless of where the first header
in the body is to be found.
The following JavaScript function shows how the tree walk could be implemented. The root argument is the root of the tree to walk, and the enter and exit arguments are callbacks that are called with the nodes as they are entered and exited. [ECMA262]
function (root, enter, exit) {
var node = root;
start: while (node) {
enter(node);
if (node.firstChild) {
node = node.firstChild;
continue start;
}
while (node) {
exit(node);
if (node.nextSibling) {
node = node.nextSibling;
continue start;
}
if (node == root)
node = null;
else
node = node.parentNode;
}
}
}
Given the outline of a document, but ignoring any
sections created for nav and aside elements, and any of their descendants, if
the only root of the tree is the body
element's section, and
it has only a single subsection which is created by an article element, then the heading of the body element should be assumed to
be a site-wide heading, and the heading of the article element should be assumed to be the
page's heading.
If a page starts with a heading that is common to the whole site, the
document must be authored such that, in the document's outline, ignoring any sections created for nav and aside
elements and any of their descendants, the tree has only one root section, the body element's section, its heading
is the site-wide heading, the body
element has just one subsection, that subsection is created by an
article element, and that article's heading is the page heading.
If a page does not contain a site-wide heading, then the page must be
authored such that, in the document's outline,
ignoring any sections created for nav and
aside elements and any of their
descendants, either the body element
has no subsections, or it has more than one subsection, or it has a single
subsection but that subsection is not created by an article element, or there is more than one section at the root of the
outline.
Conceptually, a site is thus a document with many articles — when those articles are split into many pages, the heading of the original single page becomes the heading of the site, repeated on every page.
p 要素HTMLElement を使用。The p element represents a paragraph.
The following examples are conforming HTML fragments:
<p>The little kitten gently seated himself on a piece of carpet. Later in his life, this would be referred to as the time the cat sat on the mat.</p>
<fieldset> <legend>Personal information</legend> <p> <label>Name: <input name="n"></label> <label><input name="anon" type="checkbox"> Hide from other users</label> </p> <p><label>Address: <textarea name="a"></textarea></label></p> </fieldset>
<p>There was once an example from Femley,<br> Whose markup was of dubious quality.<br> The validator complained,<br> So the author was pained,<br> To move the error from the markup to the rhyming.</p>
The p element should not be used when a
more specific element is more appropriate.
The following example is technically correct:
<section> <!-- ... --> <p>Last modified: 2001-04-23</p> <p>Author: fred@example.com</p> </section>
However, it would be better marked-up as:
<section> <!-- ... --> <footer>Last modified: 2001-04-23</footer> <address>Author: fred@example.com</address> </section>
Or:
<section> <!-- ... --> <footer> <p>Last modified: 2001-04-23</p> <address>Author: fred@example.com</address> </footer> </section>
hr 要素HTMLElement を使用。The hr element represents a paragraph-level thematic break, e.g. a scene change
in a story, or a transition to another topic within a section of a
reference book.
br 要素HTMLElement を使用。The br element represents a line break.
br elements must be empty. Any content
inside br elements must not be considered
part of the surrounding text.
br elements must be used only for line
breaks that are actually part of the content, as in poems or addresses.
The following example is correct usage of the br element:
<p>P. Sherman<br> 42 Wallaby Way<br> Sydney</p>
br elements must not be used for
separating thematic groups in a paragraph.
The following examples are non-conforming, as they abuse the br element:
<p><a ...>34 comments.</a><br> <a ...>Add a comment.<a></p>
<p>Name: <input name="name"><br> Address: <input name="address"></p>
Here are alternatives to the above, which are correct:
<p><a ...>34 comments.</a></p> <p><a ...>Add a comment.<a></p>
<p>Name: <input name="name"></p> <p>Address: <input name="address"></p>
If a paragraph consists of nothing but a single
br element, it represents a placeholder
blank line (e.g. as in a template). Such blank lines must not be used for
presentation purposes.
pre 要素HTMLElement を使用。The pre element represents a block of
preformatted text, in which structure is represented by typographic
conventions rather than by elements.
In the HTML
serialization, a leading newline character
immediately following the pre element
start tag is stripped.
Some examples of cases where the pre
element could be used:
To represent a block of computer code, the pre element can be used with a code element; to represent a block of computer
output the pre element can be used with a
samp element. Similarly, the kbd element can be used within a pre element to indicate text that the user is to
enter.
In the following snippet, a sample of computer code is presented.
<p>This is the <code>Panel</code> constructor:</p>
<pre><code>function Panel(element, canClose, closeHandler) {
this.element = element;
this.canClose = canClose;
this.closeHandler = function () { if (closeHandler) closeHandler() };
}</code></pre>
In the following snippet, samp and
kbd elements are mixed in the contents of
a pre element to show a session of Zork
I.
<pre><samp>You are in an open field west of a big white house with a boarded front door. There is a small mailbox here. ></samp> <kbd>open mailbox</kbd> <samp>Opening the mailbox reveals: A leaflet. ></samp></pre>
The following shows a contemporary poem that uses the pre element to preserve its unusual formatting,
which forms an intrinsic part of the poem itself.
<pre> maxling
it is with a heart
heavy
that i admit loss of a feline
so loved
a friend lost to the
unknown
(night)
~cdr 11dec07</pre>
dialog 要素dt element
followed by one dd element.
HTMLElement を使用。The dialog element represents a
conversation.
Each part of the conversation must have an explicit talker (or speaker)
given by a dt element, and a discourse (or
quote) given by a dd element.
This example demonstrates this using an extract from Abbot and Costello's famous sketch, Who's on first:
<dialog> <dt> Costello <dd> Look, you gotta first baseman? <dt> Abbott <dd> Certainly. <dt> Costello <dd> Who's playing first? <dt> Abbott <dd> That's right. <dt> Costello <dd> When you pay off the first baseman every month, who gets the money? <dt> Abbott <dd> Every dollar of it. </dialog>
Text in a dt element in a
dialog element is implicitly the source
of the text given in the following dd
element, and the contents of the dd element
are implicitly a quote from that speaker. There is thus no need to include
cite, q,
or blockquote elements in this
markup. Indeed, a q element inside a
dd element in a conversation would actually
imply the people talking were themselves quoting another work. See the
cite, q,
and blockquote elements for other
ways to cite or quote.
blockquote 要素cite
interface HTMLQuoteElement : HTMLElement {
attribute DOMString cite;
};
The HTMLQuoteElement interface is also
used by the q element.
The blockquote element represents
a section that is quoted from another source.
Content inside a blockquote must
be quoted from another source, whose address, if it has one, should be
cited in the cite attribute.
If the cite
attribute is present, it must be a valid URL. User
agents should allow users to follow such citation links.
If a blockquote element is preceded or followed by a single paragraph that contains a single cite element and that is itself not preceded or followed by another blockquote element and does not itself have
a q element descendant, then, the title of
the work given by that cite element
gives the source of the quotation contained in the blockquote element.
cite DOM 属性は element's cite 内容属性を反映しなければなりません。
The best way to represent a conversation is not with the
cite and blockquote elements, but with the dialog element.
ol 要素li 要素。reversed
start
interface HTMLOListElement : HTMLElement {
attribute boolean reversed;
attribute long start;
};
The ol element represents a list of
items, where the items have been intentionally ordered, such that changing
the order would change the meaning of the document.
The items of the list are the li element
child nodes of the ol element, in tree order.
The reversed
attribute is a boolean attribute. If present, it
indicates that the list is a descending list (..., 3, 2, 1). If the
attribute is omitted, the list is an ascending list (1, 2, 3, ...).
The start
attribute, if present, must be a valid integer
giving the ordinal value of the first list item.
If the start
attribute is present, user agents must parse it as an integer, in order to determine the
attribute's value. The default value, used if the attribute is missing or
if the value cannot be converted to a number according to the referenced
algorithm, is 1 if the element has no reversed attribute, and is the number of child
li elements otherwise.
The first item in the list has the ordinal value given by the ol element's start attribute, unless that li element has a value attribute with a value that can be
successfully parsed, in which case it has the ordinal value given by that
value attribute.
Each subsequent item in the list has the ordinal value given by its
value attribute, if
it has one, or, if it doesn't, the ordinal value of the previous item,
plus one if the reversed is absent, or minus one if it is
present.
reversed DOM 属性は value of the reversed 内容属性を反映しなければなりません。
start DOM 属性は value of the start 内容属性を反映しなければなりません。
The following markup shows a list where the order matters, and where
the ol element is therefore appropriate.
Compare this list to the equivalent list in the ul section to see an example of the same items
using the ul element.
<p>I have lived in the following countries (given in the order of when I first lived there):</p> <ol> <li>Switzerland <li>United Kingdom <li>United States <li>Norway </ol>
Note how changing the order of the list changes the meaning of the document. In the following example, changing the relative order of the first two items has changed the birthplace of the author:
<p>I have lived in the following countries (given in the order of when I first lived there):</p> <ol> <li>United Kingdom <li>Switzerland <li>United States <li>Norway </ol>
ul 要素li 要素。HTMLElement を使用。ul 湯素は、項目の並びを表します。
ただし、項目の順序は重要ではない、
つまり順序変更が実質的に文書の意味を変更しない並びを表します。
並び中の項目は、 ul 要素中の
li 要素である子供節点です。
次のマーク付けは、順序が重要ではないので
ul 要素が適切であるような並びを示しています。
この並びと、 ol の節にある、
同じ項目で ol 要素を使った同じような並びを比べてみてください。
<p>私は次の国に住んでいました:</p>
<ul>
<li>ノルウェイ
<li>スイス
<li>イギリス
<li>アメリカ
</ul>
並びの順序を変えても文書の意味が変わらないことに注意してください。 先の例の項目は逆五十音順でしたが、次の例は2007年の経常収支の大きさの順です。 しかし、文書の意味は変わっていません。
<p>私は次の国に住んでいました:</p>
<ul>
<li>スイス
<li>ノルウェイ
<li>イギリス
<li>アメリカ
</ul>
li 要素ol elements.
ul elements.
menu elements.
menu
element: phrasing content.ol
element: value
ol element: None.
interface HTMLLIElement : HTMLElement {
attribute long value;
};
The li element represents a list item. If
its parent element is an ol, ul, or menu
element, then the element is an item of the parent element's list, as
defined for those elements. Otherwise, the list item has no defined
list-related relationship to any other li
element.
The value
attribute, if present, must be a valid integer
giving the ordinal value of the list item.
If the value
attribute is present, user agents must parse it as an integer, in order to determine the
attribute's value. If the attribute's value cannot be converted to a
number, the attribute must be treated as if it was absent. The attribute
has no default value.
The value
attribute is processed relative to the element's parent ol element (q.v.), if there is one. If there is not,
the attribute has no effect.
value DOM 属性は value of the value 内容属性を反映しなければなりません。
The following example, the top ten movies are listed (in reverse
order). Note the way the list is given a title by using a figure element and its legend.
<figure> <legend>The top 10 movies of all time</legend> <ol> <li value="10"><cite>Josie and the Pussycats</cite>, 2001</li> <li value="9"><cite lang="sh">Црна мачка, бели мачор</cite>, 1998</li> <li value="8"><cite>A Bug's Life</cite>, 1998</li> <li value="7"><cite>Toy Story</cite>, 1995</li> <li value="6"><cite>Monsters, Inc</cite>, 2001</li> <li value="5"><cite>Cars</cite>, 2006</li> <li value="4"><cite>Toy Story 2</cite>, 1999</li> <li value="3"><cite>Finding Nemo</cite>, 2003</li> <li value="2"><cite>The Incredibles</cite>, 2004</li> <li value="1"><cite>Ratatouille</cite>, 2007</li> </ol> </figure>
The markup could also be written as follows, using the reversed attribute
on the ol element:
<figure> <legend>The top 10 movies of all time</legend> <ol reversed> <li><cite>Josie and the Pussycats</cite>, 2001</li> <li><cite lang="sh">Црна мачка, бели мачор</cite>, 1998</li> <li><cite>A Bug's Life</cite>, 1998</li> <li><cite>Toy Story</cite>, 1995</li> <li><cite>Monsters, Inc</cite>, 2001</li> <li><cite>Cars</cite>, 2006</li> <li><cite>Toy Story 2</cite>, 1999</li> <li><cite>Finding Nemo</cite>, 2003</li> <li><cite>The Incredibles</cite>, 2004</li> <li><cite>Ratatouille</cite>, 2007</li> </ol> </figure>
If the li element is the child of a
menu element and itself has a child that
defines a command, then the
li element must match the :enabled and :disabled
pseudo-classes in the same way as the first such child element does.
dl 要素dt elements followed by one or more dd elements.
HTMLElement を使用。The dl element introduces an association
list consisting of zero or more name-value groups (a description list).
Each group must consist of one or more names (dt elements) followed by one or more values
(dd elements).
Name-value groups may be terms and definitions, metadata topics and values, or any other groups of name-value data.
The values within a group are alternatives; multiple paragraphs forming
part of the same value must all be given within the same dd element.
The order of the list of groups, and of the names and values within each group, may be significant.
If a dl element is empty, it contains no
groups.
If a dl element contains non-whitespace text nodes, or elements other than
dt and dd,
then those elements or text
nodes do not form part of any groups in that dl.
If a dl element contains only dt elements, then it consists of one group with
names but no values.
If a dl element contains only dd elements, then it consists of one group with
values but no names.
If a dl element starts with one or more
dd elements, then the first group has no
associated name.
If a dl element ends with one or more
dt elements, then the last group has no
associated value.
When a dl element doesn't
match its content model, it is often due to accidentally using dd elements in the place of dt elements and vice versa. Conformance checkers can
spot such mistakes and might be able to advise authors how to correctly
use the markup.
In the following example, one entry ("Authors") is linked to two values ("John" and "Luke").
<dl> <dt> Authors <dd> John <dd> Luke <dt> Editor <dd> Frank </dl>
In the following example, one definition is linked to two terms.
<dl> <dt lang="en-US"> <dfn>color</dfn> </dt> <dt lang="en-GB"> <dfn>colour</dfn> </dt> <dd> A sensation which (in humans) derives from the ability of the fine structure of the eye to distinguish three differently filtered analyses of a view. </dd> </dl>
The following example illustrates the use of the dl element to mark up metadata of sorts. At the end
of the example, one group has two metadata labels ("Authors" and
"Editors") and two values ("Robert Rothman" and "Daniel Jackson").
<dl> <dt> Last modified time </dt> <dd> 2004-12-23T23:33Z </dd> <dt> Recommended update interval </dt> <dd> 60s </dd> <dt> Authors </dt> <dt> Editors </dt> <dd> Robert Rothman </dd> <dd> Daniel Jackson </dd> </dl>
The following example shows the dl
element used to give a set of instructions. The order of the instructions
here is important (in the other examples, the order of the blocks was not
important).
<p>Determine the victory points as follows (use the first matching case):</p> <dl> <dt> If you have exactly five gold coins </dt> <dd> You get five victory points </dd> <dt> If you have one or more gold coins, and you have one or more silver coins </dt> <dd> You get two victory points </dd> <dt> If you have one or more silver coins </dt> <dd> You get one victory point </dd> <dt> Otherwise </dt> <dd> You get no victory points </dd> </dl>
The following snippet shows a dl element
being used as a glossary. Note the use of dfn to indicate the word being defined.
<dl> <dt><dfn>Apartment</dfn>, n.</dt> <dd>An execution context grouping one or more threads with one or more COM objects.</dd> <dt><dfn>Flat</dfn>, n.</dt> <dd>A deflated tire.</dd> <dt><dfn>Home</dfn>, n.</dt> <dd>The user's login directory.</dd> </dl>
The dl element is
inappropriate for marking up dialogue, since dialogue is ordered (each
speaker/line pair comes after the next). For an example of how to mark up
dialogue, see the dialog element.
dt 要素dl 要素中の
dd 要素か dt 要素の前。dialog 要素中の
dd 要素の前。HTMLElement を使用。dt 要素は、説明並び (dl 要素) 中の用語・説明の群の一部として、
用語や名前を表し、会話 (dialog 要素)
中の話者・談話の組の一部として、
話者を表します。
dt 要素自体は、
dl 要素中で用いられた場合にも、
その内容が定義される用語であると示してはいませんが、
dfn
要素を使ってそうであると示すことができます。
dt 要素が
dialog
要素の子供である場合で、かつ更に time
要素を含んでいる場合、その time
要素は関連付けられた談話 (dd 要素)
が話された時刻印を表し、話者の名前の一部ではありません。
次の抜粋は、即席メッセージの会話記録をどうマーク付けできるかを示しています。
<dialog> <dt> <time>14:22</time> egof <dd> I'm not that nerdy, I've only seen 30% of the star trek episodes <dt> <time>14:23</time> kaj <dd> if you know what percentage of the star trek episodes you have seen, you are inarguably nerdy <dt> <time>14:23</time> egof <dd> it's unarguably <dt> <time>14:24</time> kaj <dd> you are not helping your case </dialog>
dd 要素dl 要素中の
dt 要素か dd 要素の後。dialog 要素中の
dt
要素の後。HTMLElement を使用。dd 要素は、説明並び
(dl 要素) 中の用語・説明の群の一部として説明や定義や値を表し、
会話 (dialog 要素) の一部として談話や引用を表します。
a 要素href
target
ping
rel
media
hreflang
type
[Stringifies=href] interface HTMLAnchorElement : HTMLElement {
attribute DOMString href;
attribute DOMString target;
attribute DOMString ping;
attribute DOMString rel;
readonly attribute DOMTokenList relList;
attribute DOMString media;
attribute DOMString hreflang;
attribute DOMString type;
};
Command
界面もこの要素に実装しなければなりません。
a 要素が href 属性を持つ場合、
ハイパーリンクを表します。
a 要素が href
属性を持たない場合、その要素は、もし関係があったとするとリンクが置かれていたであろう場所に場所持ち子です。
The target, ping, rel, media, hreflang, and type attributes
must be omitted if the href attribute is not present.
あるサイトが各頁で共通の誘導ツールバーを用いている場合、
通常はその頁自体にリンクしているリンクは a
要素を用いてマーク付けすることができます。
<nav>
<ul>
<li> <a href="/">家</a> </li>
<li> <a href="/news">おしらせ</a> </li>
<li> <a>例</a> </li>
<li> <a href="/legal">法的事項</a> </li>
</ul>
</nav>
Interactive user agents should allow users to follow hyperlinks created using the
a element. The href, target and ping attributes
decide how the link is followed. The rel, media, hreflang, and type attributes may
be used to indicate to the user the likely nature of the target resource
before the user follows the link.
ハイパーリンクを表す a 要素の活性化動作は、
次の段階を動作させることです。
当該 DOMActivate 事象が信用できない場合 (つまり、
click()
メソッド呼び出しが事象の発送の理由である場合) で、 a 要素の target 属性が ... である場合、 INVALID_ACCESS_ERR
例外を発生させ、これらの段階を停止します。
DOMActivate 事象の対象が
img 要素で、その ismap 属性が指定されている場合、
鯖側画像写像処理を次のように行わなければなりません。
DOMActivate 事象が、現実に指示装置が誘発した
img 要素上の click 事象の結果として発送された場合、
x を画像の左辺からクリックの位置までの CSS 画素による距離とし、
y を画像の上辺からクリックの位置までの CSS 画素による距離とします。
それ以外の場合、 x と y
を零とします。最後に、利用者エージェントは a 要素で定義されるハイパーリンクをたどらなければなりません。
先の段階がハイパーリンク接尾辞を定義している場合、
これをハイパーリンクをたどる時に考慮に入れます。
One way that a user agent can enable users to follow
hyperlinks is by allowing a elements to be
clicked, or focussed and activated by the keyboard. This will cause the
aforementioned activation behavior to be
invoked.
DOM 属性 href, ping, target, rel, media, hreflang, type
は、それぞれ同じ名前の内容属性を反映しなければなりません。
DOM 属性 relList は rel 内容属性を反映しなければなりません。
The a element may be wrapped around
entire paragraphs, lists, tables, and so forth, even entire sections, so
long as there is no interactive content within (e.g. buttons or other
links). This example shows how this can be used to make an entire
advertising block into a link:
<aside class="advertising"> <h1>Advertising</h1> <a href="http://ad.example.com/?adid=1929&pubid=1422"> <section> <h1>Mellblomatic 9000!</h1> <p>Turn all your widgets into mellbloms!</p> <p>Only $9.99 plus shipping and handling.</p> </section> </a> <a href="http://ad.example.com/?adid=375&pubid=1422"> <section> <h1>The Mellblom Browser</h1> <p>Web browsing at the speed of light.</p> <p>No other browser goes faster!</p> </section> </a> </aside>
q 要素cite
q element uses the HTMLQuoteElement 界面。The q element represents some phrasing content quoted
from another source.
Quotation punctuation (such as quotation marks), if any, must be placed
inside the q element.
Content inside a q element must be quoted
from another source, whose address, if it has one, should be cited in the
cite attribute.
If the cite
attribute is present, it must be a valid URL. User
agents should allow users to follow such citation links.
If a q element is contained (directly or
indirectly) in a paragraph that contains a single
cite element and has no other q element descendants, then, the title of the work
given by that cite element gives the
source of the quotation contained in the q
element.
Here is a simple example of the use of the q element:
<p>The man said <q>"Things that are impossible just take longer"</q>. I disagreed with him.</p>
Here is an example with both an explicit citation link in the q element, and an explicit citation outside:
<p>The W3C page <cite>About W3C</cite> says the W3C's mission is <q cite="http://www.w3.org/Consortium/">"To lead the World Wide Web to its full potential by developing protocols and guidelines that ensure long-term growth for the Web"</q>. I disagree with this mission.</p>
In the following example, the quotation itself contains a quotation:
<p>In <cite>Example One</cite>, he writes <q>"The man said <q>'Things that are impossible just take longer'</q>. I disagreed with him"</q>. Well, I disagree even more!</p>
In the following example, there are no quotation marks:
<p>His best argument: <q>I disagree!</q></p>
cite 要素HTMLElement を使用。The cite element represents the title
of a work (e.g. a book, a paper, an essay, a poem, a score, a song, a
script, a film, a TV show, a game, a sculpture, a painting, a theatre
production, a play, an opera, a musical, an exhibition, etc). This can be
a work that is being quoted or referenced in detail (i.e. a citation), or
it can just be a work that is mentioned in passing.
A person's name is not the title of a work — even if people call
that person a piece of work — and the element must therefore not be
used to mark up people's names. (In some cases, the b element might be appropriate for names; e.g. in a
gossip article where the names of famous people are keywords rendered with
a different style to draw attention to them. In other cases, if an element
is really needed, the span
element can be used.)
A ship is similarly not a work, and the element must not be used to mark
up ship names (the i element can be used for
that purpose).
This next example shows a typical use of the cite element:
<p>My favourite book is <cite>The Reality Dysfunction</cite> by Peter F. Hamilton. My favourite comic is <cite>Pearls Before Swine</cite> by Stephan Pastis. My favourite track is <cite>Jive Samba</cite> by the Cannonball Adderley Sextet.</p>
This is correct usage:
<p>According to the Wikipedia article <cite>HTML</cite>, as it stood in mid-February 2008, leaving attribute values unquoted is unsafe. This is obviously an over-simplification.</p>
The following, however, is incorrect usage, as the cite element here is containing far more than
the title of the work:
<!-- do not copy this example, it is an example of bad usage! --> <p>According to <cite>the Wikipedia article on HTML</cite>, as it stood in mid-February 2008, leaving attribute values unquoted is unsafe. This is obviously an over-simplification.</p>
The cite element is obviously a key
part of any citation in a bibliography, but it is only used to mark the
title:
<p><cite>Universal Declaration of Human Rights</cite>, United Nations, December 1948. Adopted by General Assembly resolution 217 A (III).</p>
A citation is not a quote (for which the
q element is appropriate).
This is incorrect usage, because cite
is not for quotes:
<p><cite>This is wrong!</cite>, said Ian.</p>
This is also incorrect usage, because a person is not a work:
<p><q>This is still wrong!</q>, said <cite>Ian</cite>.</p>
The correct usage does not use a cite
element:
<p><q>This is correct</q>, said Ian.</p>
As mentioned above, the b element might
be relevant for marking names as being keywords in certain kinds of
documents:
<p>And then <b>Ian</b> said <q>this might be right, in a gossip column, maybe!</q>.</p>
The cite element can apply
to blockquote and q elements in certain cases described in the
definitions of those elements.
This next example shows the use of cite alongside blockquote:
<p>His next piece was the aptly named <cite>Sonnet 130</cite>:</p> <blockquote> <p>My mistress' eyes are nothing like the sun,<br> Coral is far more red, than her lips red, ...
em 要素HTMLElement を使用。The em element represents stress emphasis
of its contents.
The level of emphasis that a particular piece of content has is given by
its number of ancestor em elements.
The placement of emphasis changes the meaning of the sentence. The element thus forms an integral part of the content. The precise way in which emphasis is used in this way depends on the language.
These examples show how changing the emphasis changes the meaning. First, a general statement of fact, with no emphasis:
<p>Cats are cute animals.</p>
By emphasizing the first word, the statement implies that the kind of animal under discussion is in question (maybe someone is asserting that dogs are cute):
<p><em>Cats</em> are cute animals.</p>
Moving the emphasis to the verb, one highlights that the truth of the entire sentence is in question (maybe someone is saying cats are not cute):
<p>Cats <em>are</em> cute animals.</p>
By moving it to the adjective, the exact nature of the cats is reasserted (maybe someone suggested cats were mean animals):
<p>Cats are <em>cute</em> animals.</p>
Similarly, if someone asserted that cats were vegetables, someone correcting this might emphasize the last word:
<p>Cats are cute <em>animals</em>.</p>
By emphasizing the entire sentence, it becomes clear that the speaker is fighting hard to get the point across. This kind of emphasis also typically affects the punctuation, hence the exclamation mark here.
<p><em>Cats are cute animals!</em></p>
Anger mixed with emphasizing the cuteness could lead to markup such as:
<p><em>Cats are <em>cute</em> animals!</em></p>
strong 要素HTMLElement を使用。The strong element represents strong
importance for its contents.
The relative level of importance of a piece of content is given by its
number of ancestor strong elements;
each strong element increases the
importance of its contents.
Changing the importance of a piece of text with the strong element does not change the meaning of
the sentence.
Here is an example of a warning notice in a game, with the various parts marked up according to how important they are:
<p><strong>Warning.</strong> This dungeon is dangerous. <strong>Avoid the ducks.</strong> Take any gold you find. <strong><strong>Do not take any of the diamonds</strong>, they are explosive and <strong>will destroy anything within ten meters.</strong></strong> You have been warned.</p>
small 要素HTMLElement を使用。The small element represents small
print (part of a document often describing legal restrictions, such as
copyrights or other disadvantages), or other side comments.
The small element does not
"de-emphasize" or lower the importance of text emphasised by the em element or marked as important with the strong element.
In this example the footer contains contact information and a copyright.
<footer> <address> For more details, contact <a href="mailto:js@example.com">John Smith</a>. </address> <p><small>© copyright 2038 Example Corp.</small></p> </footer>
In this second example, the small
element is used for a side comment.
<p>Example Corp today announced record profits for the second quarter <small>(Full Disclosure: Foo News is a subsidiary of Example Corp)</small>, leading to speculation about a third quarter merger with Demo Group.</p>
In this last example, the small
element is marked as being important small print.
<p><strong><small>Continued use of this service will result in a kiss.</small></strong></p>
mark 要素HTMLElement を使用。The mark element represents a run of
text in one document marked or highlighted for reference purposes, due to
its relevance in another context. When used in a quotation or other block
of text referred to from the prose, it indicates a highlight that was not
originally present but which has been added to bring the reader's
attention to a part of the text that might not have been considered
important by the original author when the block was originally written,
but which is now under previously unexpected scrutiny. When used in the
main prose of a document, it indicates a part of the document that has
been highlighted due to its likely relevance to the user's current
activity.
The rendering section will eventually suggest that user
agents provide a way to let users jump between mark elements. Suggested rendering is a neon
yellow background highlight, though UAs maybe should allow this to be
toggled.
This example shows how the mark
example can be used to bring attention to a particular part of a
quotation:
<p lang="en-US">Consider the following quote:</p> <blockquote lang="en-GB"> <p>Look around and you will find, no-one's really <mark>colour</mark> blind.</p> </blockquote> <p lang="en-US">As we can tell from the <em>spelling</em> of the word, the person writing this quote is clearly not American.</p>
Another example of the mark element is
highlighting parts of a document that are matching some search string. If
someone looked at a document, and the server knew that the user was
searching for the word "kitten", then the server might return the
document with one paragraph modified as follows:
<p>I also have some <mark>kitten</mark>s who are visiting me these days. They're really cute. I think they like my garden! Maybe I should adopt a <mark>kitten</mark>.</p>
In the following snippet, a paragraph of text refers to a specific part of a code fragment.
<p>The highlighted part below is where the error lies:</p> <pre><code>var i: Integer; begin i := <mark>1.1</mark>; end.</code></pre>
This is another example showing the use of mark to highlight a part of quoted text that was
originally not emphasised. In this example, common typographic
conventions have led the author to explicitly style mark elements in quotes to render in italics.
<article>
<style>
blockquote mark, q mark {
font: inherit; font-style: italic;
text-decoration: none;
background: transparent; color: inherit;
}
.bubble em {
font: inherit; font-size: larger;
text-decoration: underline;
}
</style>
<h1>She knew</h1>
<p>Did you notice the subtle joke in the joke on panel 4?</p>
<blockquote>
<p class="bubble">I didn't <em>want</em> to believe. <mark>Of course
on some level I realized it was a known-plaintext attack.</mark> But I
couldn't admit it until I saw for myself.</p>
</blockquote>
<p>(Emphasis mine.) I thought that was great. It's so pedantic, yet it
explains everything neatly.</p>
</article>
Note, incidentally, the distinction between the em element in this example, which is part of the
original text being quoted, and the mark
element, which is highlighting a part for comment.
The following example shows the difference between denoting the
importance of a span of text (strong) as opposed to denoting the
relevance of a span of text (mark). It is an extract from a textbook, where
the extract has had the parts relevant to the exam highlighted. The
safety warnings, important though they may be, are apparently not
relevant to the exam.
<h3>Wormhole Physics Introduction</h3> <p><mark>A wormhole in normal conditions can be held open for a maximum of just under 39 minutes.</mark> Conditions that can increase the time include a powerful energy source coupled to one or both of the gates connecting the wormhole, and a large gravity well (such as a black hole).</p> <p><mark>Momentum is preserved across the wormhole. Electromagnetic radiation can travel in both directions through a wormhole, but matter cannot.</mark></p> <p>When a wormhole is created, a vortex normally forms. <strong>Warning: The vortex caused by the wormhole opening will annihilate anything in its path.</strong> Vortexes can be avoided when using sufficiently advanced dialing technology.</p> <p><mark>An obstruction in a gate will prevent it from accepting a wormhole connection.</mark></p>
dfn 要素dfn elements.
title attribute has special semantics on this
element.
HTMLElement を使用。The dfn element represents the defining
instance of a term. The paragraph, description list
group, or section that is the nearest ancestor of the dfn element must also contain the definition(s) for
the term given by the
dfn element.
Defining term: If the dfn element has a title attribute, then the exact
value of that attribute is the term being defined. Otherwise, if it
contains exactly one element child node and no child text nodes, and that child element is an abbr element with a title attribute, then the exact value of
that attribute is the term being defined. Otherwise, it is the
exact textContent of the dfn element that gives the term being defined.
If the title
attribute of the dfn element is present,
then it must contain only the term being defined.
The title
attribute of ancestor elements does not affect dfn elements.
An a element that links to a dfn element represents an instance of the term
defined by the dfn element.
In the following fragment, the term "GDO" is first defined in the first paragraph, then used in the second.
<p>The <dfn><abbr title="Garage Door Opener">GDO</abbr></dfn> is a device that allows off-world teams to open the iris.</p> <!-- ... later in the document: --> <p>Teal'c activated his <abbr title="Garage Door Opener">GDO</abbr> and so Hammond ordered the iris to be opened.</p>
With the addition of an a element, the
reference can be made explicit:
<p>The <dfn id=gdo><abbr title="Garage Door Opener">GDO</abbr></dfn> is a device that allows off-world teams to open the iris.</p> <!-- ... later in the document: --> <p>Teal'c activated his <a href=#gdo><abbr title="Garage Door Opener">GDO</abbr></a> and so Hammond ordered the iris to be opened.</p>
abbr 要素title attribute has special semantics on this
element.
HTMLElement を使用。The abbr element represents an
abbreviation or acronym, optionally with its expansion. The title attribute may be used to
provide an expansion of the abbreviation. The attribute, if specified,
must contain an expansion of the abbreviation, and nothing else.
The paragraph below contains an abbreviation marked up with the
abbr element. This paragraph defines the term "Web
Hypertext Application Technology Working Group".
<p>The <dfn id=whatwg><abbr title="Web Hypertext Application Technology Working Group">WHATWG</abbr></dfn> is a loose unofficial collaboration of Web browser manufacturers and interested parties who wish to develop new technologies designed to allow authors to write and deploy Applications over the World Wide Web.</p>
This paragraph has two abbreviations. Notice how only one is defined;
the other, with no expansion associated with it, does not use the
abbr element.
<p>The <abbr title="Web Hypertext Application Technology Working Group">WHATWG</abbr> started working on HTML5 in 2004.</p>
This paragraph links an abbreviation to its definition.
<p>The <a href="#whatwg"><abbr title="Web Hypertext Application Technology Working Group">WHATWG</abbr></a> community does not have much representation from Asia.</p>
This paragraph marks up an abbreviation without giving an expansion, possibly as a hook to apply styles for abbreviations (e.g. smallcaps).
<p>Philip` and Dashiva both denied that they were going to get the issue counts from past revisions of the specification to backfill the <abbr>WHATWG</abbr> issue graph.</p>
If an abbreviation is pluralized, the expansion's grammatical number (plural vs singular) must match the grammatical number of the contents of the element.
Here the plural is outside the element, so the expansion is in the singular:
<p>Two <abbr title="Working Group">WG</abbr>s worked on this specification: the <abbr>WHATWG</abbr> and the <abbr>HTMLWG</abbr>.</p>
Here the plural is inside the element, so the expansion is in the plural:
<p>Two <abbr title="Working Groups">WGs</abbr> worked on this specification: the <abbr>WHATWG</abbr> and the <abbr>HTMLWG</abbr>.</p>
time 要素datetime
interface HTMLTimeElement : HTMLElement {
attribute DOMString dateTime;
readonly attribute DOMTimeStamp date;
readonly attribute DOMTimeStamp time;
readonly attribute DOMTimeStamp timezone;
};
The time element represents a date
and/or a time.
The datetime attribute, if
present, must contain a date or time string that
identifies the date or time being specified.
If the datetime attribute is not present, then the
date or time must be specified in the content of the element, such that
parsing the element's textContent
according to the rules for parsing date or time strings in content successfully
extracts a date or time.
dateTime DOM 属性は datetime 内容属性を反映しなければなりません。
User agents, to obtain the date, time, and timezone represented by a time element, must follow these steps:
datetime attribute is present, then parse it
according to the rules for parsing date or time strings in attributes, and
let the result be result.
textContent according to the rules for
parsing date or time strings in content, and let the result be
result.
The date DOM
attribute must return null if the date is unknown, and otherwise must return the
time corresponding to midnight UTC (i.e. the first second) of the given date.
The time DOM
attribute must return null if the time is unknown, and otherwise must return the
time corresponding to the given time of 1970-01-01, with the timezone UTC.
The timezone DOM attribute must
return null if the timezone is unknown, and otherwise must
return the time corresponding to 1970-01-01 00:00 UTC in the given timezone, with the
timezone set to UTC (i.e. the time corresponding to 1970-01-01 at 00:00
UTC plus the offset corresponding to the timezone).
In the following snippet:
<p>Our first date was <time datetime="2006-09-23">a Saturday</time>.</p>
...the time element's date attribute would have
the value 1,158,969,600,000ms, and the time and timezone attributes would return null.
In the following snippet:
<p>We stopped talking at <time datetime="2006-09-24 05:00 -7">5am the next morning</time>.</p>
...the time element's date attribute would have
the value 1,159,056,000,000ms, the time attribute would have the value
18,000,000ms, and the timezone attribute would return
−25,200,000ms. To obtain the actual time, the three attributes can
be added together, obtaining 1,159,048,800,000, which is the specified
date and time in UTC.
Finally, in the following snippet:
<p>Many people get up at <time>08:00</time>.</p>
...the time element's date attribute would have
the value null, the time attribute would have the value
28,800,000ms, and the timezone attribute would return null.
These APIs may be suboptimal. Comments on making them more useful to JS authors are welcome. The primary use cases for these elements are for marking up publication dates e.g. in blog entries, and for marking event dates in hCalendar markup. Thus the DOM APIs are likely to be used as ways to generate interactive calendar widgets or some such.
progress 要素value
max
interface HTMLProgressElement : HTMLElement {
attribute float value;
attribute float max;
readonly attribute float position;
};
The progress element represents the
completion progress of a task. The progress is either indeterminate,
indicating that progress is being made but that it is not clear how much
more work remains to be done before the task is complete (e.g. because the
task is waiting for a remote host to respond), or the progress is a number
in the range zero to a maximum, giving the fraction of work that has so
far been completed.
There are two attributes that determine the current task completion represented by the element.
The value
attribute specifies how much of the task has been completed, and the max attribute specifies
how much work the task requires in total. The units are arbitrary and not
specified.
Instead of using the attributes, authors are recommended to include the current value and the maximum value inline as text inside the element.
Here is a snippet of a Web application that shows the progress of some automated task:
<section>
<h2>Task Progress</h2>
<p>Progress: <progress><span id="p">0</span>%</progress></p>
<script>
var progressBar = document.getElementById('p');
function updateProgress(newValue) {
progressBar.textContent = newValue;
}
</script>
</section>
(The updateProgress() method in this example would be
called by some other code on the page to update the actual progress bar
as the task progressed.)
Author requirements: The max and value attributes,
when present, must have values that are valid floating point numbers. The max attribute, if
present, must have a value greater than zero. The value attribute, if
present, must have a value equal to or greater than zero, and less than or
equal to the value of the max attribute, if present.
The progress element is
the wrong element to use for something that is just a gauge, as opposed to
task progress. For instance, indicating disk space usage using progress would be inappropriate. Instead, the
meter element is available for such use
cases.
User agent requirements: User agents must parse the
max and value attributes'
values according to the rules for parsing floating point
number values.
If the value attribute is omitted, then user agents
must also parse the textContent of
the progress element in question
using the steps for finding one or two numbers of a ratio
in a string. These steps will return nothing, one number, one number
with a denominator punctuation character, or two numbers.
Using the results of this processing, user agents must determine whether the progress bar is an indeterminate progress bar, or whether it is a determinate progress bar, and in the latter case, what its current and maximum values are, all as follows:
max
attribute is omitted, and the value is omitted, and the results of parsing
the textContent was nothing, then
the progress bar is an indeterminate progress bar. Abort these steps.
max
attribute is included, then, if a value could be parsed out of it, then
the maximum value is that value.
max attribute is absent but the value attribute is
present, or, if the max attribute is present but no value could be
parsed from it, then the maximum is 1.
textContent contained one number with an
associated denominator punctuation character, then the maximum value is
the value associated with that denominator punctuation
character; otherwise, if the textContent contained two numbers, the
maximum value is the higher of the two values; otherwise, the maximum
value is 1.
value attribute is present on the element and a
value could be parsed out of it, that value is the current value of the
progress bar. Otherwise, if the attribute is present but no value could
be parsed from it, the current value is zero.
value attribute is absent and the max attribute is
present, then, if the textContent
was parsed and found to contain just one number, with no associated
denominator punctuation character, then the current value is that number.
Otherwise, if the value attribute is absent and the max attribute is
present then the current value is zero.
textContent of the element.
UA requirements for showing the progress bar: When
representing a progress element to
the user, the UA should indicate whether it is a determinate or
indeterminate progress bar, and in the former case, should indicate the
relative position of the current value relative to the maximum value.
The max and value DOM attributes
must reflect the elements' content attributes of
the same name. When the relevant content attributes are absent, the DOM
attributes must return zero. The value parsed from the textContent never affects the DOM values.
Would be cool to have the value DOM attribute
update the textContent in-line...
If the progress bar is an indeterminate progress bar, then the position DOM
attribute must return −1. Otherwise, it must return the result of
dividing the current value by the maximum value.
meter 要素value
min
low
high
max
optimum
interface HTMLMeterElement : HTMLElement {
attribute float value;
attribute float min;
attribute float max;
attribute float low;
attribute float high;
attribute float optimum;
};
The meter element represents a scalar
measurement within a known range, or a fractional value; for example disk
usage, the relevance of a query result, or the fraction of a voting
population to have selected a particular candidate.
This is also known as a gauge.
The meter element should
not be used to indicate progress (as in a progress bar). For that role,
HTML provides a separate progress
element.
The meter element also does
not represent a scalar value of arbitrary range — for example, it
would be wrong to use this to report a weight, or height, unless there is
a known maximum value.
There are six attributes that determine the semantics of the gauge represented by the element.
The min attribute
specifies the lower bound of the range, and the max attribute specifies the upper
bound. The value
attribute specifies the value to have the gauge indicate as the "measured"
value.
The other three attributes can be used to segment the gauge's range into
"low", "medium", and "high" parts, and to indicate which part of the gauge
is the "optimum" part. The low attribute specifies the range
that is considered to be the "low" part, and the high attribute specifies the
range that is considered to be the "high" part. The optimum attribute gives the
position that is "optimum"; if that is higher than the "high" value then
this indicates that the higher the value, the better; if it's lower than
the "low" mark then it indicates that lower values are better, and
naturally if it is in between then it indicates that neither high nor low
values are good.
Authoring requirements: The recommended way of giving the value is to include it as contents of the element, either as two numbers (the higher number represents the maximum, the other number the current value, and the minimum is assumed to be zero), or as a percentage or similar (using one of the characters such as "%"), or as a fraction.
The value,
min, low, high, max, and optimum attributes
are all optional. When present, they must have values that are valid floating point
numbers, and their values must satisfy the following inequalities:
All meter elements must have a value
specified somehow, either using the value attribute or by including a number in the
contents of the element.
If no minimum or maximum is specified, then the range is assumed to be 0..1, and the value thus has to be within that range.
The following examples all represent a measurement of three quarters (of the maximum of whatever is being measured):
<meter>75%</meter> <meter>750‰</meter> <meter>3/4</meter> <meter>6 blocks used (out of 8 total)</meter> <meter>max: 100; current: 75</meter> <meter><object data="graph75.png">0.75</object></meter> <meter min="0" max="100" value="75"></meter>
The following example is incorrect use of the element, because it doesn't give a range (and since the default maximum is 1, both of the gauges would end up looking maxed out):
<p>The grapefruit pie had a radius of <meter>12cm</meter> and a height of <meter>2cm</meter>.</p> <!-- BAD! -->
Instead, one would either not include the meter element, or use the meter element with a defined range to give the dimensions in context compared to other pies:
<p>The grapefruit pie had a radius of 12cm and a height of 2cm.</p> <dl> <dt>Radius: <dd> <meter min=0 max=20 value=12>12cm</meter> <dt>Height: <dd> <meter min=0 max=10 value=2>2cm</meter> </dl>
There is no explicit way to specify units in the meter element, but the units may be specified in
the title attribute in
free-form text.
The example above could be extended to mention the units:
<dl> <dt>Radius: <dd> <meter min=0 max=20 value=12 title="centimeters">12cm</meter> <dt>Height: <dd> <meter min=0 max=10 value=2 title="centimeters">2cm</meter> </dl>
利用者エージェント要件:
利用者エージェントは、属性
min、max、value、low、high、optimum
を浮動小数点値を構文解析する規則を使って構文解析しなければなりません。
利用者エージェントは、
value
属性が省略されている場合、
要素の textContent をも文字列中の比率の1つか2つの数字を探す段階に従い処理しなければなりません。
この段階は何も返さないか、1つの数を返すか、1つの数と分母句読点文字を返すか、
2つの数を返します。
利用者エージェントは、その後、これらすべての数を、 計器の6点の値を得るために次のように使わなければなりません。 (これらが評価される順序は重要です。ある値が前の値を参照していたりします。)
If the min
attribute is specified and a value could be parsed out of it, then the
minimum value is that value. Otherwise, the minimum value is zero.
If the max
attribute is specified and a value could be parsed out of it, the
maximum value is that value.
Otherwise, if the max attribute is specified but no value could be
parsed out of it, or if it was not specified, but either or both of the
min or value attributes
were specified, then the maximum value is 1.
Otherwise, none of the max, min, and value attributes were specified. If the result
of processing the textContent of
the element was either nothing or just one number with no denominator
punctuation character, then the maximum value is 1; if the result was
one number but it had an associated denominator punctuation character,
then the maximum value is the value associated
with that denominator punctuation character; and finally, if there
were two numbers parsed out of the textContent, then the maximum is the
higher of those two numbers.
If the above machinations result in a maximum value less than the minimum value, then the maximum value is actually the same as the minimum value.
If the value
attribute is specified and a value could be parsed out of it, then that
value is the actual value.
If the value
attribute is not specified but the max attribute is specified and the
result of processing the textContent of the element was one number
with no associated denominator punctuation character, then that number
is the actual value.
If neither of the value and max attributes are specified, then, if the
result of processing the textContent of the element was one number
(with or without an associated denominator punctuation character), then
that is the actual value, and if the result of processing the textContent of the element was two
numbers, then the actual value is the lower of the two numbers found.
Otherwise, if none of the above apply, the actual value is zero.
If the above procedure results in an actual value less than the minimum value, then the actual value is actually the same as the minimum value.
If, on the other hand, the result is an actual value greater than the maximum value, then the actual value is the maximum value.
If the low
attribute is specified and a value could be parsed out of it, then the
low boundary is that value. Otherwise, the low boundary is the same as
the minimum value.
If the above results in a low boundary that is less than the minimum value, the low boundary is the minimum value.
If the high
attribute is specified and a value could be parsed out of it, then the
high boundary is that value. Otherwise, the high boundary is the same as
the maximum value.
If the above results in a high boundary that is higher than the maximum value, the high boundary is the maximum value.
If the optimum attribute is specified and a value
could be parsed out of it, then the optimum point is that value.
Otherwise, the optimum point is the midpoint between the minimum value
and the maximum value.
If the optimum point is then less than the minimum value, then the optimum point is actually the same as the minimum value. Similarly, if the optimum point is greater than the maximum value, then it is actually the maximum value instead.
All of which should result in the following inequalities all being true:
UA requirements for regions of the gauge: If the optimum point is equal to the low boundary or the high boundary, or anywhere in between them, then the region between the low and high boundaries of the gauge must be treated as the optimum region, and the low and high parts, if any, must be treated as suboptimal. Otherwise, if the optimum point is less than the low boundary, then the region between the minimum value and the low boundary must be treated as the optimum region, the region between the low boundary and the high boundary must be treated as a suboptimal region, and the region between the high boundary and the maximum value must be treated as an even less good region. Finally, if the optimum point is higher than the high boundary, then the situation is reversed; the region between the high boundary and the maximum value must be treated as the optimum region, the region between the high boundary and the low boundary must be treated as a suboptimal region, and the remaining region between the low boundary and the minimum value must be treated as an even less good region.
UA requirements for showing the gauge: When
representing a meter element to the
user, the UA should indicate the relative position of the actual value to
the minimum and maximum values, and the relationship between the actual
value and the three regions of the gauge.
次に示すマーク付けは・・・
<h3>Suggested groups</h3>
<menu type="toolbar">
<a href="?cmd=hsg" onclick="hideSuggestedGroups()">Hide suggested groups</a>
</menu>
<ul>
<li>
<p><a href="/group/comp.infosystems.www.authoring.stylesheets/view">comp.infosystems.www.authoring.stylesheets</a> -
<a href="/group/comp.infosystems.www.authoring.stylesheets/subscribe">join</a></p>
<p>Group description: <strong>Layout/presentation on the WWW.</strong></p>
<p><meter value="0.5">Moderate activity,</meter> Usenet, 618 subscribers</p>
</li>
<li>
<p><a href="/group/netscape.public.mozilla.xpinstall/view">netscape.public.mozilla.xpinstall</a> -
<a href="/group/netscape.public.mozilla.xpinstall/subscribe">join</a></p>
<p>Group description: <strong>Mozilla XPInstall discussion.</strong></p>
<p><meter value="0.25">Low activity,</meter> Usenet, 22 subscribers</p>
</li>
<li>
<p><a href="/group/mozilla.dev.general/view">mozilla.dev.general</a> -
<a href="/group/mozilla.dev.general/subscribe">join</a></p>
<p><meter value="0.25">Low activity,</meter> Usenet, 66 subscribers</p>
</li>
</ul>
次のようにレンダリングされましょう。

User agents may combine the value of the title attribute and the other attributes to
provide context-sensitive help or inline text detailing the actual values.
For example, the following snippet:
<meter min=0 max=60 value=23.2 title=seconds></meter>
...might cause the user agent to display a gauge with a tooltip saying "Value: 23.2 out of 60." on one line and "seconds" on a second line.
The min, max, value, low, high, and optimum DOM attributes must reflect the elements' content attributes of the same
name. When the relevant content attributes are absent, the DOM attributes
must return zero. The value parsed from the textContent never affects the DOM values.
Would be cool to have the value DOM attribute update the textContent in-line...
code 要素HTMLElement を使用。The code element represents a fragment
of computer code. This could be an XML element name, a filename, a
computer program, or any other string that a computer would recognize.
Although there is no formal way to indicate the language of computer
code being marked up, authors who wish to mark code elements with the language used, e.g. so that
syntax highlighting scripts can use the right rules, may do so by adding a
class prefixed with "language-" to the element.
The following example shows how the element can be used in a paragraph to mark up element names and computer code, including punctuation.
<p>The <code>code</code> element represents a fragment of computer code.</p> <p>When you call the <code>activate()</code> method on the <code>robotSnowman</code> object, the eyes glow.</p> <p>The example below uses the <code>begin</code> keyword to indicate the start of a statement block. It is paired with an <code>end</code> keyword, which is followed by the <code>.</code> punctuation character (full stop) to indicate the end of the program.</p>
The following example shows how a block of code could be marked up
using the pre and code elements.
<pre><code class="language-pascal">var i: Integer; begin i := 1; end.</code></pre>
A class is used in that example to indicate the language used.
See the pre element for more
details.
var 要素HTMLElement を使用。The var element represents a variable.
This could be an actual variable in a mathematical expression or
programming context, or it could just be a term used as a placeholder in
prose.
In the paragraph below, the letter "n" is being used as a variable in prose:
<p>If there are <var>n</var> pipes leading to the ice cream factory then I expect at <em>least</em> <var>n</var> flavours of ice cream to be available for purchase!</p>
samp 要素HTMLElement を使用。The samp element represents (sample)
output from a program or computing system.
See the pre and kbd elements for more details.
This example shows the samp element
being used inline:
<p>The computer said <samp>Too much cheese in tray two</samp> but I didn't know what that meant.</p>
This second example shows a block of sample output. Nested samp and kbd
elements allow for the styling of specific elements of the sample output
using a style sheet.
<pre><samp><samp class="prompt">jdoe@mowmow:~$</samp> <kbd>ssh demo.example.com</kbd> Last login: Tue Apr 12 09:10:17 2005 from mowmow.example.com on pts/1 Linux demo 2.6.10-grsec+gg3+e+fhs6b+nfs+gr0501+++p3+c4a+gr2b-reslog-v6.189 #1 SMP Tue Feb 1 11:22:36 PST 2005 i686 unknown <samp class="prompt">jdoe@demo:~$</samp> <samp class="cursor">_</samp></samp></pre>
kbd 要素HTMLElement を使用。The kbd element represents user input
(typically keyboard input, although it may also be used to represent other
input, such as voice commands).
When the kbd element is nested inside a
samp element, it represents the input as
it was echoed by the system.
When the kbd element contains a
samp element, it represents input based
on system output, for example invoking a menu item.
When the kbd element is nested inside
another kbd element, it represents an
actual key or other single unit of input as appropriate for the input
mechanism.
Here the kbd element is used to
indicate keys to press:
<p>To make George eat an apple, press <kbd><kbd>Shift</kbd>+<kbd>F3</kbd></kbd></p>
In this second example, the user is told to pick a particular menu
item. The outer kbd element marks up a
block of input, with the inner kbd
elements representing each individual step of the input, and the samp elements inside them indicating that the
steps are input based on something being displayed by the system, in this
case menu labels:
<p>To make George eat an apple, select
<kbd><kbd><samp>File</samp></kbd>|<kbd><samp>Eat Apple...</samp></kbd></kbd>
</p>
sub and sup
elementsHTMLElement を使用。The sup element represents a superscript
and the sub element represents a
subscript.
These elements must be used only to mark up typographical conventions
with specific meanings, not for typographical presentation for
presentation's sake. For example, it would be inappropriate for the
sub and sup elements to be used in the name of the LaTeX
document preparation system. In general, authors should use these elements
only if the absence of those elements would change the meaning of
the content.
When the sub element is used inside a
var element, it represents the subscript
that identifies the variable in a family of variables.
<p>The coordinate of the <var>i</var>th point is (<var>x<sub><var>i</var></sub></var>, <var>y<sub><var>i</var></sub></var>). For example, the 10th point has coordinate (<var>x<sub>10</sub></var>, <var>y<sub>10</sub></var>).</p>
In certain languages, superscripts are part of the typographical conventions for some abbreviations.
<p>The most beautiful women are <span lang="fr"><abbr>M<sup>lle</sup></abbr> Gwendoline</span> and <span lang="fr"><abbr>M<sup>me</sup></abbr> Denise</span>.</p>
Mathematical expressions often use subscripts and superscripts. Authors
are encouraged to use MathML for marking up mathematics, but authors may
opt to use sub and sup if detailed mathematical markup is not desired.
[MathML]
<var>E</var>=<var>m</var><var>c</var><sup>2</sup>
f(<var>x</var>, <var>n</var>) = log<sub>4</sub><var>x</var><sup><var>n</var></sup>
span 要素HTMLElement を使用。The span element doesn't mean anything
on its own, but can be useful when used together with other attributes,
e.g. class, lang, or dir.
i 要素HTMLElement を使用。The i element represents a span of text in
an alternate voice or mood, or otherwise offset from the normal prose,
such as a taxonomic designation, a technical term, an idiomatic phrase
from another language, a thought, a ship name, or some other prose whose
typical typographic presentation is italicized.
Terms in languages different from the main text should be annotated with
lang attributes (xml:lang in XML).
The examples below show uses of the i
element:
<p>The <i class="taxonomy">Felis silvestris catus</i> is cute.</p> <p>The term <i>prose content</i> is defined above.</p> <p>There is a certain <i lang="fr">je ne sais quoi</i> in the air.</p>
In the following example, a dream sequence is marked up using i elements.
<p>Raymond tried to sleep.</p> <p><i>The ship sailed away on Thursday</i>, he dreamt. <i>The ship had many people aboard, including a beautiful princess called Carey. He watched her, day-in, day-out, hoping she would notice him, but she never did.</i></p> <p><i>Finally one night he picked up the courage to speak with her—</i></p> <p>Raymond woke with a start as the fire alarm rang out.</p>
The i element should be used as a last
resort when no other element is more appropriate. In particular, citations
should use the cite element, defining
instances of terms should use the dfn
element, stress emphasis should use the em
element, importance should be denoted with the strong element, quotes should be marked up with
the q element, and small print should use
the small element.
Authors are encouraged to use the class attribute on the i element to identify why the element is being used,
so that if the style of a particular use (e.g. dream sequences as opposed
to taxonomic terms) is to be changed at a later date, the author doesn't
have to go through the entire document (or series of related documents)
annotating each use.
Style sheets can be used to format i elements, just like any other element can be
restyled. Thus, it is not the case that content in i elements will necessarily be italicized.
b 要素HTMLElement を使用。The b element represents a span of text to
be stylistically offset from the normal prose without conveying any extra
importance, such as key words in a document abstract, product names in a
review, or other spans of text whose typical typographic presentation is
boldened.
The following example shows a use of the b element to highlight key words without marking
them up as important:
<p>The <b>frobonitor</b> and <b>barbinator</b> components are fried.</p>
In the following example, objects in a text adventure are highlighted
as being special by use of the b element.
<p>You enter a small room. Your <b>sword</b> glows brighter. A <b>rat</b> scurries past the corner wall.</p>
Another case where the b element is
appropriate is in marking up the lede (or lead) sentence or paragraph.
The following example shows how a BBC
article about kittens adopting a rabbit as their own could be marked
up using HTML5 elements:
<article> <h2>Kittens 'adopted' by pet rabbit</h2> <p><b>Six abandoned kittens have found an unexpected new mother figure — a pet rabbit.</b></p> <p>Veterinary nurse Melanie Humble took the three-week-old kittens to her Aberdeen home.</p> [...]
The b element should be used as a last
resort when no other element is more appropriate. In particular, headers
should use the h1 to h6 elements, stress emphasis should use the em element, importance should be denoted with the
strong element, and text marked or
highlighted should use the mark element.
The following would be incorrect usage:
<p><b>WARNING!</b> Do not frob the barbinator!</p>
In the previous example, the correct element to use would have been
strong, not b.
Style sheets can be used to format b elements, just like any other element can be
restyled. Thus, it is not the case that content in b elements will necessarily be boldened.
bdo 要素dir
global attribute has special requirements on this element.
HTMLElement を使用。The bdo element allows authors to
override the Unicode bidi algorithm by explicitly specifying a direction
override. [BIDI]
Authors must specify the dir attribute on this element, with the value
ltr to specify a left-to-right override and with the value
rtl to specify a right-to-left override.
If the element has the dir attribute set to the exact value
ltr, then for the purposes of the bidi algorithm, the user
agent must act as if there was a U+202D LEFT-TO-RIGHT OVERRIDE character
at the start of the element, and a U+202C POP DIRECTIONAL FORMATTING at
the end of the element.
If the element has the dir attribute set to the exact value
rtl, then for the purposes of the bidi algorithm, the user
agent must act as if there was a U+202E RIGHT-TO-LEFT OVERRIDE character
at the start of the element, and a U+202C POP DIRECTIONAL FORMATTING at
the end of the element.
The requirements on handling the bdo
element for the bidi algorithm may be implemented indirectly through the
style layer. For example, an HTML+CSS user agent should implement these
requirements by implementing the CSS unicode-bidi property.
[CSS21]
ruby 要素rt 要素が1つか、または
rp 要素と rt 要素と別の rp 要素、のいずれかが続く。HTMLElement を使用。ruby 要素は、
1つ以上の語句付け内容の範囲にルビ注釈を付すことができます。
ruby 要素は、すべての子供 rt 要素・rp 要素とその子孫を無視したときの、
当該要素に含まれる語句付け内容の範囲(群)を表します。
語句付け内容の範囲(群)は、 rt
要素を使って作成される、関連付けられた注釈を持ちます。
次の例では、斎藤信男という語中のそれぞれの漢字に読みを注釈付けしています。
... <ruby>
斎 <rt> さい </rt>
藤 <rt> とう </rt>
信 <rt> のぶ </rt>
男 <rt> お </rt>
</ruby> ...
これは、次のようにレンダリングされましょう。

rt 要素ruby 要素の子供として。HTMLElement を使用。rt 要素は、ルビ注釈のルビ文部分を示します。
ruby 要素の子供である
rt 要素は、
当該 ruby 要素中で
(rp 要素を無視した時)
直前にある零個以上の語句付け内容の節点に対する注釈
(子供により与えられます。) を表します。
ruby 要素の子供ではない
rt 要素は、
その子供と同じものを表します。
rp 要素ruby 要素の子供として、 rt 要素の直前または直後に。rp 要素が別の rp
要素の直後にある rt 要素の直後の場合:
Unicode 文字クラス Pe から1文字。HTMLElement を使用。rp 要素は、
ルビ注釈に対応していない利用者エージェントが示す、
ルビ注釈のルビ文部分の周囲の括弧を提供するために使うことができます。
ruby 要素の子供である
rp 要素は、何も表さず、
その要素と内容は無視されなければなりません。親要素が ruby 要素でない rp
要素は、その子供と同じものを表します。
前掲の斎藤信男という語中で漢字に読みが注釈付けされている例では、
遺物利用者エージェントが読みを括弧中に示すようにするため、
rp も更に使うことができます。
... <ruby>
斎 <rp>(</rp><rt>さい</rt><rp>)</rp>
藤 <rp>(</rp><rt>とう</rt><rp>)</rp>
信 <rp>(</rp><rt>のぶ</rt><rp>)</rp>
男 <rp>(</rp><rt>お</rt><rp>)</rp>
</ruby> ...
適合容赦エージェントでのレンダリングは先のようになりますが、 ルビに対応していない利用者エージェントでは、 レンダリングは次のようになります。
... 斎 (さい) 藤 (とう) 信 (のぶ) 男 (お) ...
We need to summarize the various elements, in particular to distinguish b/i/em/strong/var/q/mark/cite.
HTML は脚注をマーク付けするための専用の仕組みを持っていません。 ここでは、推奨される代替法を紹介します。
短い行内注釈については、 title 属性を使うべきです。
次の例では、対話の2つの部分が注釈付けされています。
<dialog> <dt>Customer <dd>Hello! I wish to register a complaint. Hello. Miss? <dt>Shopkeeper <dd><span title="Colloquial pronunciation of 'What do you'" >Watcha</span> mean, miss? <dt>Customer <dd>Uh, I'm sorry, I have a cold. I wish to make a complaint. <dt>Shopkeeper <dd>Sorry, <span title="This is, of course, a lie.">we're closing for lunch</span>. </dialog>
より長い注釈については、 a
を使って、文書の後の要素を指すようにするべきです。
慣習的にはリンクの内容は数字を四角括弧で括ったものです。
次の例では、対話中の脚注が対話の後の段落へのリンクとなっています。 その段落の方は逆に対話へ逆リンクしており、 利用者が脚注の場所へ返れるようになっています。
<dialog> <dt>Announcer <dd>Number 16: The <i>hand</i>. <dt>Interviewer <dd>Good evening. I have with me in the studio tonight Mr Norman St John Polevaulter, who for the past few years has been contradicting people. Mr Polevaulter, why <em>do</em> you contradict people? <dt>Norman <dd>I don't. <a href="#fn1" id="r1">[1]</a> <dt>Interviewer <dd>You told me you did! </dialog> <section> <p id="fn1"><a href="#r1">[1]</a> This is, naturally, a lie, but paradoxically if it were true he could not say so without contradicting the interviewer and thus making it false.</p> </section>
傍注 (文章中の特定の語や文に対してだけではなく、節全体に適用される、
より長い注釈) には、 aside 要素を使うべきです。
次の例では、対話の後に傍注があり、対話の背景を説明しています。
<dialog> <dt>Customer <dd>I will not buy this record, it is scratched. <dt>Shopkeeper <dd>I'm sorry? <dt>Customer <dd>I will not buy this record, it is scratched. <dt>Shopkeeper <dd>No no no, this's'a tobacconist's. </dialog> <aside> <p>In 1970, the British Empire lay in ruins, and foreign nationalists frequented the streets — many of them Hungarians (not the streets — the foreign nationals). Sadly, Alexander Yalt has been publishing incompetently-written phrase books. </aside>
ins 要素cite
datetime
HTMLModElement 界面を使用します。ins 要素は文書に対する追加を表します。
次の例は、段落1つの追加を表します。
<aside>
<ins>
<p> 果物が好きです。 </p>
</ins>
</aside>
次の場合もそうで、 aside 要素の中のものはすべて語句付け内容とみなされ、段落が1つだけ追加されています。
<aside>
<ins>
林檎は<em>おいしい</em>。
</ins>
<ins>
梨も。
</ins>
</aside>
次の例は2つの段落の追加を表しています。
2つ目の段落は2つの部分で挿入されています。
この例の1つ目の ins 要素は段落の境界を越えているので、
悪い形と考えられます。
<aside>
<ins datetime="2005-03-16T00:00Z">
<p> 果物が好きです。 </p>
林檎は<em>おいしい</em>。
</ins>
<ins datetime="2007-12-19T00:00Z">
梨も。
</ins>
</aside>
こちらは同じことをマーク付けするよりよい方法です。 こちらはより多くの要素を使っていますが、 どの要素も暗示段落境界は超えていません。
<aside>
<ins datetime="2005-03-16T00:00Z">
<p> 果物が好きです。 </p>
</ins>
<ins datetime="2005-03-16T00:00Z">
林檎は<em>おいしい</em>。
</ins>
<ins datetime="2007-12-19T00:00Z">
梨も。
</ins>
</aside>
del 要素cite
datetime
HTMLModElement 界面を使用します。The del element represents a removal
from the document.
del elements should not cross implied paragraph boundaries.
ins and del elementsThe cite attribute
may be used to specify the address of a document that explains the change.
When that document is long, for instance the minutes of a meeting, authors
are encouraged to include a fragment identifier pointing to the specific
part of that document that discusses the change.
If the cite
attribute is present, it must be a valid URL that
explains the change. User agents should allow users to follow such
citation links.
The datetime attribute may be used
to specify the time and date of the change.
If present, the datetime attribute must be a valid datetime value.
User agents must parse the datetime attribute according to the parse a string as a datetime value algorithm.
If that doesn't return a time, then the modification has no associated
timestamp (the value is non-conforming; it is not a valid datetime). Otherwise, the modification is marked
as having been made at the given datetime. User agents should use the
associated timezone information to determine which timezone to present the
given datetime in.
The ins and del elements must implement the HTMLModElement interface:
interface HTMLModElement : HTMLElement {
attribute DOMString cite;
attribute DOMString dateTime;
};
cite DOM attribute must reflect the element's cite content attribute. The dateTime DOM 属性は element's datetime 内容属性を反映しなければなりません。
Since the ins and del elements do not affect paragraphing, it is possible, in some cases where
paragraphs are implied (without
explicit p elements), for an ins or del element
to span both an entire paragraph or other non-phrasing content elements and part of another
paragraph.
For example:
<section> <ins> <p> This is a paragraph that was inserted. </p> This is another paragraph whose first sentence was inserted at the same time as the paragraph above. </ins> This is a second sentence, which was there all along. </section>
By only wrapping some paragraphs in p
elements, one can even get the end of one paragraph, a whole second
paragraph, and the start of a third paragraph to be covered by the same
ins or del
element (though this is very confusing, and not considered good practice):
<section> This is the first paragraph. <ins>This sentence was inserted. <p>This second paragraph was inserted.</p> This sentence was inserted too.</ins> This is the third paragraph in this example. </section>
However, due to the way implied
paragraphs are defined, it is not possible to mark up the end of one
paragraph and the start of the very next one using the same ins or del element.
You instead have to use one (or two) p
element(s) and two ins or del elements:
For example:
<section> <p>This is the first paragraph. <del>This sentence was deleted.</del></p> <p><del>This sentence was deleted too.</del> That sentence needed a separate <del> element.</p> </section>
Partly because of the confusion described above, authors are strongly
recommended to always mark up all paragraphs with the p element, and to not have any ins or del elements
that cross across any implied
paragraphs.
The content models of the ol and ul elements do not allow ins and del
elements as children. Lists always represent all their items, including
items that would otherwise have been marked as deleted.
To indicate that an item is inserted or deleted, an ins or del element
can be wrapped around the contents of the li element. To indicate that an item has been
replaced by another, a single li element
can have one or more del elements followed
by one or more ins elements.
In the following example, a list that started empty had items added and removed from it over time. The bits in the example that have been emphasised show the parts that are the "current" state of the list. The list item numbers don't take into account the edits, though.
<h1>Stop-ship bugs</h1> <ol> <li><ins datetime="2008-02-12 15:20 Z">Bug 225: Rain detector doesn't work in snow</ins></li> <li><del datetime="2008-03-01 20:22 Z"><ins datetime="2008-02-14 12:02 Z">Bug 228: Water buffer overflows in April</ins></del></li> <li><ins datetime="2008-02-16 13:50 Z">Bug 230: Water heater doesn't use renewable fuels</ins></li> <li><del datetime="2008-02-20 21:15 Z"><ins datetime="2008-02-16 14:25 Z">Bug 232: Carbon dioxide emissions detected after startup</ins></del></li> </ol>
In the following example, a list that started with just fruit was replaced by a list with just colors.
<h1>List of <del>fruits</del><ins>colors</ins></h1> <ul> <li><del>Lime</del><ins>Green</ins></li> <li><del>Apple</del></li> <li>Orange</li> <li><del>Pear</del></li> <li><ins>Teal</ins></li> <li><del>Lemon</del><ins>Yellow</ins></li> <li>Olive</li> <li><ins>Purple</ins> </ul>
figure 要素legend element followed
by flow content.
legend element.
HTMLElement を使用。The figure element represents some flow content, optionally with a caption, which
can be moved away from the main flow of the document without affecting the
document's meaning.
The element can thus be used to annotate illustrations, diagrams, photos, code listings, etc, that are referred to from the main content of the document, but that could, without affecting the flow of the document, be moved away from that primary content, e.g. to the side of the page, to dedicated pages, or to an appendix.
The first legend element child of the
element, if any, represents the caption of the figure element's contents. If there is no child
legend element, then there is no
caption.
The remainder of the element's contents, if any, represents the content.
This example shows the figure
element to mark up a code listing.
<p>In <a href="#l4">listing 4</a> we see the primary core interface
API declaration.</p>
<figure id="l4">
<legend>Listing 4. The primary core interface API declaration.</legend>
<pre><code>interface PrimaryCore {
boolean verifyDataLine();
void sendData(in sequence<byte> data);
void initSelfDestruct();
}</code></pre>
</figure>
<p>The API is designed to use UTF-8.</p>
Here we see a figure element to mark
up a photo.
<figure>
<img src="bubbles-work.jpeg"
alt="Bubbles, sitting in his office chair, works on his
latest project intently.">
<legend>Bubbles at work</legend>
</figure>
In this example, we see an image that is not a figure, as well as an image and a video that are.
<h2>Malinko's comics</h2> <p>This case centered on some sort of "intellectual property" infringement related to a comic (see Exhibit A). The suit started after a trailer ending with these words:</p> <img src="promblem-packed-action.png" alt="ROUGH COPY! Promblem-Packed Action!"> <p>...was aired. A lawyer, armed with a Bigger Notebook, launched a preemptive strike using snowballs. A complete copy of the trailer is included with Exhibit B.</p> <figure> <img src="ex-a.png" alt="Two squiggles on a dirty piece of paper."> <legend>Exhibit A. The alleged <cite>rough copy</cite> comic.</legend> </figure> <figure> <video src="ex-b.mov"></video> <legend>Exhibit A. The alleged <cite>rough copy</cite> comic.</legend> </figure> <p>The case was resolved out of court.</p>
Here, a part of a poem is marked up using figure.
<figure> <p>'Twas brillig, and the slithy toves<br> Did gyre and gimble in the wabe;<br> All mimsy were the borogoves,<br> And the mome raths outgrabe.</p> <legend><cite>Jabberwocky</cite> (first verse). Lewis Carroll, 1832-98</legend> </figure>
In this example, which could be part of a much larger work discussing a castle, the figure has three images in it.
<figure>
<img src="castle1423.jpeg" title="Etching. Anonymous, ca. 1423."
alt="The castle has one tower, and a tall wall around it.">
<img src="castle1858.jpeg" title="Oil-based paint on canvas. Maria Towle, 1858."
alt="The castle now has two towers and two walls.">
<img src="castle1999.jpeg" title="Film photograph. Peter Jankle, 1999."
alt="The castle lies in ruins, the original tower all that remains in one piece.">
<legend>The castle through the ages: 1423, 1858, and 1999 respectively.</legend>
</figure>
img 要素alt
src
usemap
ismap
width
height
[NamedConstructor=Image(),
NamedConstructor=Image(in unsigned long width),
NamedConstructor=Image(in unsigned long width, in unsigned long height)]
interface HTMLImageElement : HTMLElement {
attribute DOMString alt;
attribute DOMString src;
attribute DOMString useMap;
attribute boolean isMap;
attribute unsigned long width;
attribute unsigned long height;
readonly attribute boolean complete;
};
An img element represents an image.
The image given by the src attribute is the embedded
content, and the value of the alt attribute is the img element's fallback
content.
The src attribute
must be present, and must contain a valid URL
referencing a non-interactive, optionally animated, image resource that is
neither paged nor scripted.
Images can thus be static bitmaps (e.g. PNGs, GIFs, JPEGs), single-page vector documents (single-page PDFs, XML files with an SVG root element), animated bitmaps (APNGs, animated GIFs), animated vector graphics (XML files with an SVG root element that use declarative SMIL animation), and so forth. However, this also precludes SVG files with script, multipage PDF files, interactive MNG files, HTML documents, plain text documents, and so forth.
The requirements on the alt attribute's value are described in the next section.
There has been some suggestion that the longdesc attribute from HTML4, or some other mechanism
that is more powerful than alt="", should be
included. This has not yet been considered.
The img must not be used as a layout
tool. In particular, img elements should
not be used to display fully transparent images, as they rarely convey
meaning and rarely add anything useful to the document.
When an img is created with a src attribute, and whenever
the src attribute is
set subsequently, the user agent must fetch the
resource specifed by the src attribute's value, unless the user agent cannot
support images, or its support for images has been disabled, or the user
agent only fetches elements on demand.
Fetching the image must delay the load event.
This, unfortunately, can be used to perform a rudimentary port scan of the user's local network (especially in conjunction with scripting, though scripting isn't actually necessary to carry out such an attack). User agents may implement cross-origin access control policies that mitigate this attack.
If the image's type is a supported image type, and the image is a valid image of that type, then the image is said to be available (this affects exactly what the element represents, as defined below). This can be true even before the image is completely downloaded, if the user agent supports incremental rendering of images; in such cases, each task that is queued by the networking task source while the image is being fetched must update the presentation of the image appropriately.
Whether the image is fetched successfully or not (e.g. whether the response code was a 2xx code or equivalent) must be ignored when determining the image's type and whether it is a valid image.
This allows servers to return images with error responses, and have them displayed.
The user agents should apply the image sniffing rules to determine the type of the image, with the image's associated Content-Type headers giving the official type. If these rules are not applied, then the type of the image must be the type given by the image's associated Content-Type headers.
User agents must not support non-image resources with the img element (e.g. XML files whose root element is
an HTML element). User agents must not run executable code (e.g. scripts)
embedded in the image resource. User agents must only display the first
page of a multipage resource (e.g. a PDF file). User agents must not allow
the resource to act in an interactive fashion, but should honour any
animation in the resource.
This specification does not specify which image types are to be supported.
The task that is queued by the networking task source once the resource has been
fetched, must, if the download was
successful and the image is available, queue a
task to fire a load
event on the img element (this happens
after complete
starts returning true); and otherwise, if the fetching process fails
without a response from the remote server, or completes but the image is
not a valid or supported image, queue a task to fire an error event on
the img element.
What an img element represents depends
on the src attribute
and the alt attribute.
src
attribute is set and the alt attribute is set to the empty string
The image is either decorative or supplemental to the rest of the content, redundant with some other information in the document.
If the image is available and the user agent is configured to
display that image, then the element represents the image specified by
the src attribute.
Otherwise, the element represents nothing, and may be omitted completely from the rendering. User agents may provide the user with a notification that an image is present but has been omitted from the rendering.
src
attribute is set and the alt attribute is set to a string whose first
character is a U+007B LEFT CURLY BRACKET character ({) and whose last
character is a U+007D RIGHT CURLY BRACKET character (})
The image is a key part of the content, and there is no textual
equivalent of the image available. The string consisting of all the
characters between the first and the last character of the value of the
alt attribute gives
the kind of image (e.g. photo, diagram, user-uploaded image). If that
value is the empty string (i.e. the attribute is just "{}"), then even the kind of image being shown is not
known.
If the image is available, the element represents the image
specified by the src
attribute.
If the image is not available or if the user agent is not
configured to display the image, then the user agent should display some
sort of indicator that the image is not being rendered, and, if
possible, provide to the user the information regarding the kind of
image that is (as derived from the alt attribute).
src
attribute is set and the alt attribute is set to a value that isn't
matched by the previous two entries (not empty, not "{...}")
The image is a key part of the content; the alt attribute gives a
textual equivalent or replacement for the image.
If the image is available and the user agent is configured to
display that image, then the element represents the image specified by
the src attribute.
Otherwise, the element represents the text given by the alt attribute. User agents
may provide the user with a notification that an image is present but
has been omitted from the rendering.
src
attribute is set and the alt attribute is not
The image's role in the document is unknown.
If the image is available, the element represents the image
specified by the src
attribute.
If the image is not available or if the user agent is not configured to display the image, then the user agent may display some sort of indicator that the image is not being rendered.
src
attribute is not set and the alt attribute is set to a string whose first
character is a U+007B LEFT CURLY BRACKET character ({) and whose last
character is a U+007D RIGHT CURLY BRACKET character (})
The user agent should display some sort of indicator that an image is
missing, providing to the user the information regarding the kind of
image that it would be (as derived from the alt attribute).
src
attribute is not set and either the alt attribute is set to the empty string or the
alt attribute is not
set at all
The element represents nothing.
The element represents the text given by the alt attribute.
The alt attribute
does not represent advisory information. User agents must not present the
contents of the alt
attribute in the same way as content of the title attribute.
User agents may always provide the user with the option to display any image, or to prevent any image from being displayed. User agents may also apply image analysis heuristics to help the user make sense of the image when the user is unable to make direct use of the image, e.g. due to a visual disability or because they are using a text terminal with no graphics capabilities.
The contents of img elements,
if any, are ignored for the purposes of rendering.
The usemap attribute, if present, can indicate that
the image has an associated image map.
The ismap
attribute, when used on an element that is a descendant of an a element with an href attribute, indicates by its presence that
the element provides access to a server-side image map. This affects how
events are handled on the corresponding a
element.
The ismap
attribute is a boolean attribute. The attribute
must not be specified on an element that does not have an ancestor
a element with an href attribute.
The img element supports dimension attributes.
The DOM attributes alt, src, useMap, and isMap each must reflect the respective content attributes of the same
name.
The DOM attributes width and height must return the rendered
width and height of the image, in CSS pixels, if the image is being
rendered, and is being rendered to a visual medium; or else the intrinsic
with and height of the image, in CSS pixels, if the image is
available but not being rendered to a visual medium; or else 0, if
the image is not available or its dimensions are not known. [CSS21]
The DOM attribute complete must return true if the
user agent has fetched the image specified in the src attribute, and it is a
valid image, even if the final task queued by the networking
task source for the fetching of the
image resource has not yet been processed. Otherwise, the attribute must
return false.
The value of complete can thus change while a script is
executing.
Three constructors are provided for creating HTMLImageElement objects (in addition
to the factory methods from DOM Core such as createElement()): Image(), Image(width), and
Image(width,
height). When invoked as constructors,
these must return a new HTMLImageElement object (a new
img element). If the width argument is present, the new object's width content attribute must be set to width. If the height argument is also
present, the new object's height
content attribute must be set to height.
A single image can have different appropriate alternative text depending on the context.
In each of the following cases, the same image is used, yet the alt text is different each
time. The image is the coat of arms of the Canton Geneva in Switzerland.
Here it is used as a supplementary icon:
<p>I lived in <img src="carouge.svg" alt=""> Carouge.</p>
Here it is used as an icon representing the town:
<p>Home town: <img src="carouge.svg" alt="Carouge"></p>
Here it is used as part of a text on the town:
<p>Carouge has a coat of arms.</p> <p><img src="carouge.svg" alt="The coat of arms depicts a lion, sitting in front of a tree."></p> <p>It is used as decoration all over the town.</p>
Here it is used as a way to support a similar text where the description is given as well as, instead of as an alternative to, the image:
<p>Carouge has a coat of arms.</p> <p><img src="carouge.svg" alt=""></p> <p>The coat of arms depicts a lion, sitting in front of a tree. It is used as decoration all over the town.</p>
Here it is used as part of a story:
<p>He picked up the folder and a piece of paper fell out.</p> <p><img src="carouge.svg" alt="Shaped like a shield, the paper had a red background, a green tree, and a yellow lion with its tongue hanging out and whose tail was shaped like an S."></p> <p>He stared at the folder. S! The answer he had been looking for all this time was simply the letter S! How had he not seen that before? It all came together now. The phone call where Hector had referred to a lion's tail, the time Marco had stuck his tongue out...</p>
Here it is not known at the time of publication what the image will be, only that it will be a coat of arms of some kind, and thus no replacement text can be provided, and instead only the kind of image is provided:
<p>The last user to have uploaded a coat of arms uploaded this one:</p>
<p><img src="last-uploaded-coat-of-arms.cgi" alt="{user-uploaded coat of arms}"></p>
Ideally, the author would find a way to provide real replacement text even in this case, e.g. by asking the previous user. Not providing replacement text makes the document more difficult to use for people who are unable to view images, e.g. blind users, or users or very low-bandwidth connections or who pay by the byte, or users who are forced to use a text-only Web browser.
Here are some more examples showing the same picture used in different contexts, with different appropriate alternate texts each time.
<article> <h1>My cats</h1> <h2>Fluffy</h2> <p>Fluffy is my favourite.</p> <img src="fluffy.jpg" alt="She likes playing with a ball of yarn."> <p>She's just too cute.</p> <h2>Miles</h2> <p>My other cat, Miles just eats and sleeps.</p> </article>
<article> <h1>Photography</h1> <h2>Shooting moving targets indoors</h2> <p>The trick here is to know how to anticipate; to know at what speed and what distance the subject will pass by.</p> <img src="fluffy.jpg" alt="A cat flying by, chasing a ball of yarn, can be photographed quite nicely using this technique."> <h2>Nature by night</h2> <p>To achieve this, you'll need either an extremely sensitive film, or immense flash lights.</p> </article>
<article> <h1>About me</h1> <h2>My pets</h2> <p>I've got a cat named Fluffy and a dog named Miles.</p> <img src="fluffy.jpg" alt="Fluffy, my cat, tends to keep itself busy."> <p>My dog Miles and I like go on long walks together.</p> <h2>music</h2> <p>After our walks, having emptied my mind, I like listening to Bach.</p> </article>
<article> <h1>Fluffy and the Yarn</h1> <p>Fluffy was a cat who liked to play with yarn. He also liked to jump.</p> <aside><img src="fluffy.jpg" alt="" title="Fluffy"></aside> <p>He would play in the morning, he would play in the evening.</p> </article>
The requirements for the alt attribute depend on what the image is intended
to represent, as described in the following sections.
A general requirement that applies in all cases is that the alt attribute's value must
not start with a U+007B LEFT CURLY BRACKET character ({) and end with a
U+007D RIGHT CURLY BRACKET character (}), unless the attribute is giving
the kind of image rather than replacement text.
When an a element that is a hyperlink, or a button element, has no
textual content but contains one or more images, the alt attributes must contain
text that together convey the purpose of the link or button.
In this example, a user is asked to pick his preferred color from a list of three. Each color is given by an image, but for users who have configured their user agent not to display images, the color names are used instead:
<h1>Pick your color</h1> <ul> <li><a href="green.html"><img src="green.jpeg" alt="Green"></a></li> <li><a href="blue.html"><img src="blue.jpeg" alt="Blue"></a></li> <li><a href="red.html"><img src="red.jpeg" alt="Red"></a></li> </ul>
In this example, each button has a set of images to indicate the kind of color output desired by the user. The first image is used in each case to give the alternative text.
<button name="rgb"><img src="red" alt="RGB"><img src="green" alt=""><img src="blue" alt=""></button> <button name="cmyk"><img src="cyan" alt="CMYK"><img src="magenta" alt=""><img src="yellow" alt=""><img src="black" alt=""></button>
Since each image represents one part of the text, it could also be written like this:
<button name="rgb"><img src="red" alt="R"><img src="green" alt="G"><img src="blue" alt="B"></button> <button name="cmyk"><img src="cyan" alt="C"><img src="magenta" alt="M"><img src="yellow" alt="Y"><img src="black" alt="K"></button>
However, with other alternative text, this might not work, and putting all the alternative text into one image in each case might make more sense:
<button name="rgb"><img src="red" alt="sRGB profile"><img src="green" alt=""><img src="blue" alt=""></button> <button name="cmyk"><img src="cyan" alt="CMYK profile"><img src="magenta" alt=""><img src="yellow" alt=""><img src="black" alt=""></button>
Sometimes something can be more clearly stated in graphical form, for
example as a flowchart, a diagram, a graph, or a simple map showing
directions. In such cases, an image can be given using the img element, but the lesser textual version must
still be given, so that users who are unable to view the image (e.g.
because they have a very slow connection, or because they are using a
text-only browser, or because they are listening to the page being read
out by a hands-free automobile voice Web browser, or simply because they
are blind) are still able to understand the message being conveyed.
The text must be given in the alt attribute, and must convey the same message as
the image specified in the src attribute.
It is important to realize that the alternative text is a replacement for the image, not a description of the image.
In the following example we have a flowchart in image form,
with text in the alt
attribute rephrasing the flowchart in prose form:
<p>In the common case, the data handled by the tokenization stage comes from the network, but it can also come from script.</p> <p><img src="images/parsing-model-overview.png" alt="The network passes data to the Tokeniser stage, which passes data to the Tree Construction stage. From there, data goes to both the DOM and to Script Execution. Script Execution is linked to the DOM, and, using document.write(), passes data to the Tokeniser."></p>
Here's another example, showing a good solution and a bad solution to the problem of including an image in a description.
First, here's the good solution. This sample shows how the alternative text should just be what you would have put in the prose if the image had never existed.
<!-- This is the correct way to do things. --> <p> You are standing in an open field west of a house. <img src="house.jpeg" alt="The house is white, with a boarded front door."> There is a small mailbox here. </p>
Second, here's the bad solution. In this incorrect way of doing things, the alternative text is simply a description of the image, instead of a textual replacement for the image. It's bad because when the image isn't shown, the text doesn't flow as well as in the first example.
<!-- This is the wrong way to do things. --> <p> You are standing in an open field west of a house. <img src="house.jpeg" alt="A white house, with a boarded front door."> There is a small mailbox here. </p>
A document can contain information in iconic form. The icon is intended to help users of visual browsers to recognize features at a glance.
In some cases, the icon is supplemental to a text label conveying the
same meaning. In those cases, the alt attribute must be present but must be empty.
Here the icons are next to text that conveys the same meaning, so they
have an empty alt
attribute:
<nav> <p><a href="/help/"><img src="/icons/help.png" alt=""> Help</a></p> <p><a href="/configure/"><img src="/icons/configuration.png" alt=""> Configuration Tools</a></p> </nav>
In other cases, the icon has no text next to it describing what it
means; the icon is supposed to be self-explanatory. In those cases, an
equivalent textual label must be given in the alt attribute.
Here, posts on a news site are labeled with an icon indicating their topic.
<body> <article> <header> <h1>Ratatouille wins <i>Best Movie of the Year</i> award</h1> <p><img src="movies.png" alt="Movies"></p> </header> <p>Pixar has won yet another <i>Best Movie of the Year</i> award, making this its 8th win in the last 12 years.</p> </article> <article> <header> <h1>Latest TWiT episode is online</h1> <p><img src="podcasts.png" alt="Podcasts"></p> </header> <p>The latest TWiT episode has been posted, in which we hear several tech news stories as well as learning much more about the iPhone. This week, the panelists compare how reflective their iPhones' Apple logos are.</p> </article> </body>
Many pages include logos, insignia, flags, or emblems, which stand for a particular entity such as a company, organization, project, band, software package, country, or some such.
If the logo is being used to represent the entity, e.g. as a page
header, the alt
attribute must contain the name of the entity being represented by the
logo. The alt
attribute must not contain text like the word "logo", as it is
not the fact that it is a logo that is being conveyed, it's the entity
itself.
If the logo is being used next to the name of the entity that it
represents, then the logo is supplemental, and its alt attribute must instead
be empty.
If the logo is merely used as decorative material (as branding, or, for example, as a side image in an article that mentions the entity to which the logo belongs), then the entry below on purely decorative images applies. If the logo is actually being discussed, then it is being used as a phrase or paragraph (the description of the logo) with an alternative graphical representation (the logo itself), and the first entry above applies.
In the following snippets, all four of the above cases are present. First, we see a logo used to represent a company:
<h1><img src="XYZ.gif" alt="The XYZ company"></h1>
Next, we see a paragraph which uses a logo right next to the company name, and so doesn't have any alternative text:
<article> <h2>News</h2> <p>We have recently been looking at buying the <img src="alpha.gif" alt=""> ΑΒΓ company, a small Greek company specializing in our type of product.</p>
In this third snippet, we have a logo being used in an aside, as part of the larger article discussing the acquisition:
<aside><p><img src="alpha-large.gif" alt=""></p></aside> <p>The ΑΒΓ company has had a good quarter, and our pie chart studies of their accounts suggest a much bigger blue slice than its green and orange slices, which is always a good sign.</p> </article>
Finally, we have an opinion piece talking about a logo, and the logo is therefore described in detail in the alternative text.
<p>Consider for a moment their logo:</p> <p><img src="/images/logo" alt="It consists of a green circle with a green question mark centered inside it."></p> <p>How unoriginal can you get? I mean, oooooh, a question mark, how <em>revolutionary</em>, how utterly <em>ground-breaking</em>, I'm sure everyone will rush to adopt those specifications now! They could at least have tried for some sort of, I don't know, sequence of rounded squares with varying shades of green and bold white outlines, at least that would look good on the cover of a blue book.</p>
This example shows how the alternative text should be written such that if the image isn't available, and the text is used instead, the text flows seamlessly into the surrounding text, as if the image had never been there in the first place.
Sometimes, an image just consists of text, and the purpose of the image is not to highlight the actual typographic effects used to render the text, but just to convey the text itself.
In such cases, the alt attribute must be present but must consist of
the same text as written in the image itself.
Consider a graphic containing the text "Earth Day", but with the letters all decorated with flowers and plants. If the text is merely being used as a header, to spice up the page for graphical users, then the correct alternative text is just the same text "Earth Day", and no mention need be made of the decorations:
<h1><img src="earthdayheader.png" alt="Earth Day"></h1>
In many cases, the image is actually just supplementary, and its
presence merely reinforces the surrounding text. In these cases, the alt attribute must be
present but its value must be the empty string.
In general, an image falls into this category if removing the image doesn't make the page any less useful, but including the image makes it a lot easier for users of visual browsers to understand the concept.
A flowchart that repeats the previous paragraph in graphical form:
<p>The network passes data to the Tokeniser stage, which passes data to the Tree Construction stage. From there, data goes to both the DOM and to Script Execution. Script Execution is linked to the DOM, and, using document.write(), passes data to the Tokeniser.</p> <p><img src="images/parsing-model-overview.png" alt=""></p>
In these cases, it would be wrong to include alternative text that
consists of just a caption. If a caption is to be included, then either
the title attribute
can be used, or the figure and
legend elements can be used. In the
latter case, the image would in fact be a phrase or paragraph with an
alternative graphical representation, and would thus require alternative
text.
<!-- Using the title="" attribute -->
<p>The network passes data to the Tokeniser stage, which
passes data to the Tree Construction stage. From there, data goes
to both the DOM and to Script Execution. Script Execution is
linked to the DOM, and, using document.write(), passes data to
the Tokeniser.</p>
<p><img src="images/parsing-model-overview.png" alt=""
title="Flowchart representation of the parsing model."></p>
<!-- Using <figure> and <legend> --> <p>The network passes data to the Tokeniser stage, which passes data to the Tree Construction stage. From there, data goes to both the DOM and to Script Execution. Script Execution is linked to the DOM, and, using document.write(), passes data to the Tokeniser.</p> <figure> <img src="images/parsing-model-overview.png" alt="The Network leads to the Tokeniser, which leads to the Tree Construction. The Tree Construction leads to two items. The first is Script Execution, which leads via document.write() back to the Tokeniser. The second item from which Tree Construction leads is the DOM. The DOM is related to the Script Execution."> <legend>Flowchart representation of the parsing model.</legend> </figure>
<!-- This is WRONG. Do not do this. Instead, do what the above examples do. -->
<p>The network passes data to the Tokeniser stage, which
passes data to the Tree Construction stage. From there, data goes
to both the DOM and to Script Execution. Script Execution is
linked to the DOM, and, using document.write(), passes data to
the Tokeniser.</p>
<p><img src="images/parsing-model-overview.png"
alt="Flowchart representation of the parsing model."></p>
<!-- Never put the image's caption in the alt="" attribute! -->
A graph that repeats the previous paragraph in graphical form:
<p>According to a study covering several billion pages, about 62% of documents on the Web in 2007 triggered the Quirks rendering mode of Web browsers, about 30% triggered the Almost Standards mode, and about 9% triggered the Standards mode.</p> <p><img src="rendering-mode-pie-chart.png" alt=""></p>
In general, if an image is decorative but isn't especially page-specific, for example an image that forms part of a site-wide design scheme, the image should be specified in the site's CSS, not in the markup of the document.
However, a decorative image that isn't discussed by the surrounding text
still has some relevance can be included in a page using the img element. Such images are decorative, but still
form part of the content. In these cases, the alt attribute must be present but its value must
be the empty string.
Examples where the image is purely decorative despite being relevant would include things like a photo of the Black Rock City landscape in a blog post about an event at Burning Man, or an image of a painting inspired by a poem, on a page reciting that poem. The following snippet shows an example of the latter case (only the first verse is included in this snippet):
<h1>The Lady of Shalott</h1> <p><img src="shalott.jpeg" alt=""></p> <p>On either side the river lie<br> Long fields of barley and of rye,<br> That clothe the wold and meet the sky;<br> And through the field the road run by<br> To many-tower'd Camelot;<br> And up and down the people go,<br> Gazing where the lilies blow<br> Round an island there below,<br> The island of Shalott.</p>
When a picture has been sliced into smaller image files that are then
displayed together to form the complete picture again, one of the images
must have its alt
attribute set as per the relevant rules that would be appropriate for the
picture as a whole, and then all the remaining images must have their
alt attribute set to
the empty string.
In the following example, a picture representing a company logo for XYZ Corp has been split into two pieces, the first containing the letters "XYZ" and the second with the word "Corp". The alternative text ("XYZ Corp") is all in the first image.
<h1><img src="logo1.png" alt="XYZ Corp"><img src="logo2.png" alt=""></h1>
In the following example, a rating is shown as three filled stars and two empty stars. While the alternative text could have been "★★★☆☆", the author has instead decided to more helpfully give the rating in the form "3/5". That is the alternative text of the first image, and the rest have blank alternative text.
<p>Rating: <meter max=5 value=3><img src="1" alt="3/5" ><img src="1" alt=""><img src="1" alt=""><img src="0" alt="" ><img src="0" alt=""></meter></p>
Generally, image maps should be used instead of slicing an image for links.
However, if an image is indeed sliced and any of the components of the
sliced picture are the sole contents of links, then one image per link
must have alternative text in its alt attribute representing the purpose of the
link.
In the following example, a picture representing the flying spaghetti monster emblem, with each of the left noodly appendages and the right noodly appendages in different images, so that the user can pick the left side or the right side in an adventure.
<h1>The Church</h1> <p>You come across a flying spaghetti monster. Which side of His Noodliness do you wish to reach out for?</p> <p><a href="?go=left" ><img src="fsm-left.png" alt="Left side. "></a ><img src="fsm-middle.png" alt="" ><a href="?go=right"><img src="fsm-right.png" alt="Right side."></a></p>
In some cases, the image is a critical part of the content. This could be the case, for instance, on a page that is part of a photo gallery. The image is the whole point of the page containing it.
How to provide alternative text for an image that is a key part of the content depends on the image's provenance.
When it is possible for detailed alternative text to be provided, for
example if the image is part of a series of screenshots in a magazine
review, or part of a comic strip, or is a photograph in a blog entry
about that photograph, text that conveys can serve as a substitute for
the image must be given as the contents of the alt attribute.
A screenshot in a gallery of screenshots for a new OS, with some alternative text:
<figure>
<img src="KDE%20Light%20desktop.png"
alt="The desktop is blue, with icons along the left hand side in
two columns, reading System, Home, K-Mail, etc. A window is
open showing that menus wrap to a second line if they
cannot fit in the window. The window has a list of icons
along the top, with an address bar below it, a list of
icons for tabs along the left edge, a status bar on the
bottom, and two panes in the middle. The desktop has a bar
at the bottom of the screen with a few buttons, a pager, a
list of open applications, and a clock.">
<legend>Screenshot of a KDE desktop.</legend>
</figure>
A graph in a financial report:
<img src="sales.gif"
title="Sales graph"
alt="From 1998 to 2005, sales increased by the following percentages
with each year: 624%, 75%, 138%, 40%, 35%, 9%, 21%">
Note that "sales graph" would be inadequate alternative text for a sales graph. Text that would be a good caption is not generally suitable as replacement text.
In certain cases, the nature of the image might be such that providing thorough alternative text is impractical. For example, the image could be indistinct, or could be a complex fractal, or could be a detailed topographical map.
In these cases, the alt attribute must contain some suitable
alternative text, but it may be somewhat brief.
Sometimes there simply is no text that can do justice to an image. For example, there is little that can be said to usefully describe a Rorschach inkblot test. However, a description, even if brief, is still better than nothing:
<figure> <img src="/commons/a/a7/Rorschach1.jpg" alt="A shape with left-right symmetry with indistinct edges, with a small gap in the center, two larger gaps offset slightly from the center, with two similar gaps under them. The outline is wider in the top half than the bottom half, with the sides extending upwards higher than the center, and the center extending below the sides."> <legend>A black outline of the first of the ten cards in the Rorschach inkblot test.</legend> </figure>
Note that the following would be a very bad use of alternative text:
<!-- This example is wrong. Do not copy it. --> <figure> <img src="/commons/a/a7/Rorschach1.jpg" alt="A black outline of the first of the ten cards in the Rorschach inkblot test."> <legend>A black outline of the first of the ten cards in the Rorschach inkblot test.</legend> </figure>
Including the caption in the alternative text like this isn't useful because it effectively duplicates the caption for users who don't have images, taunting them twice yet not helping them any more than if they had only read or heard the caption once.
Another example of an image that defies full description is a fractal, which, by definition, is infinite in complexity.
The following example shows one possible way of providing alternative text for the full view of an image of the Mandelbrot set.
<img src="ms1.jpeg" alt="The Mandelbrot set appears as a cardioid with its cusp on the real axis in the positive direction, with a smaller bulb aligned along the same center line, touching it in the negative direction, and with these two shapes being surrounded by smaller bulbs of various sizes.">
In some unfortunate cases, there might be no alternative text available at all, either because the image is obtained in some automated fashion without any associated alternative text (e.g. a Webcam), or because the page is being generated by a script using user-provided images where the user did not provide suitable or usable alternative text (e.g. photograph sharing sites), or because the author does not himself know what the images represent (e.g. a blind photographer sharing an image on his blog).
In such cases, the alt attribute's value must be a description of
the kind of image, surrounded by braces ("{" and "}"), if that
is known. The kind of image is something along the lines of "photo",
"diagram", "painting", "user-uploaded image", etc. If even the kind of
image cannot be determined, then the string {}
must be used.
Such cases are to be kept to an absolute minimum. If there
is even the slightest possibility of the author having the ability to
provide real alternative text, then it would not be acceptable to
provide the "{...}"-style value.
A photo on a photo-sharing site, if the site received the image with no metadata other than the caption:
<figure>
<img src="1100670787_6a7c664aef.jpg" alt="{photo}">
<legend>Bubbles traveled everywhere with us.</legend>
</figure>
In this case, though, it would be better if a detailed description of the important parts of the image obtained from the user and included on the page.
A blind user's blog in which a photo taken by the user is shown. Initially, the user might not have any idea what the photo he took shows:
<article>
<h1>I took a photo</h1>
<p>I went out today and took a photo!</p>
<figure>
<img src="photo2.jpeg" alt="{photograph}">
<legend>A photograph taken blindly from my front porch.</legend>
</figure>
</article>
Eventually though, the user might obtain a description of the image from his friends and could then include alternative text:
<article> <h1>I took a photo</h1> <p>I went out today and took a photo!</p> <figure> <img src="photo2.jpeg" alt="The photograph shows my hummingbird feeder hanging from the edge of my roof. It is half full, but there are no birds around. In the background, out-of-focus trees fill the shot. The feeder is made of wood with a metal grate, and it contains peanuts. The edge of the roof is wooden too, and is painted white with light blue streaks."> <legend>A photograph taken blindly from my front porch.</legend> </figure> </article>
Sometimes the entire point of the image is that a textual description is not available, and the user is to provide the description. For instance, the point of a CAPTCHA image is to see if the user can literally read the graphic. Here is one way to mark up a CAPTCHA:
<p><label>What does this image say?
<img src="captcha.cgi?id=8934" alt="{captcha}">
<input type=text name=captcha></label>
(If you cannot see the image, you can use an <a
href="?audio">audio</a> test instead.)</p>
Another example would be software that displays images and asks for alternative text precisely for the purpose of then writing a page with correct alternative text. Such a page could have a table of images, like this:
<table>
<thead>
<tr> <th> Images <th> Descriptions
<tbody>
<tr>
<td> <img src="2421.png" alt="{}">
<td> <input name="alt2421">
<tr>
<td> <img src="2422.png" alt="{}">
<td> <input name="alt2422">
</table>
The values given in the "{...}" syntax are
intended for the user, they are not keywords. So, for instance, in a
Finnish document, they would be in Finnish. The following snippet shows
how a photo might be marked up on a Finnish-language photo upload site,
when the user has not provided any replacement text:
<html lang="fi">
...
<img src="v3525.jpeg" alt="{valokuva}">
Since some users cannot use images at all (e.g. because
they have a very slow connection, or because they are using a text-only
browser, or because they are listening to the page being read out by a
hands-free automobile voice Web browser, or simply because they are
blind), the alt
attribute is only allowed to contain the kind of image rather
than replacement text when no alternative text is available and none can
be made available, e.g. on automated image gallery sites.
Generally authors should avoid using img
elements for purposes other than showing images.
If an img element is being used for
purposes other than showing an image, e.g. as part of a service to count
page views, then the alt attribute must be the empty string.
When an image is included in a communication (such as an HTML e-mail)
aimed at someone who is known to be able to view images, the alt attribute may be
omitted. However, even in such cases it is strongly recommended that
alternative text be included (as appropriate according to the kind of
image involved, as described in the above entries), so that the e-mail is
still usable should the user use a mail client that does not support
images, or should the e-mail be forwarded on to other users whose
abilities might not include easily seeing images.
The most general rule for writing alternative text is that the intent is
that replacing every image with the text of its alt attribute not change the
meaning of the page.
So, in general, alternative text can be written by considering what one would have written had one not been able to include the image.
A corollary to this is that the alt attribute's value should never contain text
that could be considered the image's caption, title,
or legend. It is supposed to contain
replacement text that could be used by users instead of the
image; it is not meant to supplement the image. The title attribute can be used
for supplemental information.
iframe 要素src
name
sandbox
seamless
width
height
interface HTMLIFrameElement : HTMLElement {
attribute DOMString src;
attribute DOMString name;
attribute DOMString sandbox;
attribute boolean seamless;
attribute unsigned long width;
attribute unsigned long height;
};
Objects implementing the HTMLIFrameElement interface must
also implement the EmbeddingElement interface defined in
the Window Object specification. [WINDOW]
The iframe element introduces a new
nested browsing context.
The src attribute
gives the address of a page that the nested browsing
context is to contain. The attribute, if present, must be a valid URL. When the browsing context is created, if the
attribute is present, the user agent must navigate
the element's browsing context to the given URL, with
replacement enabled, and with the iframe element's document's browsing context as the source
browsing context. If the user navigates away from this page, the iframe's corresponding Window object will reference new
Document objects, but the src attribute will not change.
Whenever the src
attribute is set, the nested browsing context
must be navigated to the URL given by that attribute's value, with the iframe element's document's browsing context as the source
browsing context.
If the src
attribute is not set when the element is created, the browsing context
will remain at the initial about:blank page.
The name
attribute, if present, must be a valid browsing context
name. When the browsing context is created, if the attribute is
present, the browsing context name must be set to
the value of this attribute; otherwise, the browsing
context name must be set to the empty string.
Whenever the name attribute is set, the nested browsing context's name must be changed to the new value.
If the attribute is removed, the browsing context
name must be set to the empty string.
When content loads in an iframe,
after any load events
are fired within the content itself, the user agent must fire a load event at the
iframe element. When content fails to
load (e.g. due to a network error), then the user agent must fire an error event at
the element instead.
When there is an active parser in the iframe, and when anything in the iframe that is delaying the load event
in the iframe's browsing context, the iframe must delay the load event.
If, during the handling of the load event, the browsing
context in the iframe is again navigated, that will further delay the load event.
The sandbox
attribute, when specified, enables a set of extra restrictions on any
content hosted by the iframe. Its value
must be an unordered set of unique space-separated
tokens. The allowed values are allow-same-origin, allow-forms, and allow-scripts.
While the sandbox attribute is specified, the iframe element's nested
browsing context, and all the browsing contexts nested within it (either directly or
indirectly through other nested browsing contexts) must have the following
flags set:
This flag prevents content from navigating browsing contexts other than the sandboxed browsing context itself (or browsing contexts further nested inside it).
This flag also prevents content from
creating new auxiliary browsing contexts, e.g. using the target
attribute or the window.open() method.
This flag prevents content from instantiating plugins, whether using the embed element, the object element, the applet element, or
through navigation of a nested browsing context.
This flag prevents content from showing notifications outside of the nested browsing context.
sandbox attribute's value, when split on spaces, is
found to have the allow-same-origin
keyword set
This flag forces content into a unique origin for the purposes of the same-origin policy.
This flag also prevents script from reading
the document.cookies DOM
attribute.
The allow-same-origin attribute is
intended for two cases.
First, it can be used to allow content from the same site to be sandboxed to disable scripting, while still allowing access to the DOM of the sandboxed content.
Second, it can be used to embed content from a third-party site, sandboxed to prevent that site from opening popup windows, etc, without preventing the embedded page from communicating back to its originating site, using the database APIs to store data, etc.
sandbox attribute's value, when split on spaces, is
found to have the allow-forms
keyword set
This flag blocks form submission.
sandbox attribute's value, when split on spaces, is
found to have the allow-scripts
keyword set
This flag blocks script execution.
These flags must not be set unless the conditions listed above define them as being set.
In this example, some completely-unknown, potentially hostile, user-provided HTML content is embedded in a page. Because it is sandboxed, it is treated by the user agent as being from a unique origin, despite the content being served from the same site. Thus it is affected by all the normal cross-site restrictions. In addition, the embedded page has scripting disabled, plugins disabled, forms disabled, and it cannot navigate any frames or windows other than itself (or any frames or windows it itself embeds).
<p>We're not scared of you! Here is your content, unedited:</p> <iframe sandbox src="getusercontent.cgi?id=12193"></iframe>
Note that cookies are still send to the server in the getusercontent.cgi request, though they are not visible
in the document.cookies DOM
attribute.
In this example, a gadget from another site is embedded. The gadget has scripting and forms enabled, and the origin sandbox restrictions are lifted, allowing the gadget to communicate with its originating server. The sandbox is still useful, however, as it disables plugins and popups, thus reducing the risk of the user being exposed to malware and other annoyances.
<iframe sandbox="allow-same-origin allow-forms allow-scripts"
src="http://maps.example.com/embedded.html"></iframe>
The seamless attribute is a
boolean attribute. When specified, it indicates that the iframe element's browsing
context is to be rendered in a manner that makes it appear to be part
of the containing document (seamlessly included in the parent document).
Specifically, when the attribute is set on an element and while the browsing context's active
document has the same origin as the
iframe element's document, or the browsing context's active
document's address has the same origin as the iframe element's document, the following
requirements apply:
The user agent must set the seamless browsing context flag to true for that browsing context. This will cause links to open in the parent browsing context.
In a CSS-supporting user agent: the user agent must add all the style
sheets that apply to the iframe
element to the cascade of the active document of
the iframe element's nested browsing context, at the appropriate cascade
levels, before any style sheets specified by the document itself.
In a CSS-supporting user agent: the user agent must, for the purpose
of CSS property inheritance only, treat the root element of the active document of the iframe element's nested
browsing context as being a child of the iframe element. (Thus inherited properties on
the root element of the document in the iframe will inherit the computed values of
those properties on the iframe
element instead of taking their initial values.)
In visual media, in a CSS-supporting user agent: the user agent should
set the intrinsic width of the iframe
to the width that the element would have if it was a non-replaced
block-level element with 'width: auto'.
In visual media, in a CSS-supporting user agent: the user agent should
set the intrinsic height of the iframe to the height of the bounding box
around the content rendered in the iframe at its current width.
In visual media, in a CSS-supporting user agent: the user agent must
force the height of the initial containing block of the active document of the nested
browsing context of the iframe to
zero.
This is intended to get around the otherwise circular dependency of percentage dimensions that depend on the height of the containing block, thus affecting the height of the document's bounding box, thus affecting the height of the viewport, thus affecting the size of the initial containing block.
In speech media, the user agent should render the nested browsing context without announcing that it is a separate document.
User agents should, in general, act as if the active
document of the iframe's nested browsing context was part of the document
that the iframe is in.
For example if the user agent supports listing all the links in a document, links in "seamlessly" nested documents would be included in that list without being significantly distinguished from links in the document itself.
Parts of the above might get moved into the rendering section at some point.
If the attribute is not specified, or if the origin conditions listed above are not met, then the user agent should render the nested browsing context in a manner that is clearly distinguishable as a separate browsing context, and the seamless browsing context flag must be set to false for that browsing context.
It is important that user agents recheck the above
conditions whenever the active document of the nested browsing context of the iframe changes, such that the seamless browsing context flag gets unset if the nested browsing context is navigated to another origin.
In this example, the site's navigation is embedded using a client-side
include using an iframe. Any links in
the iframe will, in new user agents,
be automatically opened in the iframe's parent browsing context; for legacy
user agents, the site could also include a base element with a target attribute with
the value _parent. Similarly, in new user agents
the styles of the parent page will be automatically applied to the
contents of the frame, but to support legacy user agents authors might
wish to include the styles explicitly.
<nav><iframe seamless src="nav.include.html"></iframe></nav>
The iframe element supports dimension attributes for cases where the embedded
content has specific dimensions (e.g. ad units have well-defined
dimensions).
An iframe element never has fallback content, as it will always create a nested
browsing context, regardless of whether the
specified initial contents are successfully used.
Descendants of iframe elements
represent nothing. (In legacy user agents that do not support iframe elements, the contents would be parsed as
markup that could act as fallback content.)
The content model of iframe elements
is text, except that the text must be such that ...
anyone have any bright ideas?
The HTML parser treats markup inside
iframe elements as text.
The DOM attributes src, name, sandbox, and seamless must reflect the content attributes of the same name.
embed 要素src
type
width
height
interface HTMLEmbedElement : HTMLElement {
attribute DOMString src;
attribute DOMString type;
attribute unsigned long width;
attribute unsigned long height;
};
Depending on the type of content instantiated by the embed element, the node may also support other
interfaces.
The embed element represents an
integration point for an external (typically non-HTML) application or
interactive content.
The src attribute
gives the address of the resource being embedded. The attribute, if
present, must contain a valid URL.
The type
attribute, if present, gives the MIME type of the plugin to instantiate.
The value must be a valid MIME type, optionally with parameters. If both
the type attribute
and the src
attribute are present, then the type attribute must specify the same type as the
explicit Content-Type
metadata of the resource given by the src attribute. [RFC2046]
When the element is created with neither a src attribute nor a type attribute, and when attributes are removed
such that neither attribute is present on the element anymore, any plugins
instantiated for the element must be removed, and the embed element represents nothing.
When the sandboxed plugins
browsing context flag is set on the browsing
context for which the embed
element's document is the active document, then the
user agent must render the embed element
in a manner that conveys that the plugin was
disabled. The user agent may offer the user the option to override the
sandbox and instantiate the plugin anyway; if the
user invokes such an option, the user agent must act as if the sandboxed plugins browsing context flag was not set
for the purposes of this element.
Plugins are disabled in sandboxed browsing contexts because they might not honor the restrictions imposed by the sandbox (e.g. they might allow scripting even when scripting in the sandbox is disabled). User agents should convey the danger of overriding the sandbox to the user if an option to do so is provided.
When the element is created with a src attribute, and whenever the src attribute is
subsequently set, and whenever the type attribute is set or removed while the
element has a src
attribute, if the element is not in a sandboxed browsing context, user
agents should fetch the specified resource, find and
instantiate an appropriate plugin based on the content's type, and hand that
plugin the content of the resource, replacing any
previously instantiated plugin for the element.
Fetching the resource must delay the load event.
The type of the content being embedded is defined as follows:
If the element has a type attribute, then the value of the type attribute is the
content's type.
Otherwise, if the <path> component of the URL of the specified resource matches a pattern that a plugin supports, then the content's type is the type that that plugin can handle.
For example, a plugin might say that it can handle
resources with <path>
components that end with the four character string ".swf".
It would be better if browsers didn't do extension sniffing like this, and only based their decision on the actual contents of the resource. Couldn't we just apply the sniffed type of a resource steps?
Otherwise, if the specified resource has explicit Content-Type metadata, then that is the content's type.
Otherwise, the content has no type and there can be no appropriate plugin for it.
Whether the resource is fetched successfully or not (e.g. whether the response code was a 2xx code or equivalent) must be ignored when determining the resource's type and when handing the resource to the plugin.
This allows servers to return data for plugins even with error responses (e.g. HTTP 500 Internal Server Error codes can still contain plugin data).
When the element is created with a type attribute and no src attribute, and
whenever the type
attribute is subsequently set, so long as no src attribute is set, and whenever the src attribute is removed
when the element has a type attribute, if the element is not in a
sandboxed browsing context, user agents should find and instantiate an
appropriate plugin based on the value of the type attribute.
Any (namespace-less) attribute may be specified on the embed element, so long as its name is XML-compatible and contains no characters in
the range U+0041 .. U+005A (LATIN CAPITAL LETTER A LATIN CAPITAL LETTER
Z).
All attributes in HTML documents get lowercased automatically, so the restriction on uppercase letters doesn't affect such documents.
The user agent should pass the names and values of all the attributes of
the embed element that have no namespace
to the plugin used, when it is instantiated.
If the plugin instantiated for the embed element supports a scriptable interface,
the HTMLEmbedElement object
representing the element should expose that interface while the element is
instantiated.
The embed element has no fallback content. If the user agent can't find a
suitable plugin, then the user agent must use a default plugin. (This
default could be as simple as saying "Unsupported Format".)
The embed element supports dimension attributes.
The DOM attributes src and type each must reflect the respective content attributes of the same
name.
object 要素param elements, then,
transparent.
data
type
name
usemap
width
height
interface HTMLObjectElement : HTMLElement {
attribute DOMString data;
attribute DOMString type;
attribute DOMString name;
attribute DOMString useMap;
attribute unsigned long width;
attribute unsigned long height;
};
Objects implementing the HTMLObjectElement interface must
also implement the EmbeddingElement interface defined in
the Window Object specification. [WINDOW]
Depending on the type of content instantiated by the object element, the node may also support
other interfaces.
The object element can represent an
external resource, which, depending on the type of the resource, will
either be treated as an image, as a nested browsing
context, or as an external resource to be processed by a plugin.
The data
attribute, if present, specifies the address of the resource. If present,
the attribute must be a valid URL.
The type
attribute, if present, specifies the type of the resource. If present, the
attribute must be a valid MIME type, optionally with parameters. [RFC2046]
One or both of the data and type attributes must be present.
The name
attribute, if present, must be a valid browsing context
name.
When the element is created, and subsequently whenever the classid attribute changes or is removed,
or, if the classid attribute is not
present, whenever the data attribute changes or is removed, or, if
neither classid attribute nor the
data attribute are
present, whenever the type attribute changes or is removed, the user
agent must run the following steps to determine what the object element represents:
If the classid attribute is
present, and has a value that isn't the empty string, then: if the user
agent can find a plugin suitable according to the
value of the classid attribute,
and plugins aren't being sandboxed,
then that plugin should
be used, and the value of the data attribute, if any, should be passed to the
plugin. If no suitable plugin can be found, or if the plugin reports an error, jump to the last step in the
overall set of steps (fallback).
If the data
attribute is present, then:
If the type
attribute is present and its value is not a type that the user agent
supports, and is not a type that the user agent can find a plugin for, then the user agent may jump to the
last step in the overall set of steps (fallback) without fetching the
content to examine its real type.
Fetch the resource specified by the data attribute.
The fetching of the resource must delay the load event.
If the resource is not yet available (e.g. because the resource was not available in the cache, so that loading the resource required making a request over the network), then jump to the last step in the overall set of steps (fallback). When the resource becomes available, or if the load fails, restart this algorithm from this step. Resources can load incrementally; user agents may opt to consider a resource "available" whenever enough data has been obtained to begin processing the resource.
If the load failed (e.g. an HTTP 404 error, a DNS error), fire an error event
at the element, then jump to the last step in the overall set of steps
(fallback).
Determine the resource type, as follows:
Let the resource type be unknown.
If the resource has associated Content-Type metadata, then let the resource type be the type specified in the resource's Content-Type metadata.
If the resource type is unknown or "application/octet-stream" and there is a type attribute
present on the object element,
then change the resource type to instead be the
type specified in that type attribute.
Otherwise, if the resource type is "application/octet-stream" but there is no type attribute on
the object element, then change
the resource type to be unknown, so that the
sniffing rules in the next step are invoked.
If the resource type is still unknown, then change the resource type to instead be the sniffed type of the resource.
Handle the content as given by the first of the following cases that matches:
The user agent should use that plugin and pass the content of the resource to that plugin. If the plugin reports an error, then jump to the last step in the overall set of steps (fallback).
image/"
The object element must be
associated with a nested browsing context,
if it does not already have one. The element's nested browsing context must then be navigated to the given resource,
with replacement enabled, and with the
object element's document's browsing context as the source browsing context. (The data attribute of
the object element doesn't get
updated if the browsing context gets further navigated to other
locations.)
If the name attribute is present, the browsing context name must be set to the value
of this attribute; otherwise, the browsing
context name must be set to the empty string.
navigation might end up treating it as something else, because it can do sniffing. how should we handle that?
image/", and support for images has not been disabled
Apply the image sniffing rules to determine the type of the image.
The object element represents
the specified image. The image is not a nested browsing context.
If the image cannot be rendered, e.g. because it is malformed or in an unsupported format, jump to the last step in the overall set of steps (fallback).
The given resource type is not supported. Jump to the last step in the overall set of steps (fallback).
The element's contents are not part of what the object element represents.
Once the resource is completely loaded, fire a
load event at the element.
If the data
attribute is absent but the type attribute is present, plugins aren't being sandboxed, and the
user agent can find a plugin suitable according to
the value of the type attribute, then that plugin should be used.
If no suitable plugin can be found, or if the plugin reports an error, jump to the next step
(fallback).
(Fallback.) The object element
represents what the element's contents represent, ignoring any leading
param element children. This is the
element's fallback content.
When the algorithm above instantiates a plugin, the user agent should pass the names and values
of all the parameters given by
param elements that are children of the
object element to the plugin used. If the plugin
supports a scriptable interface, the HTMLObjectElement object representing
the element should expose that interface. The plugin
is not a nested browsing context.
If the sandboxed plugins
browsing context flag is set on the browsing
context for which the object
element's document is the active document, then the
steps above must always act as if they had failed to find a plugin, even if one would otherwise have been used.
Due to the algorithm above, the contents of object elements act as fallback content, used only when referenced resources
can't be shown (e.g. because it returned a 404 error). This allows
multiple object elements to be nested
inside each other, targeting multiple user agents with different
capabilities, with the user agent picking the first one it supports.
Whenever the name attribute is set, if the object element has a nested browsing context, its name must be changed to the new value.
If the attribute is removed, if the object element has a browsing context, the browsing
context name must be set to the empty string.
The usemap attribute, if present while the object element represents an image, can indicate
that the object has an associated image map. The
attribute must be ignored if the object
element doesn't represent an image.
The object element supports dimension attributes.
The DOM attributes data, type, name, and useMap each must reflect the respective content attributes of the same
name.
In the following example, a Java applet is embedded in a page using the
object element. (Generally speaking,
it is better to avoid using applets like these and instead use native
JavaScript and HTML to provide the functionality, since that way the
application will work on all Web browsers without requiring a third-party
plugin. Many devices, especially embedded devices, do not support
third-party technologies like Java.)
<figure> <object type="application/x-java-applet"> <param name="code" value="MyJavaClass"> <p>You do not have Java available, or it is disabled.</p> </object> <legend>My Java Clock</legend> </figure>
In this example, an HTML page is embedded in another using the object element.
<figure> <object data="clock.html"></object> <legend>My HTML Clock</legend> </figure>
param 要素object element,
before any flow content.
name
value
interface HTMLParamElement : HTMLElement {
attribute DOMString name;
attribute DOMString value;
};
The param element defines parameters
for plugins invoked by object elements.
The name
attribute gives the name of the parameter.
The value
attribute gives the value of the parameter.
Both attributes must be present. They may have any value.
If both attributes are present, and if the parent element of the
param is an object element, then the element defines a parameter with the given
name/value pair.
The DOM attributes name and value must both reflect the respective content attributes of the same
name.
video 要素controls attribute: Interactive content.
src attribute: transparent.
src attribute: one or more source elements, then, transparent.
src
poster
autoplay
start
loopstart
loopend
end
playcount
controls
width
height
interface HTMLVideoElement : HTMLMediaElement {
attribute unsigned long width;
attribute unsigned long height;
readonly attribute unsigned long videoWidth;
readonly attribute unsigned long videoHeight;
attribute DOMString poster;
};
A video element represents a video or
movie.
Content may be provided inside the video element. User agents should not show this
content to the user; it is intended for older Web browsers which do not
support video, so that legacy video
plugins can be tried, or to show text to the users of these older browser
informing them of how to access the video contents.
In particular, this content is not fallback content intended to address accessibility concerns. To make video content accessible to the blind, deaf, and those with other physical or cognitive disabilities, authors are expected to provide alternative media streams and/or to embed accessibility aids (such as caption or subtitle tracks) into their media streams.
The video element is a media element whose media data is
ostensibly video data, possibly with associated audio data.
The src, autoplay, start, loopstart,
loopend,
end, playcount, and
controls
attributes are the
attributes common to all media elements.
The poster
attribute gives the address of an image file that the user agent can show
while no video data is available. The attribute, if present, must contain
a valid URL. If the specified resource is to be
used, it must be fetched when the element
is created or when the poster attribute is set. The poster frame is then the image obtained from that
resource, if any.
The image given by the poster attribute, the poster frame, is intended to be a representative
frame of the video (typically one of the first non-blank frames) that
gives the user an idea of what the video is like.
poster DOM 属性は poster 内容属性を反映しなければなりません。
When no video data is available (the element's networkState attribute is either EMPTY, LOADING, or LOADED_METADATA), video elements represent either the poster frame, or nothing.
When a video element is paused and the current playback
position is the first frame of video, the element represents either
the frame of video corresponding to the current playback position or the poster frame, at the discretion of the user agent.
Notwithstanding the above, the poster frame should be preferred over nothing, but the poster frame should not be shown again after a frame of video has been shown.
When a video element is paused at any other position,
the element represents the frame of video corresponding to the current playback
position, or, if that is not yet available (e.g. because the video is
seeking or buffering), the last frame of the video to have been rendered.
When a video element is actively playing, it represents the frame of video at
the continuously increasing "current" position. When the current
playback position changes such that the last frame rendered is no
longer the frame corresponding to the current playback
position in the video, the new frame must be rendered. Similarly, any
audio associated with the video must, if played, be played synchronized
with the current playback position, at the
specified volume with the
specified mute state.
When a video element is neither actively playing nor paused (e.g. when seeking or stalled), the
element represents the last frame of the video to have been rendered.
Which frame in a video stream corresponds to a particular playback position is defined by the video stream's format.
In addition to the above, the user agent may provide messages to the user (such as "buffering", "no video loaded", "error", or more detailed information) by overlaying text or icons on the video or other areas of the element's playback area, or in another appropriate manner.
User agents that cannot render the video may instead make the element represent a link to an external video playback utility or to the video data itself.
The intrinsic width and height of the video are the aspect-ratio corrected dimensions given by the video data itself: the intrinsic width is the number of pixels per line of the video data multiplied by the pixel ratio given by the resource, multiplied by the resolution of the resource; the intrinsic height is the number of pixels per column of the video data multiplied by the resolution of the resource. The resolution of the resource is the physical distance intended for each pixel of video data, and assumes square pixels, with the resource's pixel ratio then adjusting the width of the pixels to the actual aspect-ratio-corrected width. In the absence of resolution information defining the mapping of pixels in the video to physical dimensions, user agents should assume that one pixel in the video corresponds to one CSS pixel. The pixel ratio of the resource is the corrected aspect ratio of the video divided by the ratio of the number of pixels per line to the number of pixels per column. In the absence of pixel ratio information in the resource, user agents should assume a default of 1.0 (square pixels).
The videoWidth DOM attribute
must return the intrinsic width of the video in
CSS pixels. The videoHeight DOM attribute
must return the intrinsic height of the video in
CSS pixels. If no video data is available, then the attributes must return
0.
If the video's pixel ratio override's is none, then the video's adjusted width is the same as the video's intrinsic width. If the video has a pixel ratio override other than none, then the adjusted width of the video is the number of pixels per line of the video data multiplied by the video's pixel ratio override, multiplied by the resolution of the resource; the pixel ratio of the resource is thus ignored.
The video's adjusted height is the same as the video's intrinsic height.
The adjusted aspect ratio of a video is the ratio of its adjusted width to its adjusted height.
User agents may adjust the adjusted width and height of the video to ensure that each pixel of video data corresponds to at least one device pixel, so long as this doesn't affect the adjusted aspect ratio (this is especially relevant for pixel ratios that are less than 1.0).
The video element supports dimension attributes.
Video content should be rendered inside the element's playback area such that the video content is shown centered in the playback area at the largest possible size that fits completely within it, with the video content's adjusted aspect ratio being preserved. Thus, if the aspect ratio of the playback area does not match the adjusted aspect ratio of the video, the video will be shown letterboxed. Areas of the element's playback area that do not contain the video represent nothing.
The intrinsic width of a video
element's playback area is the adjusted width of the video
resource, if that is available; otherwise it is the intrinsic width of the
poster frame, if that is available; otherwise it is
300 CSS pixels.
The intrinsic height of a video
element's playback area is the intrinsic height of the video
resource, if that is available; otherwise it is the intrinsic height of
the poster frame, if that is available; otherwise
it is 150 CSS pixels.
The poster frame is not affected by the pixel ratio conversions.
User agents should provide controls to enable or disable the display of closed captions associated with the video stream, though such features should, again, not interfere with the page's normal rendering.
User agents may allow users to view the video content in manners more
suitable to the user (e.g. full-screen or in an independent resizable
window). As for the other user interface features, controls to enable this
should not interfere with the page's normal rendering unless the user
agent is exposing a user interface. In such an independent context,
however, user agents may make full user interfaces visible, with, e.g.,
play, pause, seeking, and volume controls, even if the controls
attribute is absent.
User agents may allow video playback to affect system features that could interfere with the user's experience; for example, user agents could disable screensavers while video playback is in progress.
User agents should not provide a public API to cause videos to be shown full-screen. A script, combined with a carefully crafted video file, could trick the user into thinking a system-modal dialog had been shown, and prompt the user for a password. There is also the danger of "mere" annoyance, with pages launching full-screen videos when links are clicked or pages navigated. Instead, user-agent specific interface features may be provided to easily allow the user to obtain a full-screen playback mode.
The spec does not currently define the interaction of the "controls" attribute with the "height" and "width" attributes. This will likely be defined in the rendering section based on implementation experience. So far, browsers seem to be making the controls overlay-only, thus somewhat sidestepping the issue.
video elementsUser agents may support any video and audio codecs and container formats.
It would be helpful for interoperability if all browsers could support the same codecs. However, there are no known codecs that satisfy all the current players: we need a codec that is known to not require per-unit or per-distributor licensing, that is compatible with the open source development model, that is of sufficient quality as to be usable, and that is not an additional submarine patent risk for large companies. This is an ongoing issue and this section will be updated once more information is available.
Certain user agents might support no codecs at all, e.g. text browsers running over SSH connections.
audio 要素controls attribute: Interactive content.
src attribute: transparent.
src attribute: one or more source elements, then, transparent.
src
autoplay
start
loopstart
loopend
end
playcount
controls
[NamedConstructor=Audio(),
NamedConstructor=Audio(in DOMString url)]
interface HTMLAudioElement : HTMLMediaElement {
// no members
};
An audio element represents a sound
or audio stream.
Content may be provided inside the audio element. User agents should not show this
content to the user; it is intended for older Web browsers which do not
support audio, so that legacy audio
plugins can be tried, or to show text to the users of these older browser
informing them of how to access the audio contents.
In particular, this content is not fallback content intended to address accessibility concerns. To make audio content accessible to the deaf or to those with other physical or cognitive disabilities, authors are expected to provide alternative media streams and/or to embed accessibility aids (such as transcriptions) into their media streams.
The audio element is a media element whose media data is
ostensibly audio data.
The src, autoplay, start, loopstart,
loopend,
end, playcount, and
controls
attributes are the
attributes common to all media elements.
When an audio element is actively playing, it must have its audio data played
synchronized with the current playback position,
at the specified volume with
the specified mute state.
When an audio element is not actively playing, audio must not play for the
element.
Two constructors are provided for creating HTMLAudioElement objects (in addition
to the factory methods from DOM Core such as createElement()): Audio() and Audio(url). When
invoked as constructors, these must return a new HTMLAudioElement object (a new
audio element). If the src argument is present, the object created must have its
src content attribute
set to the provided value, and the user agent must invoke the load() method on the
object before returning.
audio elementsUser agents may support any audio codecs and container formats.
User agents must support the WAVE container format with audio encoded using the PCM format.
source 要素src
type
media
pixelratio
interface HTMLSourceElement : HTMLElement {
attribute DOMString src;
attribute DOMString type;
attribute DOMString media;
attribute float pixelRatio;
};
The source element allows authors to
specify multiple media
resources for media
elements.
The src attribute
gives the address of the media resource. The value
must be a valid URL. This attribute must be present.
The type
attribute gives the type of the media resource, to
help the user agent determine if it can play this media
resource before fetching it. Its value must be a MIME type. The codecs parameter may be specified and might be necessary
to specify exactly how the resource is encoded. [RFC2046] [RFC4281]
The following list shows some examples of how to use the codecs= MIME parameter in the type attribute.
<source src="video.mp4" type="video/mp4; codecs="avc1.42E01E, mp4a.40.2"">
<source src="video.mp4" type="video/mp4; codecs="avc1.58A01E, mp4a.40.2"">
<source src="video.mp4" type="video/mp4; codecs="avc1.4D401E, mp4a.40.2"">
<source src="video.mp4" type="video/mp4; codecs="avc1.64001E, mp4a.40.2"">
<source src="video.mp4" type="video/mp4; codecs="mp4v.20.8, mp4a.40.2"">
<source src="video.mp4" type="video/mp4; codecs="mp4v.20.240, mp4a.40.2"">
<source src="video.3gp" type="video/3gpp; codecs="mp4v.20.8, samr"">
<source src="video.ogv" type="video/ogg; codecs="theora, vorbis"">
<source src="video.ogv" type="video/ogg; codecs="theora, speex"">
<source src="audio.ogg" type="audio/ogg; codecs=vorbis">
<source src="audio.spx" type="audio/ogg; codecs=speex">
<source src="audio.oga" type="audio/ogg; codecs=flac">
<source src="video.ogv" type="video/ogg; codecs="dirac, vorbis"">
<source src="video.mkv" type="video/x-matroska; codecs="theora, vorbis"">
The media
attribute gives the intended media type of the media
resource, to help the user agent determine if this media resource is useful to the user before fetching
it. Its value must be a valid media query. [MQ]
Either the type
attribute, the media attribute or both, must be specified,
unless this is the last source element
child of the parent element.
The pixelratio attribute
allows the author to specify the pixel ratio of anamorphic media resources that do not
self-describe their pixel ratio. The attribute value,
if specified, must be a valid floating point number
giving the ratio of the correct rendered width of each pixel to the actual
height of each pixel in the image. The default value, if the attribute is
omitted or cannot be parsed, is 1.0.
The only way this default is used is in deciding what number
the pixelRatio DOM attribute will return if the
content attribute is omitted or cannot be parsed. If the content attribute
is omitted or cannot be parsed, then the user agent doesn't adjust the intrinsic width
of the video at all; the intrinsic dimensions and the pixel ratio of the video are honoured.
If a source element is inserted into
a media element that is already in a document and
whose networkState is in the EMPTY state, the user
agent must queue a task that implicitly invokes the
load() method on the
media element, and ignores any resulting exceptions.
The task source for this task is the media element's own media element
new resource task source.
The DOM attributes src, type, and media must reflect the respective content attributes of the same
name.
The DOM attribute pixelRatio must reflect the pixelratio content attribute.
Media elements implement the following interface:
interface HTMLMediaElement : HTMLElement {
// error state
readonly attribute MediaError error;
// network state
attribute DOMString src;
readonly attribute DOMString currentSrc;
const unsigned short EMPTY = 0;
const unsigned short LOADING = 1;
const unsigned short LOADED_METADATA = 2;
const unsigned short LOADED_FIRST_FRAME = 3;
const unsigned short LOADED = 4;
readonly attribute unsigned short networkState;
readonly attribute float bufferingRate;
readonly attribute boolean bufferingThrottled;
readonly attribute TimeRanges buffered;
readonly attribute ByteRanges bufferedBytes;
readonly attribute unsigned long totalBytes;
void load();
// ready state
const unsigned short DATA_UNAVAILABLE = 0;
const unsigned short CAN_SHOW_CURRENT_FRAME = 1;
const unsigned short CAN_PLAY = 2;
const unsigned short CAN_PLAY_THROUGH = 3;
readonly attribute unsigned short readyState;
readonly attribute boolean seeking;
// playback state
attribute float currentTime;
readonly attribute float duration;
readonly attribute boolean paused;
attribute float defaultPlaybackRate;
attribute float playbackRate;
readonly attribute TimeRanges played;
readonly attribute TimeRanges seekable;
readonly attribute boolean ended;
attribute boolean autoplay;
void play();
void pause();
// looping
attribute float start;
attribute float end;
attribute float loopStart;
attribute float loopEnd;
attribute unsigned long playCount;
attribute unsigned long currentLoop;
// cue ranges
void addCueRange(in DOMString className, in DOMString id, in float start, in float end, in boolean pauseOnExit, in CueRangeCallback enterCallback, in CueRangeCallback exitCallback);
void removeCueRanges(in DOMString className);
// controls
attribute boolean controls;
attribute float volume;
attribute boolean muted;
};
The media element attributes, src, autoplay, start, loopstart,
loopend,
end, playcount, and
controls,
apply to all media elements.
They are defined in this section.
Media elements are used to present audio data, or video and audio data, to the user. This is referred to as media data in this section, since this section applies equally to media elements for audio or for video. The term media resource is used to refer to the complete set of media data, e.g. the complete video file, or complete audio file.
Media elements use two task queues, the media element event task source for asynchronous events and callbacks, and the media element new resource task source for handling implicit loads. Unless otherwise specified, the task source for all the tasks queued in this section and its subsections is the media element event task source.
All media elements have an
associated error status, which records the last error the element
encountered since the load() method was last invoked. The error attribute, on getting, must
return the MediaError object
created for this last error, or null if there has not been an error.
interface MediaError {
const unsigned short MEDIA_ERR_ABORTED = 1;
const unsigned short MEDIA_ERR_NETWORK = 2;
const unsigned short MEDIA_ERR_DECODE = 3;
readonly attribute unsigned short code;
};
The code
attribute of a MediaError object
must return the code for the error, which must be one of the following:
MEDIA_ERR_ABORTED (数値 1)MEDIA_ERR_NETWORK (数値 2)MEDIA_ERR_DECODE (数値 3)The src content
attribute on media elements
gives the address of the media resource (video, audio) to show. The
attribute, if present, must contain a valid URL.
If the src
attribute of a media element that is already in a
document and whose networkState is in the EMPTY state is added,
changed, or removed, the user agent must queue a task
that implicitly invokes the load() method on the media
element, and ignores any resulting exceptions. The task source for this task is the media element's own media element
new resource task source.
If a src attribute is specified, the resource it
specifies is the media resource that will be used.
Otherwise, the resource specified by the first suitable source element child of the media element is the one used.
The src DOM
attribute on media elements
must reflect the content attribute of the same
name.
To pick a media resource for a media element, a user agent must use the following steps:
Let the chosen resource's pixel ratio override be none.
If the media element has a src attribute, then resolve the URL given in that attribute. If that is successful, then
the resulting absolute URL is the address of the
media resource; jump to the last step.
Otherwise, let candidate be the first source element child in the media element, or null if there is no such child.
Loop: this is the start of the loop that looks at the source elements.
If candidate is not null and it has a pixelratio
attribute, and the result of applying the rules for
parsing floating point number values to the value of that attribute
is not an error, then let the chosen resource's pixel
ratio override be that result; otherwise, reset it back to
none.
If either:
src attribute, or
src
attribute fails, or
type attribute and
that attribute's value, when parsed as a MIME type, does not represent
a type that the user agent can render (including any codecs described
by the codec parameter), or [RFC2046] [RFC4281]
media attribute
and that attribute's value, when processed according to the rules for
media queries, does not match the current
environment, [MQ]
...then the candidate is not suitable; go to the next step.
Otherwise, the result of resolving the URL given in that candidate element's src attribute is the address of the media resource; jump to the last step.
Let candidate be the next source element child in the media element, or null if there are no more such
children.
If candidate is not null, return to the step labeled loop.
There is no media resource. Abort these steps.
Let the address of the chosen media resource be the absolute URL that was found before jumping to this step, and let its pixel ratio override be the value of the chosen resource's pixel ratio override.
The currentSrc DOM attribute
must return the empty string if the media element's
networkState has the value EMPTY, and the absolute URL that is the address of the chosen media resource otherwise.
媒体要素がネットワークと対話するに当たっては、
いくつかの状態を経ることとなります。networkState
属性は、取得時、要素の現在のネットワーク状態を返さなければなりません。
その状態は、次の値のいずれか1つでなければなりません。
EMPTY (数値 0)LOADING (数値 1)currentSrc 属性から利用可能です。) が、
メタデータはまだまったく取得されておらず、従って他の属性もまだすべて初期状態にあります。LOADED_METADATA (数値 2)LOADED_FIRST_FRAME (数値 3)LOADED (数値 4)後に定義する load() メソッドの算法で、正確にいつ
networkState
属性の値が変化するかを説明しています。
All media elements have a begun flag, which must begin in the false state, a loaded-first-frame flag, which must begin in the false state, and an autoplaying flag, which must begin in the true state.
When the load()
method on a media element is invoked, the user agent
must run the following steps. Note that this algorithm might get aborted,
e.g. if the load()
method itself is invoked again.
If there are any tasks from the media element's media element new resource task source or its media element event task source in one of the task queues, then remove those tasks.
Basically, pending events, callbacks, and loads for the media element are discarded when the media element starts loading a new resource.
Any already-running instance of this algorithm for this element must be aborted. If those method calls have not yet returned, they must finish the step they are on, and then immediately return. This is not blocking; this algorithm must not wait for the earlier instances to abort before continuing.
If the element's begun flag is true, then the begun flag must be set to false, the error attribute must
be set to a new MediaError object
whose code
attribute is set to MEDIA_ERR_ABORTED, and the user agent
must synchronously fire a progress event called
abort at the media element.
The error
attribute must be set to null, the loaded-first-frame flag must be set to
false, and the autoplaying flag must be set
to true.
The playbackRate attribute must be set to
the value of the defaultPlaybackRate attribute.
If the media element's networkState is not set to EMPTY, then the following
substeps must be followed:
networkState attribute must be set to
EMPTY.
readyState is not set to DATA_UNAVAILABLE, it must be set to
that state.
paused attribute is false, it must be set to
true.
seeking is true, it must be set to false.
currentLoop DOM attribute must be set to
0.emptied at the media
element.
The user agent must pick a media resource for
the media element. If that fails, the method must
raise an INVALID_STATE_ERR exception, and abort these
steps.
The networkState attribute must be set to LOADING.
The currentSrc attribute starts returning the
new value.
The user agent must then set the begun flag to
true and synchronously fire a progress event
called loadstart at the media
element.
The method must return, but these steps must continue.
Playback of any previously playing media resource for this element stops.
If a fetching process is in progress for the media element, the user agent should stop it.
The user agent must then begin to fetch the chosen media resource. The rate of the download may be throttled, however, in response to user preferences (including throttling it to zero until the user indicates that the download can start), or to balance the download with other connections sharing the same bandwidth.
While the fetching process is progressing, the user agent must queue a task to fire a progress
event called progress at the element every 350ms
(±200ms) or for every byte received, whichever is least
frequent.
If at any point the user agent has received no data for more than
about three seconds, the user agent must queue a
task to fire a progress event called stalled at the
element.
User agents may allow users to selectively block or slow media data downloads. When a media element's download has been blocked, the user agent must act as if it was stalled (as opposed to acting as if the connection was closed).
The user agent may use whatever means necessary to fetch the resource (within the constraints put forward by this and other specifications); for example, reconnecting to the server in the face of network errors, using HTTP partial range requests, or switching to a streaming protocol. The user agent must consider a resource erroneous only if it has given up trying to fetch it.
The networking task source tasks to process the data as it is being fetched must, when appropriate, include the relevant substeps from the following list:
DNS errors and HTTP 4xx and 5xx errors (and equivalents in other protocols) must cause the user agent to execute the following steps. User agents may also follow these steps in response to other network errors of similar severity.
error
attribute must be set to a new MediaError object whose code attribute
is set to MEDIA_ERR_NETWORK.
error at the media element.
networkState attribute must be
switched to the EMPTY
value and the user agent must queue a task to fire a simple event called emptied at the
element.
The server returning a file of the wrong kind (e.g. one that that
turns out to not be pure audio when the media
element is an audio element),
or the file using unsupported codecs for all the data, must cause the
user agent to execute the following steps. User agents may also
execute these steps in response to other codec-related fatal errors,
such as the file requiring more resources to process than the user
agent can provide in real time.
error
attribute must be set to a new MediaError object whose code attribute
is set to MEDIA_ERR_DECODE.
error at the media element.
networkState attribute must be
switched to the EMPTY
value and the user agent must queue a task to fire a simple event called emptied at the
element.
The fetching process is aborted by the user, e.g. because the user
navigated the browsing context to another page, the user agent must
execute the following steps. These steps are not followed if the load() method itself
is reinvoked, as the steps above handle that particular kind of abort.
error
attribute must be set to a new MediaError object whose code attribute
is set to MEDIA_ERR_ABORT.
abort at the media element.
networkState attribute has the value
LOADING,
the element's networkState attribute must be
switched to the EMPTY
value and the user agent must queue a task to fire a simple event called emptied at the
element. (If the networkState attribute has a value
greater than LOADING, then this doesn't happen; the
available data, if any, will be playable.)
The server returning data that is partially usable but cannot be optimally rendered must cause the user agent to execute the following steps.
The user agent must follow these substeps:
The current playback position must be set to the effective start.
The networkState attribute must be set
to LOADED_METADATA.
A number of attributes, including duration,
buffered, and played, become
available.
The user agent will queue a task to fire a simple
event called durationchange at the element at
this point.
The user agent must queue a task to fire a simple event called loadedmetadata at the element.
The user agent must follow these substeps:
The networkState attribute must be set
to LOADED_FIRST_FRAME.
The readyState attribute must change to
CAN_SHOW_CURRENT_FRAME.
The loaded-first-frame flag must be set to true.
The user agent must queue a task to fire a simple event called loadedfirstframe at the
element.
The user agent must queue a task to fire a simple event called canshowcurrentframe at the
element.
When the user agent has completely fetched of the entire media resource, it must move on to the next step.
If the fetching process completes without errors, the begun flag must be set to false, the networkState attribute must be set to
LOADED, and
the user agent must queue a task to fire a progress event called load at the element.
If a media element whose networkState has the value EMPTY is inserted into a
document, the user agent must queue a task that
implicitly invokes the load() method on the media
element, and ignores any resulting exceptions. The task source for this task is the media element's own media element
new resource task source.
The bufferingRate attribute
must return the average number of bits received per second for the current
download over the past few seconds. If there is no download in progress,
the attribute must return 0.
The bufferingThrottled
attribute must return true if the user agent is intentionally throttling
the bandwidth used by the download (including when throttling to zero to
pause the download altogether), and false otherwise.
The buffered attribute must return
a static normalized TimeRanges
object that represents the ranges of the media
resource, if any, that the user agent has buffered, at the time the
attribute is evaluated.
Typically this will be a single range anchored at the zero point, but if, e.g. the user agent uses HTTP range requests in response to seeking, then there could be multiple ranges.
The bufferedBytes attribute
must return a static normalized
ByteRanges object that represents the ranges of the media resource, if any, that the user agent has
buffered, at the time the attribute is evaluated.
The totalBytes attribute must
return the length of the media resource, in bytes,
if it is known and finite. If it is not known, is infinite (e.g. streaming
radio), or if no media data is available, the
attribute must return 0.
User agents may discard previously buffered data.
Thus, a time or byte position included within a range of the
objects return by the buffered or bufferedBytes attributes at one time can
end up being not included in the range(s) of objects returned by the same
attributes at a later time.
The duration attribute must return
the length of the media resource, in seconds. If no
media data is available, then the attributes must
return 0. If media data is available but the length
is not known, the attribute must return the Not-a-Number (NaN) value. If
the media resource is known to be unbounded (e.g. a
streaming radio), then the attribute must return the positive Infinity
value.
When the length of the media
resource changes (e.g. from being unknown to known, or from
indeterminate to known, or from a previously established length to a new
length) the user agent must queue a task to fire a simple event called durationchange at the media element.
Media elements have a current playback position, which must initially be zero. The current position is a time.
The currentTime attribute must,
on getting, return the current playback position,
expressed in seconds. On setting, the user agent must seek to the new value (which might raise an
exception).
The start
content attribute gives the offset into the media
resource at which playback is to begin. The default value is the
default start position of the media resource, or 0
if not enough media data has been obtained yet to
determine the default start position or if the resource doesn't specify a
default start position.
The effective start is the smaller of
the start DOM
attribute and the end of the media resource.
The loopstart content attribute
gives the offset into the media resource at which
playback is to begin when looping a clip. The default value of the loopstart
content attribute is the value of the start DOM attribute.
The effective loop start is the
smaller of the loopStart DOM attribute and the end of the
media resource.
The loopend
content attribute gives an offset into the media
resource at which playback is to jump back to the loopstart, when
looping the clip. The default value of the loopend content
attribute is the value of the end DOM attribute.
The effective loop end is the
greater of the start, loopStart, and loopEnd DOM
attributes, except if that is greater than the end of the media resource, in which case that's its value.
The end content
attribute gives an offset into the media resource
at which playback is to end. The default value is infinity.
The effective end is the greater of
the start, loopStart, and
end DOM
attributes, except if that is greater than the end of the media resource, in which case that's its value.
The start,
loopstart, loopend, and end attributes must, if specified, contain value time offsets. To get the time
values they represent, user agents must use the rules
for parsing time offsets.
The start, loopStart, loopEnd, and end DOM attributes must reflect the start, loopstart, loopend, and end content attributes on the media element respectively.
The playcount content attribute
gives the number of times to play the clip. The default value is 1.
The playCount DOM attribute must
reflect the playcount content attribute on the media element. The value must be limited to only positive non-zero numbers.
The currentLoop attribute must
initially have the value 0. It gives the index of the current loop. It is
changed during playback as described below.
When any of the start, loopStart, loopEnd, end, playCount, and currentLoop
DOM attributes change value (either through content attribute mutations
reflecting into the DOM attribute, if applicable, or through direct
mutations of the DOM attribute), the user agent must apply the following
steps:
If the playCount DOM attribute's value is less
than or equal to the currentLoop DOM attribute's value, then
the currentLoop DOM attribute's value must be
set to playCount-1 (which will make the
current loop the last loop).
If the media element's networkState is in the EMPTY state or the
LOADING
state, then the user agent must at this point abort these steps.
If the currentLoop is zero, and the current playback position is before the effective start, the user agent must seek to the effective start.
If the currentLoop is greater than zero, and the
current playback position is before the effective loop start, the user agent must
seek to the effective loop start.
If the currentLoop is less than playCount-1, and the current playback position is after the effective loop end, the user agent must seek to the effective loop start, and increase currentLoop by 1.
If the currentLoop is equal to playCount-1, and the current playback position is after the effective end, the user agent must seek to the effective end and then the looping will
end.
Media elements have a ready state, which describes to what degree they are ready to be rendered at the current playback position. The possible values are as follows; the ready state of a media element at any particular time is the greatest value describing the state of the element:
DATA_UNAVAILABLE (数値 0)networkState attribute is less than LOADED_FIRST_FRAME are always in the
DATA_UNAVAILABLE state.
CAN_SHOW_CURRENT_FRAME (数値 1)DATA_UNAVAILABLE state. In video, this
corresponds to the user agent having data from the current frame, but not
the next frame. In audio, this corresponds to the user agent only having
audio up to the current playback position, but no
further.
CAN_PLAY (数値 2)DATA_UNAVAILABLE state. In video, this
corresponds to the user agent having data for the current frame and the
next frame. In audio, this corresponds to the user agent having data
beyond the current playback position.
CAN_PLAY_THROUGH (数値 3)DATA_UNAVAILABLE state, and, in
addition, the user agent estimates that data is being fetched at a rate
where the current playback position, if it were
to advance at the rate given by the defaultPlaybackRate attribute,
would not overtake the available data before playback reaches the effective end of the media
resource on the last loop.
When the ready state of a media element whose
networkState is not EMPTY changes, the user
agent must follow the steps given below:
DATA_UNAVAILABLE
The user agent must fire a simple event called
dataunavailable at the element.
CAN_SHOW_CURRENT_FRAME
If the element's loaded-first-frame
flag is true, the user agent must fire a simple
event called canshowcurrentframe event.
The first time the networkState attribute switches to this
value, the loaded-first-frame flag is
false, and the event is fired by the algorithm described
above for the load() method, in conjunction with other steps.
CAN_PLAY
The user agent must fire a simple event called
canplay.
CAN_PLAY_THROUGH
The user agent must fire a simple event called
canplaythrough event. If the autoplaying flag is true, and the paused attribute is
true, and the media element has an autoplay
attribute specified, then the user agent must also set the paused attribute to
false and fire a simple event called play.
It is possible for the ready state of a media element to jump
between these states discontinuously. For example, the state of a media
element whose loaded-first-frame flag is
false can jump straight from DATA_UNAVAILABLE to CAN_PLAY_THROUGH without passing through
the CAN_SHOW_CURRENT_FRAME and CAN_PLAY states,
and thus without firing the canshowcurrentframe and canplay events. The
only state that is guaranteed to be reached is the CAN_SHOW_CURRENT_FRAME state, which
is reached as part of the load() method's processing.
The readyState DOM attribute
must, on getting, return the value described above that describes the
current ready state of the media element.
The autoplay attribute is a boolean attribute. When present, the algorithm
described herein will cause the user agent to automatically begin playback
of the media resource as soon as it can do so
without stopping.
The autoplay DOM attribute must reflect the content attribute of the same name.
The paused
attribute represents whether the media element is
paused or not. The attribute must initially be true.
A media element is said to be actively playing when its paused attribute is
false, the readyState attribute is either CAN_PLAY or CAN_PLAY_THROUGH, the element has not ended playback, playback has not stopped due to errors, and the element has not paused for user interaction.
A media element is said to have ended playback when the element's networkState attribute is LOADED_METADATA or greater, the current playback position is equal to the effective end of the media
resource, and the currentLoop attribute is equal to
playCount-1.
A media element is said to have stopped due to errors when the element's networkState attribute is LOADED_METADATA or greater, and the user
agent encounters a non-fatal error
during the processing of the media data, and due to
that error, is not able to play the content at the current playback position.
A media element is said to have paused for user interaction when its paused attribute is
false, the readyState attribute is either CAN_PLAY or CAN_PLAY_THROUGH and the user agent has
reached a point in the media resource where the
user has to make a selection for the resource to continue.
It is possible for a media element to have both ended playback and paused for user interaction at the same time.
When a media element is actively playing and its owner Document
is an active document, its current playback position must increase monotonically
at playbackRate units of media time per unit
time of wall clock time. If this value is not 1, the user agent may apply
pitch adjustments to any audio component of the media
resource.
This specification doesn't define how the user agent achieves the appropriate playback rate — depending on the protocol and media available, it is plausible that the user agent could negotiate with the server to have the server provide the media data at the appropriate rate, so that (except for the period between when the rate is changed and when the server updates the stream's playback rate) the client doesn't actually have to drop or interpolate any frames.
Media resources might be internally scripted or interactive. Thus, a media element could play in a non-linear fashion. If this happens, the user agent must act as if the algorithm for seeking was used whenever the current playback position changes in a discontinuous fashion (so that the relevant events fire).
When a media element
that is actively playing stops playing because its
readyState attribute changes to a value
lower than CAN_PLAY, without the element having ended playback, or playback having stopped due to errors, or playback having paused for user interaction, or the seeking algorithm being invoked, the user agent
must queue a task to fire a simple
event called timeupdate at the element, and queue a task to fire a simple
event called waiting at the element.
When a media element that is actively playing stops playing because it has paused for user interaction, the user agent must queue a task to fire a simple
event called timeupdate at the element.
When currentLoop is less than playCount-1 and the current playback position reaches the effective loop end, then the user agent must
increase currentLoop by 1 and seek to the effective
loop start.
When currentLoop is equal to the playCount-1 and the current playback position reaches the effective end, then the user agent must
follow these steps:
The user agent must stop playback.
The ended attribute becomes true.
The user agent must queue a task to fire a simple event called timeupdate at
the element.
The user agent must queue a task to fire a simple event called ended at the element.
The defaultPlaybackRate
attribute gives the desired speed at which the media
resource is to play, as a multiple of its intrinsic speed. The
attribute is mutable, but on setting, if the new value is 0.0, a
NOT_SUPPORTED_ERR exception must be raised instead of the
value being changed. It must initially have the value 1.0.
The playbackRate attribute
gives the speed at which the media resource plays,
as a multiple of its intrinsic speed. If it is not equal to the defaultPlaybackRate, then the
implication is that the user is using a feature such as fast forward or
slow motion playback. The attribute is mutable, but on setting, if the new
value is 0.0, a NOT_SUPPORTED_ERR exception must be raised
instead of the value being changed. Otherwise, the playback must change
speed (if the element is actively playing). It
must initially have the value 1.0.
When the defaultPlaybackRate or playbackRate attributes change value
(either by being set by script or by being changed directly by the user
agent, e.g. in response to user control) the user agent must queue a task to fire a simple
event called ratechange at the media
element.
When the play()
method on a media element is invoked, the user agent
must run the following steps.
If the media element's networkState attribute has the value EMPTY, then the user agent must
invoke the load()
method and wait for it to return. If that raises an exception, that
exception must be reraised by the play() method.
If the playback has ended,
then the user agent must set currentLoop to zero and seek to the effective
start.
If this involved a seek, the user agent will queue a task to fire a simple event called timeupdate at
the media element.
The playbackRate attribute must be set to
the value of the defaultPlaybackRate attribute.
If this caused the playbackRate attribute to change value,
the user agent will queue a
task to fire a simple event called ratechange at
the media element.
If the media element's paused attribute is
true, it must be set to false.
The media element's autoplaying flag must be set to false.
The method must then return.
If the fourth step above changed the value of paused, the user
agent must queue a task to fire
a simple event called play at the element.
利用者エージェントは、 pause() メソッドが呼び出された時、
次の段階を走らせなければなりません。
If the media element's networkState attribute has the value EMPTY, then the user agent must
invoke the load()
method and wait for it to return. If that raises an exception, that
exception must be reraised by the pause() method.
If the media element's paused attribute is
false, it must be set to true.
The media element's autoplaying flag must be set to false.
The method must then return.
If the second step above changed the value of paused, then the
user agent must queue a task to fire a simple event called timeupdate at
the element, and queue a task to fire a simple event called pause at the element.
When a media element is removed from a
Document, if the media element's networkState attribute has a value other
than EMPTY then the user agent
must act as if the pause() method had been invoked.
Media elements that are actively playing while not in a
Document must not play any video, but
should play any audio component. Media elements must not stop playing just
because all references to them have been removed; only once a media
element to which no references exist has reached a point where no further
audio remains to be played for that element (e.g. because the element is
paused or because the end of the clip has been reached) may the element be
garbage collected.
If the media element's ownerDocument stops being an active
document, then the playback will stop until
the document is active again.
The ended
attribute must return true if the media element has
ended playback, and false otherwise.
The played
attribute must return a static normalized
TimeRanges object that represents the ranges of the media resource, if any, that the user agent has so far
rendered, at the time the attribute is evaluated.
The seeking
attribute must initially have the value false.
When the user agent is required to seek to a particular new playback position in the media resource, it means that the user agent must run the following steps:
If the media element's networkState is less than LOADED_METADATA, then the user agent
must raise an INVALID_STATE_ERR exception (if the seek was
in response to a DOM method call or setting of a DOM attribute), and
abort these steps.
If currentLoop is 0, let min be the effective
start. Otherwise, let it be the effective loop start.
If currentLoop is equal to playCount-1, let max be the effective
end. Otherwise, let it be the effective loop end.
If the new playback position is more than max, let it be max.
If the new playback position is less than min, let it be min.
If the (possibly now changed) new playback
position is not in one of the ranges given in the seekable
attribute, then the user agent must raise an INDEX_SIZE_ERR
exception (if the seek was in response to a DOM method call or setting
of a DOM attribute), and abort these steps.
The current playback position must be set to the given new playback position.
The seeking DOM attribute must be set to true.
The user agent must queue a task to queue a task to fire a simple
event called timeupdate at the element.
If the media element was actively playing immediately before it started
seeking, but seeking caused its readyState attribute to change to a value
lower than CAN_PLAY, the user agent must queue a task to fire a simple
event called waiting at the element.
If, when it reaches this step, the user agent has still not
established whether or not the media data for the
new playback position is available, and, if it is,
decoded enough data to play back that position, the user agent must queue a task to fire a simple
event called seeking at the element.
If the seek was in response to a DOM method call or setting of a DOM attribute, then continue the script. The remainder of these steps must be run asynchronously.
The user agent must wait until it has established whether or not the media data for the new playback position is available, and, if it is, until it has decoded enough data to play back that position.
The seeking DOM attribute must be set to false.
The user agent must queue a task to fire a simple event called seeked at the element.
The seekable attribute must return
a static normalized TimeRanges
object that represents the ranges of the media
resource, if any, that the user agent is able to seek to, at the time
the attribute is evaluated, notwithstanding the looping attributes (i.e.
the effective start and effective end, etc, don't affect the seekable
attribute).
If the user agent can seek to anywhere in the media resource, e.g. because it a simple movie file
and the user agent and the server support HTTP Range requests, then the
attribute would return an object with one range, whose start is the time
of the first frame (typically zero), and whose end is the same as the time
of the first frame plus the duration attribute's value (which would equal
the time of the last frame).
Media elements have a set of cue ranges. Each cue range is made up of the following information:
The addCueRange(className, id, start, end, pauseOnExit, enterCallback, exitCallback) method must, when called, add a
cue range to the media
element, that cue range having the class name className, the identifier id, the start
time start (in seconds), the end time end (in seconds), the "pause" boolean with the same value
as pauseOnExit, the "enter" callback enterCallback, the "exit" callback exitCallback, and an "active" boolean that is true if the
current playback position is equal to or greater
than the start time and less than the end time, and false otherwise.
The removeCueRanges(className) method must, when called, remove
all the cue ranges of the media element which have the class name className.
When the current playback position of a media element changes (e.g. due to playback or seeking), the user agent must run the following steps. If the current playback position changes while the steps are running, then the user agent must wait for the steps to complete, and then must immediately rerun the steps. (These steps are thus run as often as possible or needed — if one iteration takes a long time, this can cause certain ranges to be skipped over as the user agent rushes ahead to "catch up".)
Let current ranges be an ordered list of cue ranges, initialized to contain all the cue ranges of the media element whose start times are less than or equal to the current playback position and whose end times are greater than the current playback position, in the order they were added to the element.
Let other ranges be an ordered list of cue ranges, initialized to contain all the cue ranges of the media element that are not present in current ranges, in the order they were added to the element.
If none of the cue ranges in current ranges have their "active" boolean set to "false" (inactive) and none of the cue ranges in other ranges have their "active" boolean set to "true" (active), then abort these steps.
If the time was reached through the usual monotonic increase of the
current playback position during normal playback, the user agent must
then queue a task to fire a
simple event called timeupdate at the element. (In the other
cases, such as explicit seeks, relevant events get fired as part of the
overall process of changing the current playback position.)
If the time was reached through the usual monotonic increase of the
current playback position during normal playback, and there are cue ranges in other ranges that have both their "active" boolean and
their "pause" boolean set to "true", then immediately act as if the
element's pause() method had been invoked.
(In the other cases, such as explicit seeks, playback is not paused by
exiting a cue range, even if that cue range has its "pause" boolean set
to "true".)
For each non-null "exit" callback of the cue ranges in other ranges that have their "active" boolean set to "true" (active), in list order, queue a task that invokes the callback, passing the cue range's identifier as the callback's only argument.
For each non-null "enter" callback of the cue ranges in current ranges that have their "active" boolean set to "false" (inactive), in list order, queue a task that invokes the callback, passing the cue range's identifier as the callback's only argument.
Set the "active" boolean of all the cue ranges in the current ranges list to "true" (active), and the "active" boolean of all the cue ranges in the other ranges list to "false" (inactive).
Invoking a callback (an object implementing one of the following two
interfaces) means calling its handleEvent() method.
interface VoidCallback {
void handleEvent();
};
interface CueRangeCallback {
void handleEvent(in DOMString id);
};
The handleEvent method
of objects implementing these interfaces is the entry point for the
callback represented by the object.
The controls attribute is a boolean attribute. If the attribute is present, or if
the media element is without
script, then the user agent should expose a user
interface to the user. This user interface should include features
to begin playback, pause playback, seek to an arbitrary position in the
content (if the content supports arbitrary seeking), change the volume,
and show the media content in manners more suitable to the user (e.g.
full-screen video or in an independent resizable window). Other controls
may also be made available.
If the attribute is absent, then the user agent should avoid making a user interface available that could conflict with an author-provided user interface. User agents may make the following features available, however, even when the attribute is absent:
User agents may provide controls to affect playback of the media resource (e.g. play, pause, seeking, and volume controls), but such features should not interfere with the page's normal rendering. For example, such features could be exposed in the media element's context menu.
Where possible (specifically, for starting, stopping, pausing, and unpausing playback, for muting or changing the volume of the audio, and for seeking), user interface features exposed by the user agent must be implemented in terms of the DOM API described above, so that, e.g., all the same events fire.
The controls DOM attribute must reflect the content attribute of the same name.
The volume
attribute must return the playback volume of any audio portions of the media element, in the range 0.0 (silent) to 1.0
(loudest). Initially, the volume must be 1.0, but user agents may remember
the last set value across sessions, on a per-site basis or otherwise, so
the volume may start at other values. On setting, if the new value is in
the range 0.0 to 1.0 inclusive, the attribute must be set to the new value
and the playback volume must be correspondingly adjusted as soon as
possible after setting the attribute, with 0.0 being silent, and 1.0 being
the loudest setting, values in between increasing in loudness. The range
need not be linear. The loudest setting may be lower than the system's
loudest possible setting; for example the user could have set a maximum
volume. If the new value is outside the range 0.0 to 1.0 inclusive, then,
on setting, an INDEX_SIZE_ERR exception must be raised
instead.
The muted
attribute must return true if the audio channels are muted and false
otherwise. Initially, the audio channels should not be muted (false), but
user agents may remember the last set value across sessions, on a per-site
basis or otherwise, so the muted state may start as muted (true). On
setting, the attribute must be set to the new value; if the new value is
true, audio playback for this media resource must
then be muted, and if false, audio playback must then be enabled.
Whenever either the muted or volume attributes are changed, the user agent
must queue a task to fire a simple
event called volumechange at the media element.
Objects implementing the TimeRanges interface represent a list of
ranges (periods) of time.
interface TimeRanges {
readonly attribute unsigned long length;
float start(in unsigned long index);
float end(in unsigned long index);
};
The length DOM attribute must
return the number of ranges represented by the object.
The start(index) method must return the position of the
start of the indexth range represented by the object,
in seconds measured from the start of the timeline that the object covers.
The end(index) method must return the position of the
end of the indexth range represented by the object, in
seconds measured from the start of the timeline that the object covers.
These methods must raise INDEX_SIZE_ERR exceptions if
called with an index argument greater than or equal to
the number of ranges represented by the object.
When a TimeRanges object is said
to be a normalized TimeRanges
object, the ranges it represents must obey the following criteria:
In other words, the ranges in such an object are ordered, don't overlap, aren't empty, and don't touch (adjacent ranges are folded into one bigger range).
The timelines used by the objects returned by the buffered, seekable and played DOM attributes
of media elements must be the
same as that element's media resource's timeline.
Objects implementing the ByteRanges interface represent a list of
ranges of bytes.
interface ByteRanges {
readonly attribute unsigned long length;
unsigned long start(in unsigned long index);
unsigned long end(in unsigned long index);
};
The length DOM attribute must
return the number of ranges represented by the object.
The start(index) method must return the position of the
first byte of the indexth range represented by the
object.
The end(index) method must return the position of the
byte immediately after the last byte of the indexth
range represented by the object. (The byte position returned by this
method is not in the range itself. If the first byte of the range is the
byte at position 0, and the entire stream of bytes is in the range, then
the value of the position of the byte returned by this method for that
range will be the same as the number of bytes in the stream.)
These methods must raise INDEX_SIZE_ERR exceptions if
called with an index argument greater than or equal to
the number of ranges represented by the object.
When a ByteRanges object is said
to be a normalized ByteRanges
object, the ranges it represents must obey the following criteria:
In other words, the ranges in such an object are ordered, don't overlap, aren't empty, and don't touch (adjacent ranges are folded into one bigger range).
The following events fire on media elements as part of the processing model described above:
| Event name | Interface | Dispatched when... | Preconditions |
|---|---|---|---|
loadstart
| ProgressEvent [PROGRESS]
| The user agent begins fetching the media data,
synchronously during the load() method call.
| networkState equals LOADING
|
progress
| ProgressEvent [PROGRESS]
| The user agent is fetching media data. | networkState is more than EMPTY and less than
LOADED
|
loadedmetadata
| Event
| The user agent is fetching media data, and the media resource's metadata has just been received. | networkState equals LOADED_METADATA
|
loadedfirstframe
| Event
| The user agent is fetching media data, and the media resource's first frame has just been received. | networkState equals LOADED_FIRST_FRAME
|
load
| ProgressEvent [PROGRESS]
| The user agent finishes fetching the entire media resource. | networkState equals LOADED
|
abort
| ProgressEvent [PROGRESS]
| The user agent stops fetching the media data
before it is completely downloaded. This can be fired synchronously
during the load()
method call.
| error is an
object with the code MEDIA_ERR_ABORTED. networkState equals either EMPTY or LOADED, depending
on when the download was aborted.
|
error
| ProgressEvent [PROGRESS]
| An error occurs while fetching the media data. | error is an
object with the code MEDIA_ERR_NETWORK_ERROR
or higher. networkState equals either EMPTY or LOADED, depending
on when the download was aborted.
|
emptied
| Event
| A media element whose networkState was previously not in the
EMPTY state has
just switched to that state (either because of a fatal error during
load that's about to be reported, or because the load() method was
reinvoked, in which case it is fired synchronously during the load() method call).
| networkState is EMPTY; all the DOM
attributes are in their initial states.
|
stalled
| ProgressEvent
| The user agent is trying to fetch media data, but data is unexpectedly not forthcoming. | |
play
| Event
| Playback has begun. Fired after the play method has returned.
| paused is
newly false.
|
pause
| Event
| Playback has been paused. Fired after the pause method has
returned.
| paused is
newly true.
|
waiting
| Event
| Playback has stopped because the next frame is not available, but the user agent expects that frame to become available in due course. | readyState is either DATA_UNAVAILABLE or CAN_SHOW_CURRENT_FRAME, and
paused is
false. Either seeking is true, or the current playback position is not contained in any
of the ranges in buffered. It is possible for playback to
stop for two other reasons without paused being false, but those two reasons do
not fire this event: maybe playback ended, or playback stopped
due to errors.
|
seeking
| Event
| The seeking DOM attribute changed to true and
the seek operation is taking long enough that the user agent has time
to fire the event.
| |
seeked
| Event
| The seeking DOM attribute changed to false.
| |
timeupdate
| Event
| The current playback position changed in an interesting way, for example discontinuously. | |
ended
| Event
| Playback has stopped because the end of the media resource was reached. | currentTime equals the effective end; ended is true.
|
dataunavailable
| Event
| The user agent cannot render the data at the current playback position because data for the current frame is not immediately available. | The readyState attribute is newly equal to
DATA_UNAVAILABLE.
|
canshowcurrentframe
| Event
| The user agent cannot render the data after the current playback position because data for the next frame is not immediately available. | The readyState attribute is newly equal to
CAN_SHOW_CURRENT_FRAME.
|
canplay
| Event
| The user agent can resume playback of the media data, but estimates that if playback were to be started now, the media resource could not be rendered at the current playback rate up to its end without having to stop for further buffering of content. | The readyState attribute is newly equal to
CAN_PLAY.
|
canplaythrough
| Event
| The user agent estimates that if playback were to be started now, the media resource could be rendered at the current playback rate all the way to its end without having to stop for further buffering. | The readyState attribute is newly equal to
CAN_PLAY_THROUGH.
|
ratechange
| Event
| Either the defaultPlaybackRate or the playbackRate attribute has just been
updated.
| |
durationchange
| Event
| The duration attribute has just been updated.
| |
volumechange
| Event
| Either the volume attribute or the muted attribute has
changed. Fired after the relevant attribute's setter has returned.
|
Talk about making sure interactive media files (e.g. SVG) don't have access to the container DOM (XSS potential); talk about not exposing any sensitive data like metadata from tracks in the media files (intranet snooping risk)
canvas 要素width
height
interface HTMLCanvasElement : HTMLElement {
attribute unsigned long width;
attribute unsigned long height;
DOMString toDataURL();
DOMString toDataURL(in DOMString type, [Variadic] in any args);
DOMObject getContext(in DOMString contextId);
};
The canvas element represents a
resolution-dependent bitmap canvas, which can be used for rendering
graphs, game graphics, or other visual images on the fly.
Authors should not use the canvas
element in a document when a more suitable element is available. For
example, it is inappropriate to use a canvas element to render a page heading: if the
desired presentation of the heading is graphically intense, it should be
marked up using appropriate elements (typically h1) and then styled using CSS and supporting
technologies such as XBL.
When authors use the canvas element,
they should also provide content that, when presented to the user, conveys
essentially the same function or purpose as the bitmap canvas. This
content may be placed as content of the canvas element. The contents of the canvas element, if any, are the element's fallback content.
In interactive visual media, if the canvas element is with
script, the canvas element
represents an embedded element with a dynamically created image.
In non-interactive, static, visual media, if the canvas element has been previously painted on
(e.g. if the page was viewed in an interactive visual medium and is now
being printed, or if some script that ran during the page layout process
painted on the element), then the canvas element represents embedded content with the current image and size.
Otherwise, the element represents its fallback
content instead.
In non-visual media, and in visual media if the canvas element is without
script, the canvas element
represents its fallback content instead.
The canvas element has two attributes
to control the size of the coordinate space: width and height. These attributes, when
specified, must have values that are valid non-negative integers. The rules for parsing non-negative integers must be used to
obtain their numeric values. If an attribute is missing, or if parsing its
value returns an error, then the default value must be used instead. The
width attribute
defaults to 300, and the height attribute defaults to 150.
The intrinsic dimensions of the canvas element equal the size of the coordinate
space, with the numbers interpreted in CSS pixels. However, the element
can be sized arbitrarily by a style sheet. During rendering, the image is
scaled to fit this layout size.
The size of the coordinate space does not necessarily represent the size of the actual bitmap that the user agent will use internally or during rendering. On high-definition displays, for instance, the user agent may internally use a bitmap with two device pixels per unit in the coordinate space, so that the rendering remains at high quality throughout.
Whenever the width and height attributes are set (whether to a new
value or to the previous value), the bitmap and any associated contexts
must be cleared back to their initial state and reinitialized with the
newly specified coordinate space dimensions.
DOM 属性 width, height は同じ名前の内容属性を反映しなければなりません。
Only one square appears to be drawn in the following example:
// canvas is a reference to a <canvas> element
var context = canvas.getContext('2d');
context.fillRect(0,0,50,50);
canvas.setAttribute('width', '300'); // clears the canvas
context.fillRect(0,100,50,50);
canvas.width = canvas.width; // clears the canvas
context.fillRect(100,0,50,50); // only this square remains
When the canvas is initialized it must be set to fully transparent black.
To draw on the canvas, authors must first obtain a reference to a context using the getContext(contextId) method of the canvas element.
This specification only defines one context, with the name "2d". If getContext()
is called with that exact string for its contextId
argument, then the UA must return a reference to an object implementing
CanvasRenderingContext2D.
Other specifications may define their own contexts, which would return
different objects.
Vendors may also define experimental contexts using the syntax
vendorname-context,
for example, moz-3d.
When the UA is passed an empty string or a string specifying a context that it does not support, then it must return null. String comparisons must be case-sensitive.
Arguments other than the contextId must be ignored.
A future version of this specification will probably define a
3d context (probably based on the OpenGL ES API).
The toDataURL() method must,
when called with no arguments, return a data: URL
containing a representation of the image as a PNG file. [PNG].
If the canvas has no pixels (i.e. either its horizontal dimension or its
vertical dimension is zero) then the method must return the string "data:,". (This is the shortest data:
URL; it represents the empty string in a text/plain
resource.)
The toDataURL(type) method (when called with one or
more arguments) must return a data: URL
containing a representation of the image in the format given by type. The possible values are MIME types with no
parameters, for example image/png, image/jpeg,
or even maybe image/svg+xml if the implementation actually
keeps enough information to reliably render an SVG image from the canvas.
For image types that do not support an alpha channel, the image must be
composited onto a solid black background using the source-over operator,
and the resulting image must be the one used to create the data: URL.
Only support for image/png is required. User agents may
support other types. If the user agent does not support the requested
type, it must return the image using the PNG format.
User agents must convert the provided type to lower case before
establishing if they support that type and before creating the data: URL.
When trying to use types other than image/png,
authors can check if the image was really returned in the requested format
by checking to see if the returned string starts with one the exact
strings "data:image/png," or "data:image/png;". If it does, the image is PNG, and thus
the requested type was not supported. (The one exception to this is if the
canvas has either no height or no width, in which case the result might
simply be "data:,".)
If the method is invoked with the first argument giving a type corresponding to one of the types given in the first column of the following table, and the user agent supports that type, then the subsequent arguments, if any, must be treated as described in the second cell of that row.
| Type | Other arguments |
|---|---|
| image/jpeg | The second argument, if it is a number between 0.0 and 1.0, must be treated as the desired quality level. If it is not a number or is outside that range, the user agent must use its default value, as if the argument had been omitted. |
Other arguments must be ignored and must not cause the user agent to
raise an exception. A future version of this specification will probably
define other parameters to be passed to toDataURL() to
allow authors to more carefully control compression settings, image
metadata, etc.
When the getContext() method of a canvas element is invoked with 2d as the argument, a CanvasRenderingContext2D
object is returned.
There is only one CanvasRenderingContext2D
object per canvas, so calling the getContext() method with the 2d argument a second time
must return the same object.
The 2D context represents a flat Cartesian surface whose origin (0,0) is at the top left corner, with the coordinate space having x values increasing when going right, and y values increasing when going down.
interface CanvasRenderingContext2D {
// back-reference to the canvas
readonly attribute HTMLCanvasElement canvas;
// state
void save(); // push state on state stack
void restore(); // pop state stack and restore state
// transformations (default transform is the identity matrix)
void scale(in float x, in float y);
void rotate(in float angle);
void translate(in float x, in float y);
void transform(in float m11, in float m12, in float m21, in float m22, in float dx, in float dy);
void setTransform(in float m11, in float m12, in float m21, in float m22, in float dx, in float dy);
// compositing
attribute float globalAlpha; // (default 1.0)
attribute DOMString globalCompositeOperation; // (default source-over)
// colors and styles
attribute DOMObject strokeStyle; // (default black)
attribute DOMObject fillStyle; // (default black)
CanvasGradient createLinearGradient(in float x0, in float y0, in float x1, in float y1);
CanvasGradient createRadialGradient(in float x0, in float y0, in float r0, in float x1, in float y1, in float r1);
CanvasPattern createPattern(in HTMLImageElement image, in DOMString repetition);
CanvasPattern createPattern(in HTMLCanvasElement image, in DOMString repetition);
// line caps/joins
attribute float lineWidth; // (default 1)
attribute DOMString lineCap; // "butt", "round", "square" (default "butt")
attribute DOMString lineJoin; // "round", "bevel", "miter" (default "miter")
attribute float miterLimit; // (default 10)
// shadows
attribute float shadowOffsetX; // (default 0)
attribute float shadowOffsetY; // (default 0)
attribute float shadowBlur; // (default 0)
attribute DOMString shadowColor; // (default transparent black)
// rects
void clearRect(in float x, in float y, in float w, in float h);
void fillRect(in float x, in float y, in float w, in float h);
void strokeRect(in float x, in float y, in float w, in float h);
// path API
void beginPath();
void closePath();
void moveTo(in float x, in float y);
void lineTo(in float x, in float y);
void quadraticCurveTo(in float cpx, in float cpy, in float x, in float y);
void bezierCurveTo(in float cp1x, in float cp1y, in float cp2x, in float cp2y, in float x, in float y);
void arcTo(in float x1, in float y1, in float x2, in float y2, in float radius);
void rect(in float x, in float y, in float w, in float h);
void arc(in float x, in float y, in float radius, in float startAngle, in float endAngle, in boolean anticlockwise);
void fill();
void stroke();
void clip();
boolean isPointInPath(in float x, in float y);
// text
attribute DOMString font; // (default 10px sans-serif)
attribute DOMString textAlign; // "start", "end", "left", "right", "center" (default: "start")
attribute DOMString textBaseline; // "top", "hanging", "middle", "alphabetic", "ideographic", "bottom" (default: "alphabetic")
void fillText(in DOMString text, in float x, in float y);
void fillText(in DOMString text, in float x, in float y, in float maxWidth);
void strokeText(in DOMString text, in float x, in float y);
void strokeText(in DOMString text, in float x, in float y, in float maxWidth);
TextMetrics measureText(in DOMString text);
// drawing images
void drawImage(in HTMLImageElement image, in float dx, in float dy);
void drawImage(in HTMLImageElement image, in float dx, in float dy, in float dw, in float dh);
void drawImage(in HTMLImageElement image, in float sx, in float sy, in float sw, in float sh, in float dx, in float dy, in float dw, in float dh);
void drawImage(in HTMLCanvasElement image, in float dx, in float dy);
void drawImage(in HTMLCanvasElement image, in float dx, in float dy, in float dw, in float dh);
void drawImage(in HTMLCanvasElement image, in float sx, in float sy, in float sw, in float sh, in float dx, in float dy, in float dw, in float dh);
// pixel manipulation
ImageData createImageData(in float sw, in float sh);
ImageData getImageData(in float sx, in float sy, in float sw, in float sh);
void putImageData(in ImageData imagedata, in float dx, in float dy);
void putImageData(in ImageData imagedata, in float dx, in float dy, in float dirtyX, in float dirtyY, in float dirtyWidth, in float dirtyHeight);
};
interface CanvasGradient {
// opaque object
void addColorStop(in float offset, in DOMString color);
};
interface CanvasPattern {
// opaque object
};
interface TextMetrics {
readonly attribute float width;
};
interface ImageData {
readonly attribute unsigned long int width;
readonly attribute unsigned long int height;
readonly attribute CanvasPixelArray data;
};
interface CanvasPixelArray {
readonly attribute unsigned long length;
[IndexGetter] octet XXX5(in unsigned long index);
[IndexSetter] void XXX6(in unsigned long index, in octet value);
};
The canvas attribute must
return the canvas element that the
context paints on.
Unless otherwise stated, for the 2D context interface, any method call with a numeric argument whose value is infinite or a NaN value must be ignored.
Whenever the CSS value currentColor is used as a
color in this API, the "computed value of the 'color' property" for the
purposes of determining the computed value of the currentColor keyword is the computed value of the 'color'
property on the element in question at the time that the color is
specified (e.g. when the appropriate attribute is set, or when the method
is called; not when the color is rendered or otherwise used). If the
computed value of the 'color' property is undefined for a particular case
(e.g. because the element is not in a document), then the "computed value
of the 'color' property" for the purposes of determining the computed
value of the currentColor keyword is fully opaque
black. [CSS3COLOR]
Each context maintains a stack of drawing states. Drawing states consist of:
strokeStyle, fillStyle,
globalAlpha, lineWidth,
lineCap,
lineJoin, miterLimit, shadowOffsetX, shadowOffsetY, shadowBlur, shadowColor, globalCompositeOperation,
font, textAlign,
textBaseline.
The current path and the current bitmap are not part of the
drawing state. The current path is persistent, and can only be reset using
the beginPath() method. The current bitmap is
a property of the
canvas, not the context.
The save()
method must push a copy of the current drawing state onto the drawing
state stack.
The restore() method must pop
the top entry in the drawing state stack, and reset the drawing state it
describes. If there is no saved state, the method must do nothing.
The transformation matrix is applied to coordinates when creating shapes and paths.
When the context is created, the transformation matrix must initially be the identity transform. It may then be adjusted using the transformation methods.
The transformations must be performed in reverse order. For instance, if a scale transformation that doubles the width is applied, followed by a rotation transformation that rotates drawing operations by a quarter turn, and a rectangle twice as wide as it is tall is then drawn on the canvas, the actual result will be a square.
The scale(x, y) method must add the
scaling transformation described by the arguments to the transformation
matrix. The x argument represents the scale factor in
the horizontal direction and the y argument represents
the scale factor in the vertical direction. The factors are multiples.
The rotate(angle) method must add the rotation
transformation described by the argument to the transformation matrix. The
angle argument represents a clockwise rotation angle
expressed in radians.
The translate(x, y) method must add the translation
transformation described by the arguments to the transformation matrix.
The x argument represents the translation distance in
the horizontal direction and the y argument represents
the translation distance in the vertical direction. The arguments are in
coordinate space units.
The transform(m11,
m12, m21, m22,
dx, dy) method must
multiply the current transformation matrix with the matrix described by:
| m11 | m21 | dx |
| m12 | m22 | dy |
| 0 | 0 | 1 |
The setTransform(m11, m12, m21, m22, dx, dy) method must reset the current transform to
the identity matrix, and then invoke the transform(m11, m12, m21, m22, dx, dy) method with the same
arguments.
All drawing operations are affected by the global compositing
attributes, globalAlpha and globalCompositeOperation.
The globalAlpha attribute
gives an alpha value that is applied to shapes and images before they are
composited onto the canvas. The value must be in the range from 0.0 (fully
transparent) to 1.0 (no additional transparency). If an attempt is made to
set the attribute to a value outside this range, the attribute must retain
its previous value. When the context is created, the globalAlpha attribute must initially have
the value 1.0.
The globalCompositeOperation
attribute sets how shapes and images are drawn onto the existing bitmap,
once they have had globalAlpha and the current transformation
matrix applied. It must be set to a value from the following list. In the
descriptions below, the source image, A, is the shape
or image being rendered, and the destination image, B,
is the current state of the bitmap.
source-atop
source-in
source-out
source-over (default)
destination-atop
source-atop but
using the destination image instead of the source image and vice versa.
destination-in
source-in but using
the destination image instead of the source image and vice versa.
destination-out
source-out but
using the destination image instead of the source image and vice versa.
destination-over
source-over but
using the destination image instead of the source image and vice versa.lighter
copy
xor
vendorName-operationName
These values are all case-sensitive — they must be used exactly as shown. User agents must not recognize values that are not a case-sensitive match for one of the values given above.
The operators in the above list must be treated as described by the Porter-Duff operator given at the start of their description (e.g. A over B). [PORTERDUFF]
On setting, if the user agent does not recognize the specified value, it
must be ignored, leaving the value of globalCompositeOperation
unaffected.
When the context is created, the globalCompositeOperation
attribute must initially have the value source-over.
The strokeStyle attribute
represents the color or style to use for the lines around shapes, and the
fillStyle attribute
represents the color or style to use inside the shapes.
Both attributes can be either strings, CanvasGradients, or CanvasPatterns. On setting, strings must
be parsed as CSS <color> values and the color assigned, and CanvasGradient and CanvasPattern objects must be assigned
themselves. [CSS3COLOR] If the value is a
string but is not a valid color, or is neither a string, a CanvasGradient, nor a CanvasPattern, then it must be ignored,
and the attribute must retain its previous value.
On getting, if the value is a color, then the serialization of the color must be
returned. Otherwise, if it is not a color but a CanvasGradient or CanvasPattern, then the respective object
must be returned. (Such objects are opaque and therefore only useful for
assigning to other attributes or for comparison to other gradients or
patterns.)
The serialization of a color for a color
value is a string, computed as follows: if it has alpha equal to 1.0, then
the string is a lowercase six-digit hex value, prefixed with a "#"
character (U+0023 NUMBER SIGN), with the first two digits representing the
red component, the next two digits representing the green component, and
the last two digits representing the blue component, the digits being in
the range 0-9 a-f (U+0030 to U+0039 and U+0061 to U+0066). Otherwise, the
color value has alpha less than 1.0, and the string is the color value in
the CSS rgba() functional-notation format: the
literal string rgba (U+0072 U+0067 U+0062 U+0061)
followed by a U+0028 LEFT PARENTHESIS, a base-ten integer in the range
0-255 representing the red component (using digits 0-9, U+0030 to U+0039,
in the shortest form possible), a literal U+002C COMMA and U+0020 SPACE,
an integer for the green component, a comma and a space, an integer for
the blue component, another comma and space, a U+0030 DIGIT ZERO, a U+002E
FULL STOP (representing the decimal point), one or more digits in the
range 0-9 (U+0030 to U+0039) representing the fractional part of the alpha
value, and finally a U+0029 RIGHT PARENTHESIS.
When the context is created, the strokeStyle and fillStyle
attributes must initially have the string value #000000.
There are two types of gradients, linear gradients and radial gradients,
both represented by objects implementing the opaque CanvasGradient interface.
Once a gradient has been created (see below), stops are placed along it to define how the colors are distributed along the gradient. The color of the gradient at each stop is the color specified for that stop. Between each such stop, the colors and the alpha component must be linearly interpolated over the RGBA space without premultiplying the alpha value to find the color to use at that offset. Before the first stop, the color must be the color of the first stop. After the last stop, the color must be the color of the last stop. When there are no stops, the gradient is transparent black.
The addColorStop(offset, color) method on
the CanvasGradient interface
adds a new stop to a gradient. If the offset is less
than 0, greater than 1, infinite, or NaN, then an
INDEX_SIZE_ERR exception must be raised. If the color cannot be parsed as a CSS color, then a
SYNTAX_ERR exception must be raised. Otherwise, the gradient
must have a new stop placed, at offset offset relative
to the whole gradient, and with the color obtained by parsing color as a CSS <color> value. If multiple stops are
added at the same offset on a gradient, they must be placed in the order
added, with the first one closest to the start of the gradient, and each
subsequent one infinitesimally further along towards the end point (in
effect causing all but the first and last stop added at each point to be
ignored).
The createLinearGradient(x0, y0, x1, y1) method takes four arguments that represent
the start point (x0, y0) and end
point (x1, y1) of the gradient. If
any of the arguments to createLinearGradient() are
infinite or NaN, the method must raise a NOT_SUPPORTED_ERR
exception. Otherwise, the method must return a linear CanvasGradient initialized with the
specified line.
Linear gradients must be rendered such that all points on a line perpendicular to the line that crosses the start and end points have the color at the point where those two lines cross (with the colors coming from the interpolation and extrapolation described above). The points in the linear gradient must be transformed as described by the current transformation matrix when rendering.
If x0 = x1 and y0 = y1, then the linear gradient must paint nothing.
The createRadialGradient(x0, y0, r0, x1, y1, r1) method takes six arguments, the first
three representing the start circle with origin (x0,
y0) and radius r0, and the last
three representing the end circle with origin (x1,
y1) and radius r1. The values are
in coordinate space units. If any of the arguments are infinite or NaN, a
NOT_SUPPORTED_ERR exception must be raised. If either of r0 or r1 are negative, an
INDEX_SIZE_ERR exception must be raised. Otherwise, the
method must return a radial CanvasGradient initialized with the two
specified circles.
Radial gradients must be rendered by following these steps:
If x0 = x1 and y0 = y1 and r0 = r1, then the radial gradient must paint nothing. Abort these steps.
Let x(ω) = (x1-x0)ω + x0
Let y(ω) = (y1-y0)ω + y0
Let r(ω) = (r1-r0)ω + r0
Let the color at ω be the color at that position on the gradient (with the colors coming from the interpolation and extrapolation described above).
For all values of ω where r(ω) > 0, starting with the value of ω nearest to positive infinity and ending with the value of ω nearest to negative infinity, draw the circumference of the circle with radius r(ω) at position (x(ω), y(ω)), with the color at ω, but only painting on the parts of the canvas that have not yet been painted on by earlier circles in this step for this rendering of the gradient.
This effectively creates a cone, touched by the two circles defined in the creation of the gradient, with the part of the cone before the start circle (0.0) using the color of the first offset, the part of the cone after the end circle (1.0) using the color of the last offset, and areas outside the cone untouched by the gradient (transparent black).
Gradients must be painted only where the relevant stroking or filling effects requires that they be drawn.
The points in the radial gradient must be transformed as described by the current transformation matrix when rendering.
Patterns are represented by objects implementing the opaque CanvasPattern interface.
To create objects of this type, the createPattern(image, repetition) method
is used. The first argument gives the image to use as the pattern (either
an HTMLImageElement or an
HTMLCanvasElement).
Modifying this image after calling the createPattern() method must not affect
the pattern. The second argument must be a string with one of the
following values: repeat, repeat-x, repeat-y, no-repeat. If the empty string or null is specified, repeat must be assumed. If an unrecognized value is given,
then the user agent must raise a SYNTAX_ERR exception. User
agents must recognize the four values described above exactly (e.g. they
must not do case folding). The method must return a CanvasPattern object suitably
initialized.
引数 image は HTMLImageElement
または HTMLCanvasElement
の実現値でなければなりません。 image が誤った型や null である場合、実装は
TYPE_MISMATCH_ERR 例外を発生させなければなりません。
image 引数が HTMLImageElement であって
complete 属性が偽である場合、
実装は INVALID_STATE_ERR 例外を発生させなければなりません。
If the image argument is an HTMLCanvasElement object with either
a horizontal dimension or a vertical dimension equal to zero, then the
implementation must raise an INVALID_STATE_ERR exception.
Patterns must be painted so that the top left of the first image is
anchored at the origin of the coordinate space, and images are then
repeated horizontally to the left and right (if the repeat-x
string was specified) or vertically up and down (if the
repeat-y string was specified) or in all four directions all
over the canvas (if the repeat string was specified). The
images are not scaled by this process; one CSS pixel of the image must be
painted on one coordinate space unit. Of course, patterns must actually be
painted only where the stroking or filling effect requires that they be
drawn, and are affected by the current transformation matrix.
When the createPattern() method is passed, as its
image argument, an animated image, the poster frame of
the animation, or the first frame of the animation if there is no poster
frame, must be used.
The lineWidth attribute
gives the width of lines, in coordinate space units. On setting, zero,
negative, infinite, and NaN values must be ignored, leaving the value
unchanged.
When the context is created, the lineWidth attribute must initially have the
value 1.0.
The lineCap attribute defines
the type of endings that UAs will place on the end of lines. The three
valid values are butt, round, and
square. The butt value means that the end of
each line has a flat edge perpendicular to the direction of the line (and
that no additional line cap is added). The round value means
that a semi-circle with the diameter equal to the width of the line must
then be added on to the end of the line. The square value
means that a rectangle with the length of the line width and the width of
half the line width, placed flat against the edge perpendicular to the
direction of the line, must be added at the end of each line. On setting,
any other value than the literal strings butt,
round, and square must be ignored, leaving the
value unchanged.
When the context is created, the lineCap attribute must initially have the value
butt.
The lineJoin attribute
defines the type of corners that UAs will place where two lines meet. The
three valid values are bevel, round, and
miter.
On setting, any other value than the literal strings bevel,
round, and miter must be ignored, leaving the
value unchanged.
When the context is created, the lineJoin attribute must initially have the
value miter.
A join exists at any point in a subpath shared by two consecutive lines. When a subpath is closed, then a join also exists at its first point (equivalent to its last point) connecting the first and last lines in the subpath.
In addition to the point where the join occurs, two additional points are relevant to each join, one for each line: the two corners found half the line width away from the join point, one perpendicular to each line, each on the side furthest from the other line.
A filled triangle connecting these two opposite corners with a straight
line, with the third point of the triangle being the join point, must be
rendered at all joins. The lineJoin attribute controls whether anything
else is rendered. The three aforementioned values have the following
meanings:
The bevel value means that this is all that is rendered at
joins.
The round value means that a filled arc connecting the two
aforementioned corners of the join, abutting (and not overlapping) the
aforementioned triangle, with the diameter equal to the line width and the
origin at the point of the join, must be rendered at joins.
The miter value means that a second filled triangle must
(if it can given the miter length) be rendered at the join, with one line
being the line between the two aforementioned corners, abutting the first
triangle, and the other two being continuations of the outside edges of
the two joining lines, as long as required to intersect without going over
the miter length.
The miter length is the distance from the point where the lines touch on the inside of the join to the intersection of the line edges on the outside of the join. The miter limit ratio is the maximum allowed ratio of the miter length to half the line width. If the miter length would cause the miter limit ratio to be exceeded, this second triangle must not be rendered.
The miter limit ratio can be explicitly set using the miterLimit attribute.
On setting, zero, negative, infinite, and NaN values must be ignored,
leaving the value unchanged.
When the context is created, the miterLimit attribute must initially have the
value 10.0.
All drawing operations are affected by the four global shadow attributes.
The shadowColor attribute
sets the color of the shadow.
When the context is created, the shadowColor attribute initially must be
fully-transparent black.
On getting, the serialization of the color must be returned.
On setting, the new value must be parsed as a CSS <color> value and the color assigned. If the value is not a valid color, then it must be ignored, and the attribute must retain its previous value. [CSS3COLOR]
The shadowOffsetX and
shadowOffsetY
attributes specify the distance that the shadow will be offset in the
positive horizontal and positive vertical distance respectively. Their
values are in coordinate space units. They are not affected by the current
transformation matrix.
When the context is created, the shadow offset attributes must initially
have the value 0.
On getting, they must return their current value. On setting, the attribute being set must be set to the new value, except if the value is infinite or NaN, in which case the new value must be ignored.
The shadowBlur attribute
specifies the size of the blurring effect. (The units do not map to
coordinate space units, and are not affected by the current transformation
matrix.)
When the context is created, the shadowBlur attribute must initially have the
value 0.
On getting, the attribute must return its current value. On setting the attribute must be set to the new value, except if the value is negative, infinite or NaN, in which case the new value must be ignored.
When shadows are drawn, they must be rendered as follows:
Let A be the source image for which a shadow is being created.
Let B be an infinite transparent black bitmap, with a coordinate space and an origin identical to A.
Copy the alpha channel of A to B, offset by shadowOffsetX in the positive x direction, and shadowOffsetY in the positive y direction.
If shadowBlur is greater than 0:
If shadowBlur is less than 8, let σ be half the value of shadowBlur; otherwise, let σ be the square root of multiplying the value of
shadowBlur by 2.
Perform a 2D Gaussian Blur on B, using σ as the standard deviation.
User agents may limit values of σ to an implementation-specific maximum value to avoid exceeding hardware limitations during the Gaussian blur operation.
Set the red, green, and blue components of every pixel in B to the red, green, and blue components (respectively)
of the color of shadowColor.
Multiply the alpha component of every pixel in B
by the alpha component of the color of shadowColor.
The shadow is in the bitmap B, and is rendered as part of the drawing model described below.
There are three methods that immediately draw rectangles to the bitmap. They each take four arguments; the first two give the x and y coordinates of the top left of the rectangle, and the second two give the width w and height h of the rectangle, respectively.
The current transformation matrix must be applied to the following four coordinates, which form the path that must then be closed to get the specified rectangle: (x, y), (x+w, y), (x+w, y+h), (x, y+h).
Shapes are painted without affecting the current path, and are subject
to the clipping region,
and, with the exception of clearRect(), also shadow effects, global alpha, and global composition
operators.
The clearRect(x, y, w, h) method must clear the pixels in the
specified rectangle that also intersect the current clipping region to a
fully transparent black, erasing any previous image. If either height or
width are zero, this method has no effect.
The fillRect(x, y, w, h) method must paint the specified rectangular
area using the fillStyle. If either height or width are
zero, this method has no effect.
The strokeRect(x,
y, w, h) method must stroke the specified
rectangle's path using the strokeStyle, lineWidth,
lineJoin, and (if appropriate) miterLimit attributes. If both height and
width are zero, this method has no effect, since there is no path to
stroke (it's a point). If only one of the two is zero, then the method
will draw a line instead (the path for the outline is just a straight line
along the non-zero dimension).
The context always has a current path. There is only one current path, it is not part of the drawing state.
A path has a list of zero or more subpaths. Each subpath consists of a list of one or more points, connected by straight or curved lines, and a flag indicating whether the subpath is closed or not. A closed subpath is one where the last point of the subpath is connected to the first point of the subpath by a straight line. Subpaths with fewer than two points are ignored when painting the path.
Initially, the context's path must have zero subpaths.
The points and lines added to the path by these methods must be transformed according to the current transformation matrix as they are added.
The beginPath() method must
empty the list of subpaths so that the context once again has zero
subpaths.
The moveTo(x, y) method must create a
new subpath with the specified point as its first (and only) point.
The closePath() method must
do nothing if the context has no subpaths. Otherwise, it must mark the
last subpath as closed, create a new subpath whose first point is the same
as the previous subpath's first point, and finally add this new subpath to
the path. (If the last subpath had more than one point in its list of
points, then this is equivalent to adding a straight line connecting the
last point back to the first point, thus "closing" the shape, and then
repeating the last moveTo() call.)
New points and the lines connecting them are added to subpaths using the methods described below. In all cases, the methods only modify the last subpath in the context's paths.
The lineTo(x, y) method must do
nothing if the context has no subpaths. Otherwise, it must connect the
last point in the subpath to the given point (x, y) using a straight line, and must then add the given point
(x, y) to the subpath.
The quadraticCurveTo(cpx, cpy, x, y) method must do nothing if the context has
no subpaths. Otherwise it must connect the last point in the subpath to
the given point (x, y) using a
quadratic Bézier curve with control point (cpx,
cpy), and must then add the given point (x, y) to the subpath. [BEZIER]
The bezierCurveTo(cp1x, cp1y, cp2x,
cp2y, x, y) method must do nothing if the context has
no subpaths. Otherwise, it must connect the last point in the subpath to
the given point (x, y) using a
cubic Bézier curve with control points (cp1x,
cp1y) and (cp2x, cp2y). Then, it must add the point (x,
y) to the subpath. [BEZIER]
The arcTo(x1, y1, x2, y2, radius) method must do
nothing if the context has no subpaths. If the context does have
a subpath, then the behavior depends on the arguments and the last point
in the subpath.
Negative values for radius must cause the
implementation to raise an INDEX_SIZE_ERR exception.
Let the point (x0, y0) be the last point in the subpath.
If the point (x0, y0) is equal to the point (x1, y1), or if the point (x1, y1) is equal to the point (x2, y2), or if the radius radius is zero, then the method must add the point (x1, y1) to the subpath, and connect that point to the previous point (x0, y0) by a straight line.
Otherwise, if the points (x0, y0), (x1, y1), and (x2, y2) all lie on a single straight line, then: if the direction from (x0, y0) to (x1, y1) is the same as the direction from (x1, y1) to (x2, y2), then the method must add the point (x1, y1) to the subpath, and connect that point to the previous point (x0, y0) by a straight line; otherwise, the direction from (x0, y0) to (x1, y1) is the opposite of the direction from (x1, y1) to (x2, y2), and the method must add a point (x∞, y∞) to the subpath, and connect that point to the previous point (x0, y0) by a straight line, where (x∞, y∞) is the point that is infinitely far away from (x1, y1), that lies on the same line as (x0, y0), (x1, y1), and (x2, y2), and that is on the same side of (x1, y1) on that line as (x2, y2).
Otherwise, let The Arc be the shortest arc given by circumference of the circle that has radius radius, and that has one point tangent to the half-infinite line that crosses the point (x0, y0) and ends at the point (x1, y1), and that has a different point tangent to the half-infinite line that ends at the point (x1, y1) and crosses the point (x2, y2). The points at which this circle touches these two lines are called the start and end tangent points respectively.
The method must connect the point (x0, y0) to the start tangent point by a straight line, adding the start tangent point to the subpath, and then must connect the start tangent point to the end tangent point by The Arc, adding the end tangent point to the subpath.
The arc(x, y, radius, startAngle, endAngle, anticlockwise) method draws an arc. If the
context has any subpaths, then the method must add a straight line from
the last point in the subpath to the start point of the arc. In any case,
it must draw the arc between the start point of the arc and the end point
of the arc, and add the start and end points of the arc to the subpath.
The arc and its start and end points are defined as follows:
Consider a circle that has its origin at (x, y) and that has radius radius. The points at startAngle and endAngle along this circle's circumference, measured in radians clockwise from the positive x-axis, are the start and end points respectively.
If the anticlockwise argument is false and endAngle-startAngle is equal to or greater than 2π, or, if the anticlockwise argument is true and startAngle-endAngle is equal to or greater than 2π, then the arc is the whole circumference of this circle.
Otherwise, the arc is the path along the circumference of this circle from the start point to the end point, going anti-clockwise if the anticlockwise argument is true, and clockwise otherwise. Since the points are on the circle, as opposed to being simply angles from zero, the arc can never cover an angle greater than 2π radians. If the two points are the same, or if the radius is zero, then the arc is defined as being of zero length in both directions.
Negative values for radius must cause the
implementation to raise an INDEX_SIZE_ERR exception.
The rect(x, y, w, h) method must create a new subpath containing
just the four points (x, y), (x+w, y), (x+w, y+h), (x, y+h), with those four points connected by straight lines, and
must then mark the subpath as closed. It must then create a new subpath
with the point (x, y) as the only
point in the subpath.
The fill()
method must fill all the subpaths of the current path, using fillStyle,
and using the non-zero winding number rule. Open subpaths must be
implicitly closed when being filled (without affecting the actual
subpaths).
Thus, if two overlapping but otherwise independent subpaths have opposite windings, they cancel out and result in no fill. If they have the same winding, that area just gets painted once.
The stroke() method must
calculate the strokes of all the subpaths of the current path, using the
lineWidth, lineCap, lineJoin, and
(if appropriate) miterLimit attributes, and then fill the
combined stroke area using the strokeStyle attribute.
Since the subpaths are all stroked as one, overlapping parts of the paths in one stroke operation are treated as if their union was what was painted.
Paths, when filled or stroked, must be painted without affecting the current path, and must be subject to shadow effects, global alpha, the clipping region, and global composition operators. (Transformations affect the path when the path is created, not when it is painted, though the stroke style is still affected by the transformation during painting.)
Zero-length line segments must be pruned before stroking a path. Empty subpaths must be ignored.
The clip()
method must create a new clipping region by
calculating the intersection of the current clipping region and the area
described by the current path, using the non-zero winding number rule.
Open subpaths must be implicitly closed when computing the clipping
region, without affecting the actual subpaths. The new clipping region
replaces the current clipping region.
When the context is initialized, the clipping region must be set to the rectangle with the top left corner at (0,0) and the width and height of the coordinate space.
The isPointInPath(x, y) method must return
true if the point given by the x and y coordinates passed to the method, when treated as
coordinates in the canvas coordinate space unaffected by the current
transformation, is inside the current path as determined by the non-zero
winding number rule; and must return false otherwise. Points on the path
itself are considered to be inside the path. If either of the arguments is
infinite or NaN, then the method must return false.
The font DOM
attribute, on setting, must be parsed the same way as the 'font' property
of CSS (but without supporting property-independent stylesheet syntax like
'inherit'), and the resulting font must be assigned to the context, with
the 'line-height' component forced to 'normal'. [CSS]
Font names must be interpreted in the context of the canvas element's stylesheets; any fonts embedded
using @font-face must therefore be available. [CSSWEBFONTS]
Only vector fonts should be used by the user agent; if a user agent were to use bitmap fonts then transformations would likely make the font look very ugly.
On getting, the font attribute must return the serialized form of
the current font of the context. [CSSOM]
When the context is created, the font of the context must be set to 10px
sans-serif. When the 'font-size' component is set to lengths using
percentages, 'em' or 'ex' units, or the 'larger' or 'smaller' keywords,
these must be interpreted relative to the computed value of the
'font-size' property of the corresponding canvas element at the time that the attribute is
set. When the 'font-weight' component is set to the relative values
'bolder' and 'lighter', these must be interpreted relative to the computed
value of the 'font-weight' property of the corresponding canvas element at the time that the attribute is
set. If the computed values are undefined for a particular case (e.g.
because the canvas element is not in a
document), then the relative keywords must be interpreted relative to the
normal-weight 10px sans-serif default.
The textAlign DOM attribute,
on getting, must return the current value. On setting, if the value is one
of start, end, left, right, or center, then the value must be changed to the new value.
Otherwise, the new value must be ignored. When the context is created, the
textAlign attribute must initially have the
value start.
The textBaseline DOM
attribute, on getting, must return the current value. On setting, if the
value is one of top, hanging, middle, alphabetic, ideographic, or bottom, then the value must be changed to the
new value. Otherwise, the new value must be ignored. When the context is
created, the textBaseline attribute must initially have
the value alphabetic.
The textBaseline attribute's allowed keywords
correspond to alignment points in the font:
The keywords map to these alignment points as follows:
top
hanging
middle
alphabetic
ideographic
bottom
The fillText() and strokeText() methods
take three or four arguments, text, x, y, and optionally maxWidth, and render the given text at
the given (x, y) coordinates
ensuring that the text isn't wider than maxWidth if
specified, using the current font, textAlign, and textBaseline values. Specifically, when
the methods are called, the user agent must run the following steps:
Let font be the current font of the browsing
context, as given by the font attribute.
Replace all the space characters in text with U+0020 SPACE characters.
Form a hypothetical infinitely wide CSS line box containing a single
inline box containing the text text, with all the
properties at their initial values except the 'font' property of the
inline box set to font and the 'direction' property
of the inline box set to the
directionality of the canvas
element. [CSS]
If the maxWidth argument was specified and the hypothetical width of the inline box in the hypothetical line box is greater than maxWidth CSS pixels, then change font to have a more condensed font (if one is available or if a reasonably readable one can be synthesized by applying a horizontal scale factor to the font) or a smaller font, and return to the previous step.
Let the anchor point be a point on the inline box,
determined by the textAlign and textBaseline values, as follows:
Horizontal position:
textAlign is left
textAlign is start
and the directionality of the
canvas element is 'ltr'
textAlign is end and
the directionality of the canvas element is 'rtl'
textAlign is right
textAlign is end and
the directionality of the canvas element is 'ltr'
textAlign is start
and the directionality of the
canvas element is 'rtl'
textAlign is center
Vertical position:
textBaseline is top
textBaseline is hanging
textBaseline is middle
textBaseline is alphabetic
textBaseline is ideographic
textBaseline is bottom
Paint the hypothetical inline box as the shape given by the text's glyphs, as transformed by the current transformation matrix, and anchored and sized so that before applying the current transformation matrix, the anchor point is at (x, y) and each CSS pixel is mapped to one coordinate space unit.
For fillText() fillStyle
must be applied to the glyphs and strokeStyle must be ignored. For strokeText() the reverse holds and strokeStyle must be applied to the glyph
outlines and fillStyle must be ignored.
Text is painted without affecting the current path, and is subject to shadow effects, global alpha, the clipping region, and global composition operators.
The measureText() method
takes one argument, text. When the method is invoked,
the user agent must replace all the space characters in text with U+0020
SPACE characters, and then must form a hypothetical infinitely wide CSS
line box containing a single inline box containing the text text, with all the properties at their initial values
except the 'font' property of the inline element set to the current font
of the browsing context, as given by the font attribute, and
must then return a new TextMetrics
object with its width attribute set to the width of that inline
box, in CSS pixels. [CSS]
The TextMetrics interface is
used for the objects returned from measureText(). It has one attribute, width, which is
set by the measureText() method.
Glyphs rendered using fillText() and strokeText() can spill out of the box given
by the font size (the em square size) and the width returned by measureText() (the text width). This
version of the specification does not provide a way to obtain the bounding
box dimensions of the text. If the text is to be rendered and removed,
care needs to be taken to replace the entire area of the canvas that the
clipping region covers, not just the box given by the em square height and
measured text width.
A future version of the 2D context API may provide a way to render fragments of documents, rendered using CSS, straight to the canvas. This would be provided in preference to a dedicated way of doing multiline layout.
メソッド drawImage
は画布上に画像を描画するために使用することができます。
このメソッドは、drawImage(image, dx, dy)、drawImage(image, dx, dy, dw, dh)、drawImage(image, sx, sy, sw, sh, dx, dy, dw, dh) の3通りに多重定義されています。(実際には
6通りで、3通りのいずれの場合も、 image 引数に
HTMLImageElement か HTMLCanvasElement
のいずれかを指定できます。)
引数 dw および dh は、
指定されていない場合、既定値として、 sw と
sh の値を使用しなければなりません。
その場合、画像中の 1 CSS 画素が画布座標空間上の1単位として処理されることとなります。
引数 sx、sy、
sw、 sh が省略された場合、
それぞれ既定値の 0、0、画像の画素における画像の内在幅、
画像の画素における画像の内在高としなければなりません。
引数 image は HTMLImageElement
または HTMLCanvasElement
の実現値でなければなりません。 image が誤った型や null である場合、実装は
TYPE_MISMATCH_ERR 例外を発生させなければなりません。
image 引数が HTMLImageElement であって
complete 属性が偽である場合、
実装は INVALID_STATE_ERR 例外を発生させなければなりません。
原始矩形は、その頂点が4点 (sx, sy), (sx+sw, sy), (sx+sw, sy+sh), (sx, sy+sh) であるような矩形です。
原始矩形が原始画像中に完全に収まっていない場合、
または引数 sw または sh
の1つが零である場合、実装は INDEX_SIZE_ERR 例外を発生させなければなりません。
目的矩形は、その頂点が4点 (dx, dy), (dx+dw, dy), (dx+dw, dy+dh), (dx, dy+dh) であるような矩形です。
drawImage() が呼び出されたとき、
原始矩形で指定される画像上の領域は、
現在変形行列を目的矩形の点に適用した後、
目的矩形で指定される画布上の領域に塗られなければなりません。

画布がそれ自体に塗られるとき、この描画モデルに従うと原始画像は画布上に重ねて描画する以前に複写されなければなりませんから、 画布の一部分をそれと重複する部分に複写することが可能です。
drawImage() メソッドが image 引数にアニメーション画像を引き渡されたとき、
そのアニメーションのポスター枠か、ポスター枠がない場合には最初の枠が使用されなければなりません。
画像は現在経路に影響せずに塗られ、影効果、 大域アルファ、 くり抜き領域、 大域合成操作の対象でもあります。
The createImageData(sw, sh) method must return
an ImageData object representing a
rectangle with a width in CSS pixels equal to the absolute magnitude of
sw and a height in CSS pixels equal to the absolute
magnitude of sh, filled with transparent black.
The getImageData(sx, sy, sw, sh) method must return an ImageData object representing the underlying
pixel data for the area of the canvas denoted by the rectangle whose
corners are the four points (sx, sy), (sx+sw, sy), (sx+sw, sy+sh), (sx,
sy+sh), in canvas
coordinate space units. Pixels outside the canvas must be returned as
transparent black. Pixels must be returned as non-premultiplied alpha
values.
If any of the arguments to createImageData() or getImageData() are infinite or NaN, the
method must instead raise a NOT_SUPPORTED_ERR exception. If
either the sw or sh arguments are
zero, the method must instead raise an INDEX_SIZE_ERR
exception.
ImageData objects must be
initialized so that their width attribute is set to
w, the number of physical device pixels per row in the
image data, their height attribute is set to
h, the number of rows in the image data, and their
data attribute
is initialized to a CanvasPixelArray object holding the
image data. At least one pixel's worth of image data must be returned.
The CanvasPixelArray object
provides ordered, indexed access to the color components of each pixel of
the image data. The data must be represented in left-to-right order, row
by row top to bottom, starting with the top left, with each pixel's red,
green, blue, and alpha components being given in that order for each
pixel. Each component of each device pixel represented in this array must
be in the range 0..255, representing the 8 bit value for that component.
The components must be assigned consecutive indices starting with 0 for
the top left pixel's red component.
The CanvasPixelArray object
thus represents h×w×4
integers. The length attribute of a
CanvasPixelArray object must
return this number.
The XXX5(index) method must return the value of the
indexth component in the array.
The XXX6(index, value) method must
set the value of the indexth component in the array to
value. JS undefined values must be
converted to zero. Other values must first be converted to numbers using
JavaScript's ToNumber algorithm, and if the result is a NaN value, then
the value be must converted to zero. If the result is less than 0, it must
be clamped to zero. If the result is more than 255, it must be clamped to
255. If the number is not an integer, it should be rounded to the nearest
integer using the IEEE 754r convertToIntegerTiesToEven rounding
mode. [ECMA262] [IEEE754R]
The above is not intended to cause these methods to get
any unusual behaviour, it's just supposed to be the normal behaviour for
passing values to a method expecting an octet type.
The width and height (w and h) might be different from the sw and sh arguments to the above methods, e.g. if the canvas is backed by a high-resolution bitmap, or if the sw and sh arguments are negative.
The putImageData(imagedata, dx, dy) and putImageData(imagedata, dx, dy,
dirtyX, dirtyY, dirtyWidth, dirtyHeight)
methods write data from ImageData
structures back to the canvas.
If any of the arguments to the method are infinite or NaN, the method
must raise a NOT_SUPPORTED_ERR exception.
If the first argument to the method is null or not an ImageData object then the putImageData() method must raise a
TYPE_MISMATCH_ERR exception.
When the last four arguments are omitted, they must be assumed to have
the values 0, 0, the width member of the imagedata structure, and the height member of
the imagedata structure, respectively.
When invoked with arguments that do not, per the last few paragraphs,
cause an exception to be raised, the putImageData() method must act as follows:
Let dxdevice be the x-coordinate of the device pixel in the underlying pixel data of the canvas corresponding to the dx coordinate in the canvas coordinate space.
Let dydevice be the y-coordinate of the device pixel in the underlying pixel data of the canvas corresponding to the dy coordinate in the canvas coordinate space.
If dirtyWidth is negative, let dirtyX be dirtyX+dirtyWidth, and let dirtyWidth be equal to the absolute magnitude of dirtyWidth.
If dirtyHeight is negative, let dirtyY be dirtyY+dirtyHeight, and let dirtyHeight be equal to the absolute magnitude of dirtyHeight.
If dirtyX is negative, let dirtyWidth be dirtyWidth+dirtyX, and let dirtyX be zero.
If dirtyY is negative, let dirtyHeight be dirtyHeight+dirtyY, and let dirtyY be zero.
If dirtyX+dirtyWidth is greater than the width attribute
of the imagedata argument, let dirtyWidth be the value of that width attribute,
minus the value of dirtyX.
If dirtyY+dirtyHeight is greater than the height
attribute of the imagedata argument, let dirtyHeight be the value of that height
attribute, minus the value of dirtyY.
If, after those changes, either dirtyWidth or dirtyHeight is negative or zero, stop these steps without affecting the canvas.
Otherwise, for all integer values of x and y where dirtyX ≤ x < dirtyX+dirtyWidth and dirtyY ≤ y < dirtyY+dirtyHeight, copy the four channels of the pixel with coordinate (x, y) in the imagedata data structure to the pixel with coordinate (dxdevice+x, dydevice+y) in the underlying pixel data of the canvas.
The handling of pixel rounding when the specified coordinates do not exactly map to the device coordinate space is not defined by this specification, except that the following must result in no visible changes to the rendering:
context.putImageData(context.getImageData(x, y, w, h), x, y);
...for any value of x, y, w, and h, and the following two calls:
context.createImageData(w, h); context.getImageData(0, 0, w, h);
...must return ImageData objects
with the same dimensions, for any value of w and h. In other words, while user agents may round the
arguments of these methods so that they map to device pixel boundaries,
any rounding performed must be performed consistently for all of the createImageData(), getImageData() and putImageData() operations.
The current path, transformation matrix, shadow attributes, global alpha, the
clipping region, and global composition
operator must not affect the getImageData() and putImageData() methods.
The data returned by getImageData() is at the resolution of
the canvas backing store, which is likely to not be one device pixel to
each CSS pixel if the display used is a high resolution display.
In the following example, the script generates an ImageData object so that it can draw onto
it.
// canvas is a reference to a <canvas> element
var context = canvas.getContext('2d');
// create a blank slate
var data = context.createImageData(canvas.width, canvas.height);
// create some plasma
FillPlasma(data, 'green'); // green plasma
// add a cloud to the plasma
AddCloud(data, data.width/2, data.height/2); // put a cloud in the middle
// paint the plasma+cloud on the canvas
context.putImageData(data, 0, 0);
// support methods
function FillPlasma(data, color) { ... }
function AddCloud(data, x, y) { ... }
Here is an example of using getImageData() and putImageData() to implement an edge
detection filter.
<!DOCTYPE HTML>
<html>
<head>
<title>Edge detection demo</title>
<script>
var image = new Image();
function init() {
image.onload = demo;
image.src = "image.jpeg";
}
function demo() {
var canvas = document.getElementsByTagName('canvas')[0];
var context = canvas.getContext('2d');
// draw the image onto the canvas
context.drawImage(image, 0, 0);
// get the image data to manipulate
var input = context.getImageData(0, 0, canvas.width, canvas.height);
// get an empty slate to put the data into
var output = context.crateImageData(canvas.width, canvas.height);
// alias some variables for convenience
// notice that we are using input.width and input.height here
// as they might not be the same as canvas.width and canvas.height
// (in particular, they might be different on high-res displays)
var w = input.width, h = input.height;
var inputData = input.data;
var outputData = output.data;
// edge detection
for (var y = 1; y < h-1; y += 1) {
for (var x = 1; x < w-1; x += 1) {
for (var c = 0; c < 3; c += 1) {
var i = (y*w + x)*4 + c;
outputData[i] = 127 + -inputData[i - w*4 - 4] - inputData[i - w*4] - inputData[i - w*4 + 4] +
-inputData[i - 4] + 8*inputData[i] - inputData[i + 4] +
-inputData[i + w*4 - 4] - inputData[i + w*4] - inputData[i + w*4 + 4];
}
outputData[(y*w + x)*4 + 3] = 255; // alpha
}
}
// put the image data back after manipulation
context.putImageData(output, 0, 0);
}
</script>
</head>
<body onload="init()">
<canvas></canvas>
</body>
</html>
When a shape or image is painted, user agents must follow these steps, in the order given (or act as if they do):
Render the shape or image, creating image A, as described in the previous sections. For shapes, the current fill, stroke, and line styles must be honored, and the stroke must itself also be subjected to the current transformation matrix.
Render the shadow from image A, using the current shadow styles, creating image B.
Multiply the alpha component of every pixel in B
by globalAlpha.
Within the clipping region, composite B over the current canvas bitmap using the current composition operator.
Multiply the alpha component of every pixel in A
by globalAlpha.
Within the clipping region, composite A over the current canvas bitmap using the current composition operator.
The canvas APIs must perform color
correction at only two points: when rendering images with their own gamma
correction and color space information onto the canvas, to convert the
image to the color space used by the canvas (e.g. using the drawImage()
method with an HTMLImageElement object), and when
rendering the actual canvas bitmap to the output device.
Thus, in the 2D context, colors used to draw shapes onto the
canvas will exactly match colors obtained through the getImageData() method.
The toDataURL() method must not include color
space information in the resource returned. Where the output format allows
it, the color of pixels in resources created by toDataURL()
must match those returned by the getImageData() method.
In user agents that support CSS, the color space used by a canvas element must match the color space used
for processing any colors for that element in CSS.
The gamma correction and color space information of images must be
handled in such a way that an image rendered directly using an img element would use the same colors as one
painted on a canvas element that is
then itself rendered. Furthermore, the rendering of images that have no
color correction information (such as those returned by the toDataURL()
method) must be rendered with no color correction.
Thus, in the 2D context, calling the drawImage()
method to render the output of the toDataURL() method to the canvas, given the
appropriate dimensions, has no visible effect.
canvas elementsInformation leakage can occur if scripts from one origin can access information (e.g. read pixels) from images from another origin (one that isn't the same).
To mitigate this, canvas elements are
defined to have a flag indicating whether they are origin-clean.
All canvas elements must start with
their origin-clean set to true. The flag must be set to false if
any of the following actions occur:
The element's 2D context's drawImage() method is called with an
HTMLImageElement whose origin is not the same as that of the Document object that owns
the canvas element.
The element's 2D context's drawImage() method is called with an
HTMLCanvasElement whose
origin-clean flag is false.
The element's 2D context's fillStyle attribute is set to a CanvasPattern object that was created
from an HTMLImageElement
whose origin was not the same as that of the Document object
that owns the canvas element when the
pattern was created.
The element's 2D context's fillStyle attribute is set to a CanvasPattern object that was created
from an HTMLCanvasElement
whose origin-clean flag was false when the pattern was created.
The element's 2D context's strokeStyle attribute is set to a
CanvasPattern object that was
created from an HTMLImageElement whose origin was not the same as that of the Document object
that owns the canvas element when the
pattern was created.
The element's 2D context's strokeStyle attribute is set to a
CanvasPattern object that was
created from an HTMLCanvasElement whose
origin-clean flag was false when the pattern was created.
Whenever the toDataURL() method of a canvas element whose origin-clean flag is
set to false is called, the method must raise a security exception.
Whenever the getImageData() method of the 2D context of
a canvas element whose
origin-clean flag is set to false is called with otherwise correct
arguments, the method must raise a security
exception.
Even resetting the canvas state by changing its width or height attributes
doesn't reset the origin-clean flag.
map 要素name
interface HTMLMapElement : HTMLElement {
attribute DOMString name;
readonly attribute HTMLCollection areas;
readonly attribute HTMLCollection images;
};
The map element, in conjunction with any
area element descendants, defines an image map.
The name attribute
gives the map a name so that it can be referenced. The attribute must be
present and must have a non-empty value. Whitespace is significant in this
attribute's value. If the id
attribute is also specified, both attributes must have the same value.
The areas attribute
must return an HTMLCollection
rooted at the map element, whose filter
matches only area elements.
The images
attribute must return an HTMLCollection rooted at the
Document node, whose filter matches only img and object
elements that are associated with this map
element according to the image map processing model.
The DOM attribute name must reflect the content attribute of the same name.
area 要素map element ancestor.
alt
coords
shape
href
target
ping
rel
media
hreflang
type
interface HTMLAreaElement : HTMLElement {
attribute DOMString alt;
attribute DOMString coords;
attribute DOMString shape;
attribute DOMString href;
attribute DOMString target;
attribute DOMString ping;
attribute DOMString rel;
readonly attribute DOMTokenList relList;
attribute DOMString media;
attribute DOMString hreflang;
attribute DOMString type;
};
The area element represents either a
hyperlink with some text and a corresponding area on an image map, or a dead area on an image map.
If the area element has an href attribute, then
the area element represents a hyperlink. In this case, the alt attribute must be present. It
specifies the text of the hyperlink. Its value must be text that, when
presented with the texts specified for the other hyperlinks of the image map, and with the alternative text of the image,
but without the image itself, provides the user with the same kind of
choice as the hyperlink would when used without its text but with its
shape applied to the image. The alt attribute may be left blank if there is
another area element in the same image map that points to the same resource and has a
non-blank alt
attribute.
If the area element has no href attribute, then
the area represented by the element cannot be selected, and the alt attribute must be
omitted.
In both cases, the shape and coords attributes specify the area.
The shape
attribute is an enumerated attribute. The
following table lists the keywords defined for this attribute. The states
given in the first cell of the rows with keywords give the states to which
those keywords map. Some of the keywords are non-conforming, as noted in
the last column.
| State | Keywords | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Circle state | circ
| Non-conforming |
circle
| ||
| Default state | default
| |
| Polygon state | poly
| |
polygon
| Non-conforming | |
| Rectangle state | rect
| |
rectangle
| Non-conforming |
The attribute may be omitted. The missing value default is the rectangle state.
The coords
attribute must, if specified, contain a valid list of
integers. This attribute gives the coordinates for the shape described
by the shape
attribute. The processing for this attribute is described as part of the
image map processing model.
In the circle state,
area elements must have a coords attribute
present, with three integers, the last of which must be non-negative. The
first integer must be the distance in CSS pixels from the left edge of the
image to the center of the circle, the second integer must be the distance
in CSS pixels from the top edge of the image to the center of the circle,
and the third integer must be the radius of the circle, again in CSS
pixels.
In the default
state state, area elements must not
have a coords
attribute.
In the polygon state,
area elements must have a coords attribute with
at least six integers, and the number of integers must be even. Each pair
of integers must represent a coordinate given as the distances from the
left and the top of the image in CSS pixels respectively, and all the
coordinates together must represent the points of the polygon, in order.
In the rectangle
state, area elements must have a
coords attribute
with exactly four integers, the first of which must be less than the
third, and the second of which must be less than the fourth. The four
points must represent, respectively, the distance from the left edge of
the image to the left side of the rectangle, the distance from the top
edge to the top side, the distance from the left edge to the right side,
and the distance from the top edge to the bottom side, all in CSS pixels.
When user agents allow users to follow hyperlinks created using the area element, as described in the next section,
the href,
target and
ping attributes
decide how the link is followed. The rel, media, hreflang, and type attributes may
be used to indicate to the user the likely nature of the target resource
before the user follows the link.
The target, ping, rel, media, hreflang, and type attributes
must be omitted if the href attribute is not present.
The activation behavior of area elements is to run the following steps:
DOMActivate event in
question is not trusted (i.e. a
click() method call
was the reason for the event being dispatched), and the area element's target attribute is ... then raise an INVALID_ACCESS_ERR
exception.
area element, if any.
One way that a user agent can enable users to follow
hyperlinks is by allowing area elements
to be clicked, or focussed and activated by the keyboard. This will cause the
aforementioned activation behavior to be
invoked.
The DOM attributes alt, coords, href, target, ping, rel, media, hreflang, and type, each must reflect the respective content attributes of the same
name.
The DOM attribute shape must reflect the shape content attribute, limited to only known values.
The DOM attribute relList must reflect the rel content attribute.
An image map allows geometric areas on an image to be associated with hyperlinks.
An image, in the form of an img element
or an object element representing an
image, may be associated with an image map (in the form of a map element) by specifying a usemap attribute on the
img or object element. The usemap attribute, if specified, must be a valid hash-name reference to a map element.
Consider an image that looks as follows:

If we wanted just the coloured areas to be clickable, we could do it as follows:
<p>
Please select a shape:
<img src="shapes.png" usemap="#shapes"
alt="Four shapes are available: a red hollow box, a green circle, a blue triangle, and a yellow four-pointed star.">
<map name="shapes">
<area shape=rect coords="50,50,100,100"> <!-- the hole in the red box -->
<area shape=rect coords="25,25,125,125" href="red.html" alt="Red box.">
<area shape=circle coords="200,75,50" href="green.html" alt="Green circle.">
<area shape=poly coords="325,25,262,125,388,125" href="blue.html" alt="Blue triangle.">
<area shape=poly coords="450,25,435,60,400,75,435,90,450,125,465,90,500,75,465,60"
href="yellow.html" alt="Yellow star.">
</map>
</p>
If an img element or an object element representing an image has a usemap attribute specified, user agents must
process it as follows:
First, rules for parsing a hash-name reference
to a map element must be followed. This
will return either an element (the map) or null.
If that returned null, then abort these steps. The image is not associated with an image map after all.
Otherwise, the user agent must collect all the area elements that are descendants of the map. Let those be the areas.
Having obtained the list of area
elements that form the image map (the areas),
interactive user agents must process the list in one of two ways.
If the user agent intends to show the text that the img element represents, then it must use the
following steps.
In user agents that do not support images, or that have
images disabled, object elements cannot
represent images, and thus this section never applies (the fallback content is shown instead). The following
steps therefore only apply to img
elements.
Remove all the area elements in areas that have no href attribute.
Remove all the area elements in areas that have no alt attribute, or whose alt attribute's value is
the empty string, if there is another area element in areas with
the same value in the href attribute and with a non-empty alt attribute.
Each remaining area element in areas represents a hyperlink.
Those hyperlinks should all be made available to the user in a manner
associated with the text of the img.
In this context, user agents may represent area and img
elements with no specified alt attributes, or
whose alt attributes are the empty string or some
other non-visible text, in a user-agent-defined fashion intended to
indicate the lack of suitable author-provided text.
If the user agent intends to show the image and allow interaction with
the image to select hyperlinks, then the image must be associated with a
set of layered shapes, taken from the area elements in areas, in
reverse tree order (so the last specified area element in the map is the
bottom-most shape, and the first element in the map,
in tree order, is the top-most shape).
Each area element in areas must be processed as follows to obtain a shape to
layer onto the image:
Find the state that the element's shape attribute represents.
Use the rules for parsing a list of integers to
parse the element's coords attribute, if it is present, and let
the result be the coords list. If the attribute is
absent, let the coords list be the empty list.
If the number of items in the coords list is less
than the minimum number given for the area element's current state, as per the
following table, then the shape is empty; abort these steps.
| State | Minimum number of items |
|---|---|
| Circle state | 3 |
| Default state | 0 |
| Polygon state | 6 |
| Rectangle state | 4 |
Check for excess items in the coords list as per
the entry in the following list corresponding to the shape attribute's
state:
If the shape
attribute represents the rectangle state, and the first number in
the list is numerically less than the third number in the list, then
swap those two numbers around.
If the shape
attribute represents the rectangle state, and the second number in
the list is numerically less than the fourth number in the list, then
swap those two numbers around.
If the shape
attribute represents the circle state, and the third number in
the list is less than or equal to zero, then the shape is empty; abort
these steps.
Now, the shape represented by the element is the one described for the
entry in the list below corresponding to the state of the shape attribute:
Let x be the first number in coords, y be the second number, and r be the third number.
The shape is a circle whose center is x CSS pixels from the left edge of the image and x CSS pixels from the top edge of the image, and whose radius is r pixels.
The shape is a rectangle that exactly covers the entire image.
Let xi be the (2i)th entry in coords, and yi be the (2i+1)th entry in coords (the first entry in coords being the one with index 0).
Let the coordinates be (xi, yi), interpreted in CSS pixels measured from the top left of the image, for all integer values of i from 0 to (N/2)-1, where N is the number of items in coords.
The shape is a polygon whose vertices are given by the coordinates, and whose interior is established using the even-odd rule. [GRAPHICS]
Let x1 be the first number in coords, y1 be the second number, x2 be the third number, and y2 be the fourth number.
The shape is a rectangle whose top-left corner is given by the coordinate (x1, y1) and whose bottom right corner is given by the coordinate (x2, y2), those coordinates being interpreted as CSS pixels from the top left corner of the image.
For historical reasons, the coordinates must be interpreted relative
to the displayed image, even if it stretched using CSS or the
image element's width and height attributes.
Mouse clicks on an image associated with a set of layered shapes per the
above algorithm must be dispatched to the top-most shape covering the
point that the pointing device indicated (if any), and then, must be
dispatched again (with a new Event object) to the image
element itself. User agents may also allow individual area elements representing hyperlinks to be selected and activated (e.g. using a
keyboard); events from this are not also propagated to the image.
Because a map element (and
its area elements) can be associated with
multiple img and object elements, it is possible for an area element to correspond to multiple focusable
areas of the document.
Image maps are live; if the DOM is mutated, then the user agent must act as if it had rerun the algorithms for image maps.
The math element from the MathML
namespace falls into the embedded content
category for the purposes of the content models in this specification.
User agents must handle text other than inter-element whitespace found in MathML
elements whose content models do not allow raw text by pretending for the
purposes of MathML content models, layout, and rendering that that text is
actually wrapped in an mtext element in the MathML namespace. (Such text is not, however,
conforming.)
User agents must act as if any MathML element whose contents does not
match the element's content model was replaced, for the purposes of MathML
layout and rendering, by an merror element in the MathML namespace containing some appropriate error
message.
To enable authors to use MathML tools that only accept MathML in its XML form, interactive HTML user agents are encouraged to provide a way to export any MathML fragment as a namespace-well-formed XML fragment.
The svg element from the SVG
namespace falls into the embedded content
category for the purposes of the content models in this specification.
To enable authors to use SVG tools that only accept SVG in its XML form, interactive HTML user agents are encouraged to provide a way to export any SVG fragment as a namespace-well-formed XML fragment.
The width and
height attributes
on img, embed, object,
and video elements may be specified to
give the dimensions of the visual content of the element (the width and
height respectively, relative to the nominal direction of the output
medium), in CSS pixels. The attributes, if specified, must have values
that are valid positive non-zero integers.
The specified dimensions given may differ from the dimensions specified
in the resource itself, since the resource may have a resolution that
differs from the CSS pixel resolution. (On screens, CSS pixels have a
resolution of 96ppi, but in general the CSS pixel resolution depends on
the reading distance.) If both attributes are specified, then the ratio of
the specified width to the specified height must be the same as the ratio
of the intrinsic width to the intrinsic height in the resource, or
alternatively, in the case of the video
element, the same as the adjusted ratio. The two attributes
must be omitted if the resource in question does not have both an
intrinsic width and an intrinsic height.
To parse the attributes, user agents must use the rules for parsing dimension values. This will return either an integer length, a percentage value, or nothing. The user agent requirements for processing the values obtained from parsing these attributes are described in the rendering section. If one of these attributes, when parsing, returns no value, it must be treated, for the purposes of those requirements, as if it was not specified.
The width and height DOM attributes
on the embed, object, and video elements must reflect the content attributes of the same name.
この節は規定の一部ではありません。
...examples, how to write tables accessibly, a brief mention of the table model, etc...
table 要素caption element, followed by either zero or
more colgroup elements, followed
optionally by a thead element,
followed optionally by a tfoot
element, followed by either zero or more tbody elements or one or more tr elements, followed optionally by a tfoot element (but there can only be one
tfoot element child in total).
interface HTMLTableElement : HTMLElement {
attribute HTMLTableCaptionElement caption;
HTMLElement createCaption();
void deleteCaption();
attribute HTMLTableSectionElement tHead;
HTMLElement createTHead();
void deleteTHead();
attribute HTMLTableSectionElement tFoot;
HTMLElement createTFoot();
void deleteTFoot();
readonly attribute HTMLCollection tBodies;
HTMLElement createTBody();
readonly attribute HTMLCollection rows;
HTMLElement insertRow(in long index);
void deleteRow(in long index);
};
The table element represents data with
more than one dimension (a table).
we need some editorial text on how layout tables are bad practice and non-conforming
The children of a table element must
be, in order:
Zero or one caption elements.
Zero or more colgroup elements.
Zero or one thead elements.
Zero or one tfoot elements, if the
last element in the table is not a tfoot element.
Either:
Zero or one tfoot element, if there
are no other tfoot elements in the
table.
The table element takes part in the table model.
The caption
DOM attribute must return, on getting, the first caption element child of the table element, if any, or null otherwise. On
setting, if the new value is a caption element, the first caption element child of the table element, if any, must be removed, and the
new value must be inserted as the first node of the table element. If the new value is not a caption element, then a
HIERARCHY_REQUEST_ERR DOM exception must be raised instead.
The createCaption() method
must return the first caption element
child of the table element, if any;
otherwise a new caption element must
be created, inserted as the first node of the table element, and then returned.
The deleteCaption() method
must remove the first caption element
child of the table element, if any.
The tHead DOM
attribute must return, on getting, the first thead element child of the table element, if any, or null otherwise. On
setting, if the new value is a thead
element, the first thead element child
of the table element, if any, must be
removed, and the new value must be inserted immediately before the first
element in the table element that is
neither a caption element nor a
colgroup element, if any, or at the
end of the table otherwise. If the new value is not a thead element, then a
HIERARCHY_REQUEST_ERR DOM exception must be raised instead.
The createTHead() method must
return the first thead element child of
the table element, if any; otherwise a
new thead element must be created and
inserted immediately before the first element in the table element that is neither a caption element nor a colgroup element, if any, or at the end of the
table otherwise, and then that new element must be returned.
The deleteTHead() method must
remove the first thead element child of
the table element, if any.
The tFoot DOM
attribute must return, on getting, the first tfoot element child of the table element, if any, or null otherwise. On
setting, if the new value is a tfoot
element, the first tfoot element child
of the table element, if any, must be
removed, and the new value must be inserted immediately before the first
element in the table element that is
neither a caption element, a colgroup element, nor a thead element, if any, or at the end of the
table if there are no such elements. If the new value is not a tfoot element, then a
HIERARCHY_REQUEST_ERR DOM exception must be raised instead.
The createTFoot() method must
return the first tfoot element child of
the table element, if any; otherwise a
new tfoot element must be created and
inserted immediately before the first element in the table element that is neither a caption element, a colgroup element, nor a thead element, if any, or at the end of the
table if there are no such elements, and then that new element must be
returned.
The deleteTFoot() method must
remove the first tfoot element child of
the table element, if any.
The tBodies
attribute must return an HTMLCollection rooted at the table node, whose filter matches only tbody elements that are children of the table element.
The createTBody() method must
create a new tbody element, insert it
immediately after the last tbody element
in the table element, if any, or at the
end of the table element if the table element has no tbody element children, and then must return the
new tbody element.
The rows attribute
must return an HTMLCollection
rooted at the table node, whose filter
matches only tr elements that are either
children of the table element, or
children of thead, tbody, or tfoot elements that are themselves children of
the table element. The elements in the
collection must be ordered such that those elements whose parent is a
thead are included first, in tree
order, followed by those elements whose parent is either a table or tbody
element, again in tree order, followed finally by those elements whose
parent is a tfoot element, still in
tree order.
The behavior of the insertRow(index) method depends on the state of the
table. When it is called, the method must act as required by the first
item in the following list of conditions that describes the state of the
table and the index argument:
rows collection:
INDEX_SIZE_ERR exception.
rows
collection has zero elements in it, and the table has no tbody elements in it:
tbody
element, then create a tr element, then
append the tr element to the tbody element, then append the tbody element to the table element, and finally return the tr element.
rows
collection has zero elements in it:
tr element,
append it to the last tbody element in
the table, and return the tr element.
rows collection:
tr element,
and append it to the parent of the last tr
element in the rows
collection. Then, the newly created tr
element must be returned.
tr element,
insert it immediately before the indexth tr element in the rows collection, in the same parent, and finally
must return the newly created tr element.
When the deleteRow(index) method is called, the user agent must
run the following steps:
If index is equal to −1, then index must be set to the number if items in the rows collection, minus
one.
Now, if index is less than zero, or greater than
or equal to the number of elements in the rows collection, the method must instead raise
an INDEX_SIZE_ERR exception, and these steps must be
aborted.
Otherwise, the method must remove the indexth
element in the rows collection from its parent.
caption 要素table element.
HTMLElement を使用。The caption element represents the
title of the table that is its parent,
if it has a parent and that is a table
element.
The caption element takes part in
the table model.
colgroup 要素table element, after
any caption elements and before any
thead, tbody, tfoot,
and tr elements.
col elements.
span
interface HTMLTableColElement : HTMLElement {
attribute unsigned long span;
};
The colgroup element represents a
group of one or more columns in the table that is its parent, if it has a parent and
that is a table element.
If the colgroup element contains no
col elements, then the element may have a
span content
attribute specified, whose value must be a valid
non-negative integer greater than zero.
The colgroup element and its span attribute take
part in the table model.
The span DOM
attribute must reflect the content attribute of the
same name. The value must be limited to only positive
non-zero numbers.
col 要素colgroup element
that doesn't have a span attribute.
spanHTMLTableColElement,
same as for colgroup elements. This
interface defines one member, span.
If a col element has a parent and that
is a colgroup element that itself has
a parent that is a table element, then
the col element represents one or more columns in the column group represented by that colgroup.
The element may have a span content attribute specified,
whose value must be a valid non-negative integer
greater than zero.
The col element and its span attribute take part
in the table model.
The span DOM
attribute must reflect the content attribute of the
same name. The value must be limited to only positive
non-zero numbers.
tbody 要素table element, after any caption, colgroup, and thead elements, but only if there are no tr elements that are children of the table 要素の子供として。tr elements
interface HTMLTableSectionElement : HTMLElement {
readonly attribute HTMLCollection rows;
HTMLElement insertRow(in long index);
void deleteRow(in long index);
};
The HTMLTableSectionElement
interface is also used for thead and
tfoot elements.
The tbody element represents a block of rows that consist of a body of data for the parent
table element, if the tbody element has a parent and it is a table.
The tbody element takes part in the table model.
The rows attribute
must return an HTMLCollection
rooted at the element, whose filter matches only tr elements that are children of the element.
The insertRow(index) method must, when invoked on an element
table section, act as follows:
If index is less than −1 or greater than the
number of elements in the rows collection, the method must raise an
INDEX_SIZE_ERR exception.
If index is equal to −1 or equal to the
number of items in the rows collection, the method must create a
tr element, append it to the element table section, and return the newly created tr element.
Otherwise, the method must create a tr
element, insert it as a child of the table section
element, immediately before the indexth tr element in the rows collection, and finally must return the
newly created tr element.
The deleteRow(index) method must remove the indexth element in the rows collection from its parent. If index is less than zero or greater than or equal to the
number of elements in the rows collection, the method must instead raise an
INDEX_SIZE_ERR exception.
thead 要素table element, after any caption, and colgroup elements and before any tbody, tfoot, and tr elements, but only if there are no other thead elements that are children of the table 要素の子供として。tr elements
HTMLTableSectionElement, as
defined for tbody elements.
The thead element represents the block of rows that consist of the column labels (headers) for
the parent table element, if the
thead element has a parent and it is a
table.
The thead element takes part in the
table model.
tfoot 要素table element, after any caption, colgroup, and thead elements and before any tbody and tr elements, but only if there are no other tfoot elements that are children of the table 要素の子供として。table element, after any caption, colgroup, thead, tbody, and tr elements, but only if there are no other tfoot elements that are children of the table 要素の子供として。tr elements
HTMLTableSectionElement, as
defined for tbody elements.
The tfoot element represents the block of rows that consist of the column summaries (footers)
for the parent table element, if the
tfoot element has a parent and it is a
table.
The tfoot element takes part in the
table model.
tr 要素thead 要素の子供として。tbody 要素の子供として。tfoot 要素の子供として。table element, after any caption, colgroup, and thead elements, but only if there are no tbody elements that are children of the table 要素の子供として。td or th elements
interface HTMLTableRowElement : HTMLElement {
readonly attribute long rowIndex;
readonly attribute long sectionRowIndex;
readonly attribute HTMLCollection cells;
HTMLElement insertCell(in long index);
void deleteCell(in long index);
};
The tr element represents a row of cells in a table.
The tr element takes part in the table model.
The rowIndex
attribute must, if the element has a parent table element, or a parent tbody, thead,
or tfoot element and a
grandparent table element,
return the index of the tr element in that
table element's rows collection. If there
is no such table element, then the
attribute must return −1.
The sectionRowIndex attribute
must, if the element has a parent table,
tbody, thead, or tfoot element, return the index of the tr element in the parent element's rows collection (for tables, that's the rows collection; for table
sections, that's the rows collection). If there is no such parent
element, then the attribute must return −1.
The cells attribute
must return an HTMLCollection
rooted at the tr element, whose filter
matches only td and th elements that are children of the tr element.
The insertCell(index) method must act as follows:
If index is less than −1 or greater than the
number of elements in the cells collection, the method must raise an
INDEX_SIZE_ERR exception.
If index is equal to −1 or equal to the
number of items in cells collection, the method must create a
td element, append it to the tr element, and return the newly created td element.
Otherwise, the method must create a td
element, insert it as a child of the tr
element, immediately before the indexth td or th element in
the cells collection,
and finally must return the newly created td element.
The deleteCell(index) method must remove the indexth element in the cells collection from its parent. If index is less than zero or greater than or equal to the
number of elements in the cells collection, the method must instead raise
an INDEX_SIZE_ERR exception.
td 要素tr 要素の子供として。colspan
rowspan
headersinterface HTMLTableDataCellElement : HTMLTableCellElement {
attribute DOMString headers;
};
The td element represents a data cell in a table.
The td element may have a headers content attribute
specified. The headers attribute, if specified, must contain a
string consisting of an unordered set of unique
space-separated tokens, each of which must have the value of an ID of
a th element taking part in the same table as the td element (as defined by the table model).
The exact effect of the attribute is described in detail in the algorithm for assigning header cells to data cells, which user agents must apply to determine the relationships between data cells and header cells.
The td element and its colspan and rowspan attributes
take part in the table model.
The headers DOM
attribute must reflect the content attribute of the
same name.
th 要素tr 要素の子供として。colspan
rowspan
scope
interface HTMLTableHeaderCellElement : HTMLTableCellElement {
attribute DOMString scope;
};
The th element represents a header cell in a table.
The th element may have a scope content attribute specified.
The scope attribute
is an enumerated attribute with five states,
four of which have explicit keywords:
row
keyword, which maps to the row state
col
keyword, which maps to the column state
rowgroup keyword, which
maps to the row group state
colgroup keyword, which
maps to the column group state
The scope
attribute's missing value default is the auto state.
The exact effect of these values is described in detail in the algorithm for assigning header cells to data cells, which user agents must apply to determine the relationships between data cells and header cells.
The th element and its colspan and rowspan attributes
take part in the table model.
The scope DOM
attribute must reflect the content attribute of the
same name.
td and th
elementsThe td and th elements may have a colspan content attribute
specified, whose value must be a valid non-negative
integer greater than zero.
The td and th elements may also have a rowspan content attribute
specified, whose value must be a valid non-negative
integer.
The td and th elements implement interfaces that inherit from
the HTMLTableCellElement
interface:
interface HTMLTableCellElement : HTMLElement {
attribute long colSpan;
attribute long rowSpan;
readonly attribute long cellIndex;
};
The colSpan
DOM attribute must reflect the content attribute of
the same name. The value must be limited to only
positive non-zero numbers.
The rowSpan
DOM attribute must reflect the content attribute of
the same name. Its default value, which must be used if parsing the attribute as a
non-negative integer returns an error, is also 1.
The cellIndex DOM attribute must,
if the element has a parent tr element,
return the index of the cell's element in the parent element's cells collection. If there
is no such parent element, then the attribute must return 0.
The various table elements and their content attributes together define the table model.
A table consists of cells
aligned on a two-dimensional grid of slots with coordinates (x,
y). The grid is finite, and is either empty or has one
or more slots. If the grid has one or more slots, then the x coordinates are always in the range
0 ≤ x < xwidth, and the y coordinates are always in the range
0 ≤ y < yheight. If one or both of xwidth and yheight are zero, then the table is empty (has no
slots). Tables correspond to table
elements.
A cell is a set of slots anchored
at a slot (cellx, celly), and with a particular width and height such that the cell
covers all the slots with coordinates (x, y) where cellx ≤ x < cellx+width and celly ≤ y < celly+height. Cells can either
be data cells or header cells. Data cells correspond to
td elements, and have zero or more
associated header cells. Header cells correspond to th elements.
A row is a complete set of slots
from x=0 to x=xwidth-1,
for a particular value of y. Rows correspond to
tr elements.
A column is a complete set of
slots from y=0 to y=yheight-1,
for a particular value of x. Columns can correspond to
col elements, but in the absence of
col elements are implied.
A row group is a set of
rows anchored at a slot (0, groupy) with a particular height such that the row group covers all the slots with
coordinates (x, y) where
0 ≤ x < xwidth and groupy ≤ y < groupy+height. Row groups
correspond to tbody, thead, and tfoot elements. Not every row is necessarily in
a row group.
A column group is a set
of columns anchored at a slot
(groupx, 0) with a particular width such that the column group covers all the slots with
coordinates (x, y) where
groupx ≤ x < groupx+width and
0 ≤ y < yheight. Column groups
correspond to colgroup elements. Not
every column is necessarily in a column group.
Row groups cannot overlap each other. Similarly, column groups cannot overlap each other.
A cell cannot cover slots that are from two or more row groups. It is, however, possible for a cell to be in multiple column groups. All the slots that form part of one cell are part of zero or one row groups and zero or more column groups.
In addition to cells, columns, rows, row groups, and column groups, tables can have a caption element associated with them. This
gives the table a heading, or legend.
A table model error is an error with the data
represented by table elements and their
descendants. Documents must not have table model errors.
To determine which elements correspond to which slots in a table associated with a table element, to determine the dimensions of the
table (xwidth and yheight), and to determine if there are
any table model errors,
user agents must use the following algorithm:
Let xwidth be zero.
Let yheight be zero.
Let pending tfoot
elements be a list of tfoot
elements, initially empty.
Let the table be the table represented by the table element. The xwidth and yheight variables give the
table's dimensions. The table is initially
empty.
If the table element has no children
elements, then return the table (which will be
empty), and abort these steps.
Associate the first caption
element child of the table element
with the table. If there are no such children, then
it has no associated caption
element.
Let the current element be the first element child
of the table element.
If a step in this algorithm ever requires the current
element to be advanced to the next child of the
table when there is no such next child, then the user
agent must jump to the step labeled end, near the end of this
algorithm.
While the current element is not one of the
following elements, advance the current
element to the next child of the table:
If the current element is a colgroup, follow these substeps:
Column groups: Process the current element according to the appropriate case below:
col element children
Follow these steps:
Let xstart have the value of xwidth.
Let the current column be the first col element child of the colgroup element.
Columns: If the current column
col element has a span attribute,
then parse its value using the rules for parsing
non-negative integers.
If the result of parsing the value is not an error or zero, then let span be that value.
Otherwise, if the col element
has no span
attribute, or if trying to parse the attribute's value resulted in
an error, then let span be 1.
Increase xwidth by span.
Let the last span columns in the table
correspond to the current column col element.
If current column is not the last col element child of the colgroup element, then let the current column be the next col element child of the colgroup element, and return to the
step labeled columns.
Let all the last columns in the table
from x=xstart
to x=xwidth-1
form a new column
group, anchored at the slot (xstart, 0), with width xwidth-xstart, corresponding to the colgroup element.
col element children
If the colgroup element has
a span
attribute, then parse its value using the rules
for parsing non-negative integers.
If the result of parsing the value is not an error or zero, then let span be that value.
Otherwise, if the colgroup
element has no span attribute, or if trying to parse the
attribute's value resulted in an error, then let span be 1.
Increase xwidth by span.
Let the last span columns in the table
form a new column
group, anchored at the slot (xwidth-span, 0),
with width span, corresponding to the colgroup element.
While the current element is not one of the
following elements, advance the current
element to the next child of the table:
If the current element is a colgroup element, jump to the step labeled
column groups above.
Let ycurrent be zero.
Let the list of downward-growing cells be an empty list.
Rows: While the current element is not one
of the following elements, advance the current
element to the next child of the table:
If the current element is a tr, then run the algorithm
for processing rows, advance the current
element to the next child of the table, and return to the step labeled
rows.
Run the algorithm for ending a row group.
If the current element is a tfoot, then add that element to the list of
pending tfoot
elements, advance the current
element to the next child of the table, and return to the step labeled
rows.
The current element is either a thead or a tbody.
Run the algorithm for processing row groups.
Return to the step labeled rows.
End: For each tfoot element
in the list of pending tfoot elements, in tree order, run the
algorithm for processing row groups.
If there exists a row or column in the table the table containing only slots that do not have a cell anchored to them, then this is a table model error.
Return the table.
The algorithm for processing row groups, which
is invoked by the set of steps above for processing thead, tbody,
and tfoot elements, is:
Let ystart have the value of yheight.
For each tr element that is a child of
the element being processed, in tree order, run the algorithm for processing rows.
If yheight > ystart, then let all the last rows in the table from y=ystart to y=yheight-1 form a new row group, anchored at the slot with coordinate (0, ystart), with height yheight-ystart, corresponding to the element being processed.
Run the algorithm for ending a row group.
The algorithm for ending a row group, which is invoked by the set of steps above when starting and ending a block of rows, is:
While ycurrent is less than yheight, follow these steps:
Increase ycurrent by 1.
Empty the list of downward-growing cells.
The algorithm for processing rows, which is
invoked by the set of steps above for processing tr elements, is:
If yheight is equal to ycurrent, then increase yheight by 1. (ycurrent is never greater than yheight.)
Let xcurrent be 0.
If the tr element being processed has
no td or th element children, then increase ycurrent by 1, abort this set of
steps, and return to the algorithm above.
Let current cell be the first td or th element in
the tr element being processed.
Cells: While xcurrent is less than xwidth and the slot with coordinate (xcurrent, ycurrent) already has a cell assigned to it, increase xcurrent by 1.
If xcurrent is equal to xwidth, increase xwidth by 1. (xcurrent is never greater than xwidth.)
If the current cell has a colspan attribute,
then parse that attribute's value, and let colspan be the result.
If parsing that value failed, or returned zero, or if the attribute is absent, then let colspan be 1, instead.
If the current cell has a rowspan attribute,
then parse that attribute's value, and let rowspan be the result.
If parsing that value failed or if the attribute is absent, then let rowspan be 1, instead.
If rowspan is zero, then let cell grows downward be true, and set rowspan to 1. Otherwise, let cell grows downward be false.
If xwidth < xcurrent+colspan, then let xwidth be xcurrent+colspan.
If yheight < ycurrent+rowspan, then let yheight be ycurrent+rowspan.
Let the slots with coordinates (x, y) such that xcurrent ≤ x < xcurrent+colspan and ycurrent ≤ y < ycurrent+rowspan be covered by a new cell c, anchored at (xcurrent, ycurrent), which has width colspan and height rowspan, corresponding to the current cell element.
If the current cell element is a th element, let this new cell c be a header cell; otherwise, let it be a data cell. To
establish what header cells apply to a data cell, use the algorithm for assigning header cells to data
cells described in the next section.
If any of the slots involved already had a cell covering them, then this is a table model error. Those slots now have two cells overlapping.
If cell grows downward is true, then add the tuple {c, xcurrent, colspan} to the list of downward-growing cells.
Increase xcurrent by colspan.
If current cell is the last td or th element in
the tr element being processed, then
increase ycurrent by 1, abort
this set of steps, and return to the algorithm above.
Let current cell be the next td or th element in
the tr element being processed.
Return to the step labelled cells.
When the algorithms above require the user agent to run the algorithm for growing downward-growing cells, the user agent must, for each {cell, cellx, width} tuple in the list of downward-growing cells, if any, extend the cell cell so that it also covers the slots with coordinates (x, ycurrent), where cellx ≤ x < cellx+width.
Each data cell can be assigned zero or more header cells. The algorithm for assigning header cells to data cells is as follows.
For each header cell in the table, in tree order, run these substeps:
Let (headerx, headery) be the coordinate of the slot to which the header cell is anchored.
Let headerwidth be the width of the header cell.
Let headerheight be the height of the header cell.
Let data cells be a list of data cells, initially empty.
Examine the scope attribute of the th element corresponding to the header cell,
and, based on its state, apply the appropriate substep:
Add all the data cells that cover slots with coordinates (slotx, sloty), where headerx+headerwidth ≤ slotx < xwidth and headery ≤ sloty < headery+headerheight, to the data cells list.
Add all the data cells that cover slots with coordinates (slotx, sloty), where headerx ≤ slotx < headerx+headerwidth and headery+headerheight ≤ sloty < yheight, to the data cells list.
If the header cell is not in a row group, then do nothing.
Otherwise, let (0, groupy) be the slot at which the row group is anchored, let height be the number of rows in the row group, and add all the data cells that cover slots with coordinates (slotx, sloty), where headerx ≤ slotx < xwidth and headery ≤ sloty < groupy+height, to the data cells list.
If the header cell is not anchored in a column group, then do nothing.
Otherwise, let (groupx, 0) be the slot at which that column group is anchored, let width be the number of columns in the column group, and add all the data cells that cover slots with coordinates (slotx, sloty), where headerx ≤ slotx < groupx+width and headery ≤ sloty < yheight, to the data cells list.
Run these steps:
If the header cell is equivalent to a wide cell, let headerwidth equal xwidth-headerx.
Let x equal headerx+headerwidth.
Let y equal headery+headerheight.
Horizontal: If x is equal to xwidth, then jump down to the step below labeled vertical.
If there is a header cell anchored at (x, headery) with height headerheight, then jump down to the step below labeled vertical.
Add all the data cells that cover slots with coordinates (slotx, sloty), where slotx = x and headery ≤ sloty < headery+headerheight, to the data cells list.
Increase x by 1.
Jump up to the step above labeled horizontal.
Vertical: If y is equal to yheight, then jump to the step below labeled end.
If there is a header cell cell anchored at (headerx, y), then follow these substeps:
If the header cell cell is equivalent to a wide cell, then let width be xwidth-headerx. Otherwise, let width be the width of the header cell cell.
If width is equal to headerwidth, then jump to the step below labeled end.
Add all the data cells that cover slots with coordinates (slotx, sloty), where headerx ≤ slotx < headerx+headerwidth and sloty = y, to the data cells list.
Increase y by 1.
Jump up to the step above labeled vertical.
End: Coalesce all the duplicate entries in the data cells list, so that each data cell is only present once, in tree order.
Assign the header cell to all the data cells in the data cells list that correspond to td elements that do not have a headers attribute
specified.
For each data cell in the table, in tree order, run these substeps:
If the data cell corresponds to a td
element that does not have a headers attribute specified, then skip
these substeps and move on to the next data cell (if any).
Otherwise, take the value of the headers attribute and split it on spaces, letting id list be the list of tokens obtained.
For each token in the id list, run the following steps:
A header cell anchored at (headerx, headery) with width headerwidth and height headerheight is said to be equivalent to a wide cell if all the slots with coordinates (slotx, sloty), where headerx+headerwidth ≤ slotx < xwidth and headery ≤ sloty < headery+headerheight, are all either empty or covered by empty data cells.
A data cell is said to be an empty data cell if it contains no elements and its text content, if any, consists only of White_Space characters.
User agents may remove empty data cells when analyzing data in a table.
This section will contain definitions of the
form element and so forth.
This section will be a rewrite of the HTML4 Forms and Web Forms 2.0 specifications, with hopefully no normative changes.
form 要素fieldset 要素input 要素button 要素label 要素select 要素datalist 要素optgroup 要素option 要素All Window objects must provide the
following constructors:
Option()
Option(in DOMString name)
Option(in DOMString name, in DOMString value)
When invoked as constructors, these must return a new
HTMLOptionElement object (a new option
element). need to define argument
processing
textarea 要素output 要素See WF2 for now
See WF2 for now
If a form is in a browsing context whose sandboxed forms browsing context flag is set, it must not be submitted.
Scripts allow authors to add interactivity to their documents.
Authors are encouraged to use declarative alternatives to scripting where possible, as declarative mechanisms are often more maintainable, and many users disable scripting.
For example, instead of using script to show or hide a section to show
more details, the details element
could be used.
Authors are also encouraged to make their applications degrade gracefully in the absence of scripting support.
For example, if an author provides a link in a table header to dynamically resort the table, the link could also be made to function without scripts by requesting the sorted table from the server.
script 要素src attribute, depends on the value of the type attribute.
src attribute, the element must be empty.
src
async
defer
type
charset
interface HTMLScriptElement : HTMLElement {
attribute DOMString src;
attribute boolean async;
attribute boolean defer;
attribute DOMString type;
attribute DOMString charset;
attribute DOMString text;
};
The script element allows authors to
include dynamic script and data blocks in their documents.
When used to include dynamic scripts, the scripts may either be embedded
inline or may be imported from an external file using the src attribute. If the
language is not that described by "text/javascript",
then the type
attribute must be present. If the type attribute is present, its value must be the
type of the script's language.
When used to include data blocks, the data must be embedded inline, the
format of the data must be given using the type attribute, and the src attribute must not be
specified.
The type
attribute gives the language of the script or format of the data. If the
attribute is present, its value must be a valid MIME type, optionally with
parameters. The charset parameter must not be
specified. (The default, which is used if the attribute is absent, is
"text/javascript".) [RFC2046]
The src attribute,
if specified, gives the address of the external script resource to use.
The value of the attribute must be a valid URL
identifying a script resource of the type given by the type attribute, if the
attribute is present, or of the type "text/javascript", if the attribute is absent.
The charset attribute gives the
character encoding of the external script resource. The attribute must not
be specified if the src attribute is not present. If the attribute is
set, its value must be a valid character encoding name, and must be the
preferred name for that encoding. [IANACHARSET]
The encoding specified must be the encoding used by the script resource.
If the charset attribute is omitted, the character
encoding of the document will be used. If the script resource uses a
different encoding than the document, then the attribute must be
specified.
The async and
defer attributes
are boolean attributes
that indicate how the script should be executed.
There are three possible modes that can be selected using these
attributes. If the async attribute is present, then the script will
be executed asynchronously, as soon as it is available. If the async attribute is not
present but the defer attribute is present, then the script is
executed when the page has finished parsing. If neither attribute is
present, then the script is fetched and executed immediately, before the
user agent continues parsing the page. The exact processing details for
these attributes is described below.
The defer
attribute may be specified even if the async attribute is specified, to cause legacy Web
browsers that only support defer (and not async) to fall back to the defer behavior instead
of the synchronous blocking behavior that is the default.
Changing the src,
type, charset, async, and defer attributes
dynamically has no direct effect; these attribute are only used at
specific times described below (namely, when the element is inserted into
the document).
script elements have four associated
pieces of metadata. The first is a flag indicating whether or not the
script block has been "already executed". Initially,
script elements must have this flag
unset (script blocks, when created, are not "already executed"). When a
script element is cloned, the "already
executed" flag, if set, must be propagated to the clone when it is
created. The second is a flag indicating whether the element was "parser-inserted". This flag is set by the HTML parser and is used to handle document.write() calls. The third and
fourth pieces of metadata are the script's
type and the script's character
encoding. They are determined when the script is run, based on
the attributes on the element at that time.
Running a script: When a script block is inserted into a document, the user agent must act as follows:
If either:
script element has a type attribute and
its value is the empty string, or
script element has no type attribute but
it has a language attribute and
that attribute's value is the empty string, or
script element has neither a
type
attribute nor a language
attribute, then
...let the script's type for
this script element be "text/javascript".
Otherwise, if the script element
has a type
attribute, let the script's type
for this script element be the value
of that attribute.
Otherwise, the element has a language attribute; let the script's type for this script element be the concatenation of the
string "text/" followed by the value of the language attribute.
If the script element has a charset
attribute, then let the script's character
encoding for this script
element be the encoding given by the charset attribute.
Otherwise, let the script's character
encoding for this script
element be the same as the encoding of the document itself.
If the script element is without script, or if the script element was created by an XML
parser that itself was created as part of the processing of the
innerHTML
attribute's setter,
or if the user agent does not support the scripting
language given by the script's
type for this script
element, or if the script element
has its "already executed" flag set, then the
user agent must abort these steps at this point. The script is not
executed.
The user agent must set the element's "already executed" flag.
If the element has a src attribute, then the specified resource must
be fetched.
For historical reasons, if the URL is a javascript: URL, then the user agent must not,
despite the requirements in the definition of the fetching algorithm, actually execute the given script;
instead the user agent must act as if it had received an empty HTTP 400
response.
Once the fetching process has completed, and the script has completed loading, the user agent will have to complete the steps described below. (If the parser is still active at that time, those steps defer to the parser to handle the execution of pending scripts.)
For performance reasons, user agents may start fetching the script as
soon as the attribute is set, instead, in the hope that the element will
be inserted into the document. Either way, once the element is inserted
into the document, the load must have started. If the UA performs such
prefetching, but the element is never inserted in the document, or the
src attribute is
dynamically changed, then the user agent will not execute the script,
and the fetching process will have been effectively wasted.
Then, the first of the following options that describes the situation must be followed:
defer attribute,
and the element does not have an async attribute
async attribute and a src attribute
async attribute but no src attribute, and the
list of scripts that will execute
asynchronously is not empty
src attribute and has been flagged as "parser-inserted"
src attribute
When a script completes loading: If the script's element was added to one of the lists mentioned above and the document is still being parsed, then the parser handles it. Otherwise, the UA must run the following steps as the task that the networking task source places on the task queue:
If the script's element is not the first element in the list, then do nothing yet. Stop going through these steps.
Otherwise, execute the script (that is, the script associated with the first element in the list).
Remove the script's element from the list (i.e. shift out the first entry in the list).
If there are any more entries in the list, and if the script associated with the element that is now the first in the list is already loaded, then jump back to step two to execute it.
If the script is not the first element in the list, then do nothing yet. Stop going through these steps.
Execute the script (the script associated with the first element in the list).
Remove the script's element from the list (i.e. shift out the first entry in the list).
If there are any more scripts in the list, and the element now at
the head of the list had no src attribute when it was added to the list,
or had one, but its associated script has finished loading, then jump
back to step two to execute the script associated with this element.
Remove the script's element from the list.
Fetching an external script must delay the load event.
Executing a script block: When the steps above require that the script be executed, the user agent must act as follows:
Executing the script must just consist of firing an error event at the element.
If the script element's
Document is the active document in
its browsing context, the user agent must
execute the script:
That file must be used as the file to execute.
The file must be interpreted using the character encoding given by the script's character encoding, regardless of any metadata given by the file's Content-Type metadata.
This means that a UTF-16 document will always assume external scripts are UTF-16...? This applies, e.g., to document's created using createDocument()... It also means changing document.charSet will affect the character encoding used to interpret scripts, is that really what happens?
For scripting languages that consist of pure text, user agents
must use the value of the DOM text attribute (defined below) as the
script to execute, and for XML-based scripting languages, user
agents must use all the child nodes of the script element as the script to execute.
In any case, the user agent must execute the script according to the semantics defined by the language associated with the script's type (see the scripting languages section below).
The script execution context of the script
must be the Window object of that
browsing context.
The script document context of the script
must be the Document object that owns the script element.
The element's attributes' values might have changed
between when the element was inserted into the document and when the
script has finished loading, as may its other attributes; similarly,
the element itself might have been taken back out of the DOM, or had
other changes made. These changes do not in any way affect the above
steps; only the values of the attributes at the time the script element is first inserted into the
document matter.
Then, the user agent must fire a load event at the script element.
The DOM attributes src, type, charset, async, and defer, each must reflect the respective content attributes of the same
name.
The DOM attribute text must return a concatenation
of the contents of all the text
nodes that are direct children of the script element (ignoring any other nodes such
as comments or elements), in tree order. On setting, it must act the same
way as the textContent DOM
attribute.
In this example, two script
elements are used. One embeds an external script, and the other includes
some data.
<script src="game-engine.js"></script> <script type="text/x-game-map"> ........U.........e o............x....e .....x.....xxx....e .x..xxx...xxxxx...e </script>
The data in this case might be used by the script to generate the map of a video game. The data doesn't have to be used that way, though; maybe the map data is actually embedded in other parts of the page's markup, and the data block here is just used by the site's search engine to help users who are looking for particular features in their game maps.
A user agent is said to support the scripting language if the script's type matches the MIME type of a scripting language that the user agent implements.
The following lists some MIME types and the languages to which they refer:
text/javascript
text/javascript1.1
text/javascript1.2
text/javascript1.3
text/javascript;e4x=1
User agents may support other MIME types and other languages.
When examining types to determine if they support the language, user agents must not ignore unknown MIME parameters — types with unknown parameters must be assumed to be unsupported.
noscript 要素head element of an HTML document, if there are no
ancestor noscript elements.
noscript elements.
head element: in any order, zero or more link elements, zero or more style elements, and zero or more meta elements.
head element: transparent, but there must be no noscript element descendants.
HTMLElement を使用。The noscript element does not
represent anything. It is used to present different markup to user agents
that support scripting and those that don't support scripting, by
affecting how the document is parsed.
The noscript element must not be
used in XML documents.
The noscript
element is only effective in the HTML
serialization, it has no effect in the XML serialization.
When used in HTML documents, the allowed content model is as follows:
In a head element, if the noscript element is without
script, then the content model of a noscript element must contain only link, style,
and meta elements. If the noscript element is with script, then the content model of a noscript element is text, except that invoking
the HTML fragment parsing algorithm with the
noscript element as the context element and the text contents as the input must result in a list of nodes that consists only of
link, style, and meta elements.
Outside of head elements, if the
noscript element is without script, then the content model of a noscript element is transparent, with the additional restriction that
a noscript element must not have a
noscript element as an ancestor (that
is, noscript can't be nested).
Outside of head elements, if the
noscript element is with script, then the content model of a noscript element is text, except that the text
must be such that running the following algorithm results in a conforming
document with no noscript elements
and no script elements, and such that
no step in the algorithm causes an HTML parser to
flag a parse error:
script element from
the document.
noscript
element in the document. For every noscript element in that list, perform the
following steps:
noscript element.
noscript element,
and call these elements the before children.
noscript
element, and call these elements the after
children.
noscript element.
innerHTML attribute of the parent element to the value of s.
(This, as a side-effect, causes the noscript element to be removed from the
document.)
The noscript element has no other
requirements. In particular, children of the noscript element are not exempt from form
submission, scripting, and so forth, even when the element is with script.
All these contortions are required because, for historical
reasons, the noscript element is
handled differently by the HTML parser based on
whether scripting was enabled
or not when the parser was invoked. The element is not allowed in XML,
because in XML the parser is not affected by such state, and thus the
element would not have the desired effect.
The noscript element
interacts poorly with the designMode feature. Authors are encouraged
to not use noscript elements on pages
that will have designMode enabled.
eventsource 要素src
interface HTMLEventSourceElement : HTMLElement {
attribute DOMString src;
};
The eventsource element
represents a target for events generated by a remote server.
The src
attribute, if specified, must give a valid URL
identifying a resource that uses the text/event-stream
format.
When an eventsource element with
a src
attribute specified is inserted into the document, and
when an eventsource element that
is already in the document has a src attribute
added, the user agent must run the add declared
event source algorithm.
While an eventsource element is
in a document, if its src attribute is
mutated, the user agent must must run the remove
declared event source algorithm followed by the add declared event source algorithm.
When an eventsource element with
a src
attribute specified is removed from a document, and when
an eventsource element that is in
a document with a src attribute specified has its src attribute
removed, the user agent must run the remove declared
event source algorithm.
When it is created, an eventsource element must have its
current declared event source set to "undefined".
The add declared event source algorithm is as follows:
eventsource element's src attribute.
addEventSource() method on the eventsource element had been invoked with
the resulting absolute URL.
The remove declared event source algorithm is as follows:
removeEventSource() method on the
eventsource element had been
invoked with the element's current declared event source.
There can be more than one eventsource element per document, but
authors should take care to avoid opening multiple connections to the same
server as HTTP recommends a limit to the number of simultaneous
connections that a user agent can open per server.
The src DOM
attribute must reflect the content attribute of the
same name.
details 要素legend element followed by flow content.
open
interface HTMLDetailsElement : HTMLElement {
attribute boolean open;
};
The details element represents
additional information or controls which the user can obtain on demand.
The details element is
not appropriate for footnotes. Please see the section
on footnotes for details on how to mark up footnotes.
The first element child of a details
element, if it is a legend element,
represents the summary of the details.
If the first element is not a legend
element, the UA should provide its own legend (e.g. "Details").
The open
content attribute is a boolean attribute. If
present, it indicates that the details should be shown to the user. If the
attribute is absent, the details should not be shown.
If the attribute is removed, then the details should be hidden. If the attribute is added, the details should be shown.
The user should be able to request that the details be shown or hidden.
To honor a request for the details to be shown, the user agent must set
the open
attribute on the element to the value open. To
honour a request for the details to be hidden, the user agent must remove
the open
attribute from the element.
The open
attribute must reflect the open content
attribute.
Rendering will be described in the Rendering section in
due course. Basically CSS :open and :closed match the element, it's a
block-level element by default, and when it matches :closed it renders as
if it had an XBL binding attached to it whose template was just
<template>▶<content
includes="legend:first-child">Details</content></template>,
and when it's :open it acts as if it had an XBL binding attached to it
whose template was just <template>▼<content
includes="legend:first-child">Details</content><content/></template>
or some such.
datagrid 要素table, select, or
datalist element.
table element.
select element.
datalist element.
multiple
disabled
interface HTMLDataGridElement : HTMLElement {
attribute DataGridDataProvider data;
readonly attribute DataGridSelection selection;
attribute boolean multiple;
attribute boolean disabled;
void updateEverything();
void updateRowsChanged(in RowSpecification row, in unsigned long count);
void updateRowsInserted(in RowSpecification row, in unsigned long count);
void updateRowsRemoved(in RowSpecification row, in unsigned long count);
void updateRowChanged(in RowSpecification row);
void updateColumnChanged(in unsigned long column);
void updateCellChanged(in RowSpecification row, in unsigned long column);
};
One possible thing to be added is a way to detect when a row/selection has been deleted, activated, etc, by the user (delete key, enter key, etc).
The datagrid element represents an
interactive representation of tree, list, or tabular data.
The data being presented can come either from the content, as elements
given as children of the datagrid
element, or from a scripted data provider given by the data DOM attribute.
The multiple and disabled
attributes are boolean
attributes. Their effects are described in the processing model
sections below.
The multiple and disabled DOM
attributes must reflect the multiple and
disabled content attributes respectively.
datagrid data modelこの節は規定の一部ではありません。
In the datagrid data model, data
is structured as a set of rows representing a tree, each row being split
into a number of columns. The columns are always present in the data
model, although individual columns may be hidden in the presentation.
Each row can have child rows. Child rows may be hidden or shown, by closing or opening (respectively) the parent row.
Rows are referred to by the path along the tree that one would take to reach the row, using zero-based indices. Thus, the first row of a list is row "0", the second row is row "1"; the first child row of the first row is row "0,0", the second child row of the first row is row "0,1"; the fourth child of the seventh child of the third child of the tenth row is "9,2,6,3", etc.
The columns can have captions. Those captions are not considered a row in their own right, they are obtained separately.
Selection of data in a datagrid
operates at the row level. If the multiple attribute is present, multiple rows
can be selected at once, otherwise the user can only select one row at a
time.
The datagrid element can be
disabled entirely by setting the disabled attribute.
Columns, rows, and cells can each have specific flags, known as classes,
applied to them by the data provider. These classes affect the functionality of the datagrid element, and are also passed to the style system. They are similar
in concept to the class
attribute, except that they are not specified on elements but are given by
scripted data providers.
chains of numbers that give a row's path, or identifier, are represented by objects that implement the RowSpecification 界面。
[NoInterfaceObject] interface RowSpecification {
// binding-specific interface
};
In ECMAScript, two classes of objects are said to implement this
interface: Numbers representing non-negative integers, and homogeneous
arrays of Numbers representing non-negative integers. Thus,
[1,0,9] is a RowSpecification, as is 1 on its
own. However, [1,0.2,9] is not a RowSpecification object, since its second
value is not an integer.
User agents must always represent RowSpecifications in ECMAScript by
using arrays, even if the path only has one number.
The root of the tree is represented by the empty path; in ECMAScript,
this is the empty array ([]). Only the getRowCount() and GetChildAtPosition() methods ever
get called with the empty path.
The conformance criteria in this section apply to any implementation
of the DataGridDataProvider, including
(and most commonly) the content author's implementation(s).
// To be implemented by Web authors as a JS object
[NoInterfaceObject] interface DataGridDataProvider {
void initialize(in HTMLDataGridElement datagrid);
unsigned long getRowCount(in RowSpecification row);
unsigned long getChildAtPosition(in RowSpecification parentRow, in unsigned long position);
unsigned long getColumnCount();
DOMString getCaptionText(in unsigned long column);
void getCaptionClasses(in unsigned long column, in DOMTokenList classes);
DOMString getRowImage(in RowSpecification row);
HTMLMenuElement getRowMenu(in RowSpecification row);
void getRowClasses(in RowSpecification row, in DOMTokenList classes);
DOMString getCellData(in RowSpecification row, in unsigned long column);
void getCellClasses(in RowSpecification row, in unsigned long column, in DOMTokenList classes);
void toggleColumnSortState(in unsigned long column);
void setCellCheckedState(in RowSpecification row, in unsigned long column, in long state);
void cycleCell(in RowSpecification row, in unsigned long column);
void editCell(in RowSpecification row, in unsigned long column, in DOMString data);
};
The DataGridDataProvider interface
represents the interface that objects must implement to be used as custom
data views for datagrid elements.
Not all the methods are required. The minimum number of methods that
must be implemented in a useful view is two: the getRowCount() and getCellData() methods.
Once the object is written, it must be hooked up to the datagrid using the data DOM attribute.
The following methods may be usefully implemented:
initialize(datagrid)
datagrid element
(the one given by the datagrid argument) after it has
first populated itself. This would typically be used to set the initial
selection of the datagrid element
when it is first loaded. The data provider could also use this method
call to register a select event handler on the datagrid in order to monitor selection
changes.
getRowCount(row)
datagrid must be called first.
Otherwise, this method must always return the same number. For a list (as
opposed to a tree), this method must return 0 whenever it is called with
a row identifier that is not empty.
getChildAtPosition(parentRow, position)
getRowCount(parentRow).
getColumnCount()
datagrid's updateEverything() method must be
called.
getCaptionText(column)
datagrid's updateColumnChanged() method must
be called with the appropriate column index.
getCaptionClasses(column, classes)
datagrid's updateColumnChanged() method must
be called with the appropriate column index. Some classes have predefined meanings.
getRowImage(row)
datagrid's update methods must be called to
update the row in question.
getRowMenu(row)
HTMLMenuElement object that is to be
used as a context menu for row row, or null if there
is no particular context menu. May be omitted if none of the rows have a
special context menu. As this method is called immediately before showing
the menu in question, no precautions need to be taken if the return value
of this method changes.
getRowClasses(row, classes)
datagrid's update methods must be
called to update the row in question. Some classes have predefined meanings.
getCellData(row,
column)
datagrid's update methods must be called to
update the rows that changed. If only one cell changed, the updateCellChanged() method may be
used.
getCellClasses(row, column, classes)
datagrid's update methods must be
called to update the rows or cells in question. Some classes have predefined meanings.
toggleColumnSortState(column)
datagrid when the
user tries to sort the data using a particular column column. The data provider must update its state so that
the GetChildAtPosition() method returns
the new order, and the classes of the columns returned by getCaptionClasses() represent the
new sort status. There is no need to tell the datagrid that it the data has changed, as
the datagrid automatically assumes
that the entire data model will need updating.
setCellCheckedState(row, column, state)
datagrid when the
user changes the state of a checkbox cell on row row,
column column. The checkbox should be toggled to the
state given by state, which is a positive integer (1)
if the checkbox is to be checked, zero (0) if it is to be unchecked, and
a negative number (−1) if it is to be set to the indeterminate
state. There is no need to tell the datagrid that the cell has changed, as the
datagrid automatically assumes that
the given cell will need updating.
cycleCell(row, column)
datagrid when the
user changes the state of a cyclable cell on row row,
column column. The data provider should change the
state of the cell to the new state, as appropriate. There is no need to
tell the datagrid that the cell has
changed, as the datagrid
automatically assumes that the given cell will need updating.
editCell(row, column, data)
datagrid when the
user edits the cell on row row, column column. The new value of the cell is given by data. The data provider should update the cell
accordingly. There is no need to tell the datagrid that the cell has changed, as the
datagrid automatically assumes that
the given cell will need updating.The following classes (for rows, columns, and cells) may be usefully used in conjunction with this interface:
| Class name | Applies to | Description |
|---|---|---|
checked
| Cells | The cell has a checkbox and it is checked. (The cyclable and progress classes override this, though.)
|
cyclable
| Cells | The cell can be cycled through multiple values. (The progress class overrides this, though.)
|
editable
| Cells | The cell can be edited. (The cyclable, progress, checked, unchecked and indeterminate classes override this,
though.)
|
header
| Rows | The row is a heading, not a data row. |
indeterminate
| Cells | The cell has a checkbox, and it can be set to an indeterminate
state. If neither the checked nor unchecked classes are present, then the
checkbox is in that state, too. (The cyclable and progress classes override this, though.)
|
initially-hidden
| Columns | The column will not be shown when the datagrid is initially rendered. If this
class is not present on the column when the datagrid is initially rendered, the column
will be visible if space allows.
|
initially-closed
| Rows | The row will be closed when the datagrid is initially rendered. If neither
this class nor the initially-open class is present on
the row when the datagrid is
initially rendered, the initial state will depend on platform
conventions.
|
initially-open
| Rows | The row will be opened when the datagrid is initially rendered. If neither
this class nor the initially-closed class is present
on the row when the datagrid is
initially rendered, the initial state will depend on platform
conventions.
|
progress
| Cells | The cell is a progress bar. |
reversed
| Columns | If the cell is sorted, the sort direction is descending, instead of ascending. |
selectable-separator
| Rows | The row is a normal, selectable, data row, except that instead of
having data, it only has a separator. (The header
and separator classes override this, though.)
|
separator
| Rows | The row is a separator row, not a data row. (The header
class overrides this, though.)
|
sortable
| Columns | The data can be sorted by this column. |
sorted
| Columns | The data is sorted by this column. Unless the reversed class is also present, the sort
direction is ascending.
|
unchecked
| Cells | The cell has a checkbox and, unless the checked
class is present as well, it is unchecked. (The cyclable and progress classes override this, though.)
|
The user agent must supply a default data provider for the case where
the datagrid's data attribute is
null. It must act as described in this section.
The behavior of the default data provider depends on the nature of the
first element child of the datagrid.
table element
getRowCount(row): The number of rows returned by
the default data provider for the root of the tree (when row is empty) must be the total number of tr elements that are children of tbody elements that are children of the
table, if there are any such child
tbody elements. If there are no such
tbody elements then the number of rows
returned for the root must be the number of tr elements that are children of the table.
When row is not empty, the number of rows returned must be zero.
The table-based default
data provider cannot represent a tree.
Rows in thead elements
do not contribute to the number of rows returned, although they do
affect the columns and column captions. Rows in tfoot elements are ignored completely by this algorithm.
getChildAtPosition(row,
i): The default data provider
must return the mapping appropriate to the current sort order.
getColumnCount(): The number
of columns returned must be the number of td element children in the first tr element child of the first tbody element child of the table, if there are any such tbody elements. If there are no such tbody elements, then it must be the number of
td element children in the first tr element child of the table, if any, or otherwise 1. If the number
that would be returned by these rules is 0, then 1 must be returned
instead.
getCaptionText(i): If the table has no thead element child, or if its first thead element child has no tr element child, the default data provider must
return the empty string for all captions. Otherwise, the value of the
textContent attribute of the
ith th element child
of the first tr element child of the
first thead element child of the
table element must be returned. If
there is no such th element, the empty
string must be returned.
getCaptionClasses(i, classes): If the table has no thead element child, or if its first thead element child has no tr element child, the default data provider must
not add any classes for any of the captions. Otherwise, each class in
the class attribute
of the ith th element
child of the first tr element child of
the first thead element child of the
table element must be added to the
classes. If there is no such th element, no classes must be added. The user
agent must then:
sorted and reversed classes.
table element has a class attribute that
includes the sortable class, add the sortable class.
sorted class.
reversed class as well.
The various row- and cell- related methods operate relative to a particular element, the element of the row or cell specified by their arguments.
For rows: Since the default data provider for a
table always returns 0 as the number
of children for any row other than the root, the path to the row passed
to these methods will always consist of a single number. In the prose
below, this number is referred to as i.
If the table has tbody element children, the element for the
ith row is the ith tr element that is a child of a tbody element that is a child of the table element. If the table does not have tbody element children, then the element for
the ith real row is the ith
tr element that is a child of the
table element.
For cells: Given a row and its element, the row's
ith cell's element is the ith
td element child of the row element.
The colspan and rowspan
attributes are ignored by this
algorithm.
getRowImage(i): The URL of the
row's image is the absolute URL obtained by resolving the value of the
src attribute of the
first img element child of the row's
first cell's element, if there is one and resolving its attribute is
successful. Otherwise, the URL of the row's image is
the empty string.
getRowMenu(i): If the row's first cell's element
has a menu element child, then the
row's menu is the first menu element
child of the row's first cell's element. Otherwise, the row has no menu.
getRowClasses(i, classes): The default data provider
must never add a class to the row's classes.
toggleColumnSortState(i): If the data is already being
sorted on the given column, then the user agent must change the current
sort mapping to be the inverse of the current sort mapping; if the sort
order was ascending before, it is now descending, otherwise it is now
ascending. Otherwise, if the current sort column is another column, or
the data model is currently not sorted, the user agent must create a new
mapping, which maps rows in the data model to rows in the DOM so that
the rows in the data model are sorted by the specified column, in
ascending order. (Which sort comparison operator to use is left up to
the UA to decide.)
When the sort mapping is changed, the values returned by the getChildAtPosition() method for
the default data provider will
change appropriately.
getCellData(i, j), getCellClasses(i, j, classes), getCellCheckedState(i,
j, state), cycleCell(i, j), and editCell(i, j, data): See the common definitions
below.
The data provider must call the datagrid's update methods appropriately
whenever the descendants of the datagrid mutate. For example, if a tr is removed, then the updateRowsRemoved() methods would
probably need to be invoked, and any change to a cell or its descendants
must cause the cell to be updated. If the table element stops being the first child of
the datagrid, then the data
provider must call the updateEverything() method on the
datagrid. Any change to a cell
that is in the column that the data provider is currently using as its
sort column must also cause the sort to be reperformed, with a call to
updateEverything() if the change did
affect the sort order.
select or
datalist element
The default data provider must return 1 for the column count, the empty string for the column's caption, and must not add any classes to the column's classes.
For the rows, assume the existence of a node filter view of the
descendants of the first element child of the datagrid element (the select
or datalist element), that skips all nodes other than
optgroup and option elements, as well as any
descendents of any option elements.
Given a path row, the corresponding element is the one obtained by drilling into the view, taking the child given by the path each time.
Given the following XML markup:
<datagrid>
<select>
<!-- the options and optgroups have had their labels and values removed
to make the underlying structure clearer -->
<optgroup>
<option/>
<option/>
</optgroup>
<optgroup>
<option/>
<optgroup id="a">
<option/>
<option/>
<bogus/>
<option id="b"/>
</optgroup>
<option/>
</optgroup>
</select>
</datagrid>
The path "1,1,2" would select the element with ID "b". In the filtered view, the text nodes, comment nodes, and bogus elements are ignored; so for instance, the element with ID "a" (path "1,1") has only 3 child nodes in the view.
getRowCount(row) must
drill through the view to find the element corresponding to the method's
argument, and return the number of child nodes in the filtered view that
the corresponding element has. (If the row is empty,
the corresponding element is the select element at the root
of the filtered view.)
getChildAtPosition(row,
position) must return position. (The select/datalist
default data provider does not support sorting the data grid.)
getRowImage(i) must
return the empty string, getRowMenu(i) must
return null.
getRowClasses(row, classes) must add the classes from the
following list to classes when their condition is
met:
optgroup element: header
class attribute contains
the closed class: initially-closed
class attribute contains
the open class: initially-open
The getCellData(row, cell) method must return the value of the
label attribute if the row's corresponding element is an optgroup
element, otherwise, if the row's corresponding
element is an optionelement, its label attribute if it has one, otherwise
the value of its textContent DOM
attribute.
The getCellClasses(row, cell, classes) method must
add no classes.
autoselect some rows when initialized, reflect the selection in the select, reflect the multiple attribute somehow.
The data provider must call the datagrid's update methods appropriately
whenever the descendants of the datagrid mutate.
The default data provider must return 1 for the column count, the empty string for the column's caption, and must not add any classes to the column's classes.
For the rows, assume the existence of a node filter view of the
descendants of the datagrid that
skips all nodes other than li, h1–h6, and
hr elements, and skips any descendants of
menu elements.
Given this view, each element in the view represents a row in the data model. The element corresponding to a path row is the one obtained by drilling into the view, taking the child given by the path each time. The element of the row of a particular method call is the element given by drilling into the view along the path given by the method's arguments.
getRowCount(row) must
return the number of child elements in this view for the given row, or
the number of elements at the root of the view if the row is empty.
In the following example, the elements are identified by the paths given by their child text nodes:
<datagrid>
<ol>
<li> row 0 </li>
<li> row 1
<ol>
<li> row 1,0 </li>
</ol>
</li>
<li> row 2 </li>
</ol>
</datagrid>
In this example, only the li elements
actually appear in the data grid; the ol
element does not affect the data grid's processing model.
getChildAtPosition(row,
position) must return position. (The generic default data provider does not
support sorting the data grid.)
getRowImage(i) must
return the absolute URL obtained from resolving the value of the
src attribute of the
first img element descendant (in the
real DOM) of the row's element, that is not also a descendant of another
element in the filtered view that is a descendant of the row's element,
if such an element exists and resolving its attribute is successful.
Otherwise, it must return the empty string.
In the following example, the row with path "1,0" returns "http://example.com/a" as its image URL, and the other rows (including the row with path "1") return the empty string:
<datagrid>
<ol>
<li> row 0 </li>
<li> row 1
<ol>
<li> row 1,0 <img src="http://example.com/a" alt=""> </li>
</ol>
</li>
<li> row 2 </li>
</ol>
</datagrid>
getRowMenu(i) must
return the first menu element
descendant (in the real DOM) of the row's element, that is not also a
descendant of another element in the filtered view that is a descendant
of the row's element. (This is analogous to the image case above.)
getRowClasses(i, classes) must add the classes from the
following list to classes when their condition is
met:
class attribute contains the closed class: initially-closed
class attribute contains the open class: initially-open
h1–h6
element: header
hr
element: separatorThe getCellData(i, j), getCellClasses(i, j, classes), getCellCheckedState(i,
j, state), cycleCell(i, j), and editCell(i, j, data) methods must act as described in the common definitions
below, treating the row's element as being the cell's element.
selection handling?
The data provider must call the datagrid's update methods appropriately
whenever the descendants of the datagrid mutate.
The data provider must return 0 for the number of rows, 1 for the
number of columns, the empty string for the first column's caption, and
must add no classes when asked for that column's classes. If the
datagrid's child list changes such
that there is a first element child, then the data provider must call
the updateEverything() method on the
datagrid.
These definitions are used for the cell-specific methods of the default
data providers (other than in the
select/datalist case). How they behave is based
on the contents of an element that represents the cell given by their
first two arguments. Which element that is is defined in the previous
section.
If the first element child of a cell's element is a
select element that has a no multiple attribute and has at least
one option element descendent, then the cell acts as a
cyclable cell.
The "current" option element is the selected
option element, or the first option element if
none is selected.
The getCellData() method must return the
textContent of the current
option element (the label attribute is ignored in this context as the optgroups
are not displayed).
The getCellClasses() method must add the
cyclable class and then all the classes of
the current option element.
The cycleCell() method must change the
selection of the select element such that the next
option element after the current option
element is the only one that is selected (in tree
order). If the current option element is the last
option element descendent of the select, then
the first option element descendent must be selected
instead.
The setCellCheckedState() and editCell()
methods must do nothing.
If the first element child of a cell's element is a progress element, then the cell acts as a
progress bar cell.
The getCellData() method must return the
value returned by the progress
element's position DOM attribute.
The getCellClasses() method must add the
progress class.
The setCellCheckedState(), cycleCell(), and editCell()
methods must do nothing.
If the first element child of a cell's element is an
input element that has a type attribute with the value checkbox, then the cell acts as a check box cell.
The getCellData() method must return the
textContent of the cell element.
The getCellClasses() method must add the
checked class if the input
element is checked, and the unchecked class otherwise.
The setCellCheckedState() method must
set the input element's checkbox state to checked if the method's third
argument is 1, and to unchecked otherwise.
The cycleCell() and editCell()
methods must do nothing.
If the first element child of a cell's element is an
input element that has a type attribute with the value text or that has no type attribute at all, then the cell acts
as an editable cell.
The getCellData() method must return the
value of the input
element.
The getCellClasses() method must add the
editable class.
The editCell() method must set the
input element's value
DOM attribute to the value of the third argument to the method.
The setCellCheckedState() and cycleCell()
methods must do nothing.
datagrid elementA datagrid must be disabled until
its end tag has been parsed (in the case of a datagrid element in the original document
markup) or until it has been inserted into the document (in the case of a
dynamically created element). After that point, the element must fire a
single load event at
itself, which doesn't bubble and cannot be canceled.
The end-tag parsing thing should be moved to the parsing section.
The datagrid must then populate
itself using the data provided by the data provider assigned to the data DOM attribute.
After the view is populated (using the methods described below), the
datagrid must invoke the initialize() method on the data provider
specified by the data attribute, passing itself (the HTMLDataGridElement object) as the
only argument.
When the data
attribute is null, the datagrid must
use the default data provider described in the previous section.
To obtain data from the data provider, the element must invoke methods on the data provider object in the following ways:
getColumnCount() method with no
arguments. The return value is the number of columns. If the return value
is zero or negative, not an integer, or simply not a numeric type, or if
the method is not defined, then 1 must be used instead.
getCaptionText() method with the index
of the column in question. The index i must be in the
range 0 ≤ i < N, where N is the total number of columns. The return value is the
string to use when referring to that column. If the method returns null
or the empty string, the column has no caption. If the method is not
defined, then none of the columns have any captions.
getCaptionClasses() method with the
index of the column in question, and an object implementing the DOMTokenList interface, associated with
an anonymous empty string. The index i must be in the
range 0 ≤ i < N, where N is the total number of columns. The tokens contained in
the string underlying DOMTokenList object when the method
returns represent the classes that apply to the given column. If the
method is not defined, no classes apply to the column.
initially-hidden class applies to the
column. If it does, then the column should not be initially included; if
it does not, then the column should be initially included.
sortable class applies to the column. If it
does, then the user should be able to ask the UA to display the data
sorted by that column; if it does not, then the user agent must not allow
the user to ask for the data to be sorted by that column.
sorted
class applies to the column. If it does, then that column is the sorted
column, otherwise it is not.
sorted class applies to that column. The first
column that has that class, if any, is the sorted column. If none of the
columns have that class, there is no sorted column.
reversed class applies to the column. If it
does, then the sort direction is descending (down; first rows have the
highest values), otherwise it is ascending (up; first rows have the
lowest values).
getRowCount() method with a RowSpecification object representing
the empty path as its only argument. The return value is the number of
rows at the top level of the data grid. If the return value of the method
is negative, not an integer, or simply not a numeric type, or if the
method is not defined, then zero must be used instead.
getRowCount() method with a RowSpecification object representing
the path to the row in question. The return value is the number of child
rows for the given row. If the return value of the method is negative,
not an integer, or simply not a numeric type, or if the method is not
defined, then zero must be used instead.
Invoke the getChildAtPosition() method with a
RowSpecification object
representing the path to the parent of the rows that are being rendered
as the first argument, and the position that is being rendered as the
second argument. The return value is the index of the row to render in
that position.
If the rows are:
...and the getChildAtPosition() method is
implemented as follows:
function getChildAtPosition(parent, child) {
// always return the reverse order
return getRowCount(parent)-child-1;
}
...then the rendering would actually be:
If the return value of the method is negative, larger than the number
of rows that the getRowCount() method reported for that
parent, not an integer, or simply not a numeric type, then the entire
data grid should be disabled. Similarly, if the method returns the same
value for two or more different values for the second argument (with the
same first argument, and assuming that the data grid hasn't had relevant
update methods invoked in the meantime), then the data grid should be
disabled. Instead of disabling the data grid, the user agent may act as
if the getChildAtPosition() method was
not defined on the data provider (thus disabling sorting for that data
grid, but still letting the user interact with the data). If the method
is not defined, then the return value must be assumed to be the same as
the second argument (an identity transform; the data is rendered in its
natural order).
getRowClasses() method with a RowSpecification object representing
the row in question, and a DOMTokenList associated with an empty
string. The tokens contained in the DOMTokenList object's underlying string
when the method returns represent the classes that apply to the row in
question. If the method is not defined, no classes apply to the row.
header
class applies to the row, then it is not a data row, it is a subheading.
The data from the first cell of the row is the text of the subheading,
the rest of the cells must be ignored. Otherwise, if the separator class applies to the row, then in
the place of the row, a separator should be shown. Otherwise, if the
selectable-separator class
applies to the row, then the row should be a data row, but represented as
a separator. (The difference between a separator and a selectable-separator is that the
former is not an item that can be actually selected, whereas the second
can be selected and thus has a context menu that applies to it, and so
forth.) For both kinds of separator rows, the data of the rows' cells
must all be ignored. If none of those three classes apply then the row is
a simple data row.
initially-open class applies to the
row, then it should be initially open. Otherwise, if the initially-closed class applies to the
row, then it must be initially closed. Otherwise, if neither class
applies to the row, or if the row is not openable, then the initial state
of the row should be based on platform conventions.getRowImage() method with a RowSpecification object representing
the row in question. The return value is a URL.
Immediately resolve that URL
as if it came from an attribute of the datagrid element to obtain an absolute URL identifying the image that represents
the row. If the method returns the empty string, null, or if the method
is not defined, then the row has no associated image.getRowMenu() method with a RowSpecification object representing
the row in question. The return value is a reference to an object
implementing the HTMLMenuElement interface, i.e. a
menu element DOM node. (This element
must then be interpreted as described in the section on context menus to
obtain the actual context menu to use.)
If the method returns something that is not an HTMLMenuElement, or if the method is
not defined, then the row has no associated context menu. User agents may
provide their own default context menu, and may add items to the
author-provided context menu. For example, such a menu could allow the
user to change the presentation of the datagrid element.
getCellData() method with the first
argument being a RowSpecification object representing
the row of the cell in question and the second argument being the index
of the cell's column. The second argument must be a non-negative integer
less than the total number of columns. The return value is the value of
the cell. If the return value is null or the empty string, or if the
method is not defined, then the cell has no data. (For progress bar
cells, the cell's value must be further interpreted, as described below.)
getCellClasses() method with the first
argument being a RowSpecification object representing
the row of the cell in question, the second argument being the index of
the cell's column, and the third being an object implementing the
DOMTokenList interface,
associated with an empty string. The second argument must be a
non-negative integer less than the total number of columns. The tokens
contained in the DOMTokenList
object's underlying string when the method returns represent the classes
that apply to that cell. If the method is not defined, no classes apply
to the cell.
progress class applies to the cell, it is a
progress bar. Otherwise, if the cyclable class applies to the cell, it is a
cycling cell whose value can be cycled between multiple states.
Otherwise, none of these classes apply, and the cell is a simple text
cell.
checked, unchecked, or indeterminate classes applies to the
cell. If any of these are present, then the cell has a checkbox,
otherwise none are present and the cell does not have a checkbox. If the
cell has no checkbox, check whether the editable class applies to the cell. If it
does, then the cell value is editable, otherwise the cell value is
static.
checked class applies to the cell. If it does,
the cell is checked. Otherwise, check whether the unchecked class applies to the cell. If it
does, the cell is unchecked. Otherwise, the indeterminate class applies to the cell
and the cell's checkbox is in an indeterminate state. When the indeterminate class applies to the cell,
the checkbox is a tristate checkbox, and the user can set it to the
indeterminate state. Otherwise, only the checked
and/or unchecked classes apply to the cell, and the
cell can only be toggled between those two states.
If the data provider ever raises an exception while the datagrid is invoking one of its methods, the
datagrid must act, for the purposes
of that particular method call, as if the relevant method had not been
defined.
A RowSpecification object
p with n path components passed to
a method of the data provider must fulfill the constraint
0 ≤ pi < m-1
for all integer values of i in the range
0 ≤ i < n-1, where m is the value that
was last returned by the getRowCount() method when it was passed the
RowSpecification object q with i-1 items, where
pi = qi for all integer values of i in the range 0 ≤ i < n-1, with any
changes implied by the update methods taken into account.
The data model is considered stable: user
agents may assume that subsequent calls to the data provider methods will
return the same data, until one of the update methods is called on the
datagrid element. If a user agent is
returned inconsistent data, for example if the number of rows returned by
getRowCount() varies in ways that do not
match the calls made to the update methods, the user agent may disable the
datagrid. User agents that do not
disable the datagrid in inconsistent
cases must honor the most recently returned values.
User agents may cache returned values so that the data provider is never
asked for data that could contradict earlier data. User agents must not
cache the return value of the getRowMenu method.
The exact algorithm used to populate the data grid is not defined here, since it will differ based on the presentation used. However, the behavior of user agents must be consistent with the descriptions above. For example, it would be non-conformant for a user agent to make cells have both a checkbox and be editable, as the descriptions above state that cells that have a checkbox cannot be edited.
datagridWhenever the data attribute is set to a new value, the
datagrid must clear the current
selection, remove all the displayed rows, and plan to repopulate itself
using the information from the new data provider at the earliest
opportunity.
There are a number of update methods that can be invoked on the datagrid element to cause it to refresh
itself in slightly less drastic ways:
When the updateEverything()
method is called, the user agent must repopulate the entire datagrid. If the number of rows decreased,
the selection must be updated appropriately. If the number of rows
increased, the new rows should be left unselected.
When the updateRowsChanged(row, count) method is
called, the user agent must refresh the rendering of the rows starting
from the row specified by row, and including the count next siblings of the row (or as many next siblings as
it has, if that is less than count), including all
descendant rows.
When the updateRowsInserted(row, count) method is
called, the user agent must assume that count new rows
have been inserted, such that the first new row is identified by row. The user agent must update its rendering and the
selection accordingly. The new rows should not be selected.
When the updateRowsRemoved(row, count) method is
called, the user agent must assume that count rows
have been removed starting from the row that used to be identifier by row. The user agent must update its rendering and the
selection accordingly.
The updateRowChanged(row) method must be exactly equivalent to
calling updateRowsChanged(row,
1).
When the updateColumnChanged(column) method is called, the user agent must
refresh the rendering of the specified column column,
for all rows.
When the updateCellChanged(row, column) method is
called, the user agent must refresh the rendering of the cell on row row, in column column.
Any effects the update methods have on the datagrid's selection is not considered a
change to the selection, and must therefore not fire the select event.
These update methods should be called only by the data provider, or code
acting on behalf of the data provider. In particular, calling the updateRowsInserted() and updateRowsRemoved() methods without
actually inserting or removing rows from the data provider is likely to result in inconsistent
renderings, and the user agent is likely to disable the data grid.
この節は対話的利用者エージェントにのみ適用されます。
If the datagrid element has a disabled
attribute, then the user agent must disable the datagrid, preventing the user from
interacting with it. The datagrid
element should still continue to update itself when the data provider
signals changes to the data, though. Obviously, conformance requirements
stating that datagrid elements must
react to users in particular ways do not apply when one is disabled.
If a row is openable, then the user should be able to toggle its open/closed state. When a row's open/closed state changes, the user agent must update the rendering to match the new state.
If a cell is a cell whose value can be cycled
between multiple states, then the user must be able to activate the
cell to cycle its value. When the user activates this "cycling" behavior
of a cell, then the datagrid must
invoke the data provider's cycleCell() method, with a RowSpecification object representing
the cell's row as the first argument and the cell's column index as the
second. The datagrid must then act
as if the datagrid's updateCellChanged() method had been
invoked with those same arguments.
When a cell has a checkbox, the user must be
able to set the checkbox's state. When the user changes the state of a
checkbox in such a cell, the datagrid must invoke the data provider's
setCellCheckedState() method, with
a RowSpecification object
representing the cell's row as the first argument, the cell's column index
as the second, and the checkbox's new state as the third. The state should
be represented by the number 1 if the new state is checked, 0 if the new
state is unchecked, and −1 if the new state is indeterminate (which
must be possible only if the cell has the indeterminate class set). The datagrid must then act as if the datagrid's updateCellChanged() method had been
invoked, specifying the same cell.
If a cell is editable, the user must be able to
edit the data for that cell, and doing so must cause the user agent to
invoke the editCell() method of the data provider with
three arguments: a RowSpecification object representing
the cell's row, the cell's column's index, and the new text entered by the
user. The user agent must then act as if the updateCellChanged() method had been
invoked, with the same row and column specified.
This section only applies to interactive user agents. For other user
agents, the selection attribute must return null.
interface DataGridSelection {
readonly attribute unsigned long length;
[IndexGetter] RowSpecification item(in unsigned long index);
boolean isSelected(in RowSpecification row);
void setSelected(in RowSpecification row, in boolean selected);
void selectAll();
void invert();
void clear();
};
Each datagrid element must keep
track of which rows are currently selected. Initially no rows are
selected, but this can be changed via the methods described in this
section.
The selection of a datagrid is
represented by its selection DOM attribute,
which must be a DataGridSelection object.
DataGridSelection objects
represent the rows in the selection. In the selection the rows must be
ordered in the natural order of the data provider (and not, e.g., the
rendered order). Rows that are not rendered because one of their ancestors
is closed must share the same selection state as their nearest rendered
ancestor. Such rows are not considered part of the selection for the
purposes of iterating over the selection.
This selection API doesn't allow for hidden rows to be selected because it is trivial to create a data provider that has infinite depth, which would then require the selection to be infinite if every row, including every hidden row, was selected.
The length attribute
must return the number of rows currently present in the selection. The
item(index) method must return the indexth row in the selection. If the argument is out of
range (less than zero or greater than the number of selected rows minus
one), then it must raise an INDEX_SIZE_ERR exception. [DOM3CORE]
The isSelected()
method must return the selected state of the row specified by its
argument. If the specified row exists and is selected, it must return
true, otherwise it must return false.
The setSelected()
method takes two arguments, row and selected. When invoked, it must set the selection state of
row row to selected if selected is
true, and unselected if it is false. If row is not a
row in the data grid, the method must raise an INDEX_SIZE_ERR
exception. If the specified row is not rendered because one of its
ancestors is closed, the method must do nothing.
The selectAll()
method must mark all the rows in the data grid as selected. After a call
to selectAll(), the length
attribute will return the number of rows in the data grid, not counting
children of closed rows.
The invert() method must
cause all the rows in the selection that were marked as selected to now be
marked as not selected, and vice versa.
The clear() method must
mark all the rows in the data grid to be marked as not selected. After a
call to clear(), the length
attribute will return zero.
If the datagrid element has a multiple
attribute, then the user must be able to select any number of rows (zero
or more). If the attribute is not present, then the user must not be able
to select more than a single row at a time, and selecting another one must
unselect all the other rows.
This only applies to the user. Scripts can select multiple
rows even when the multiple attribute is absent.
Whenever the selection of a datagrid changes, whether due to the user
interacting with the element, or as a result of calls to methods of the
selection object, a select
event that bubbles but is not cancelable must be fired on the datagrid element. If changes are made to the
selection via calls to the object's methods during the execution of a
script, then the select events must be
coalesced into one, which must then be fired when the
script execution has completed.
DataGridSelection interface has no relation to the Selection 界面。
この節は対話的利用者エージェントにのみ適用されます。
Each datagrid element must keep
track of which columns are currently being rendered. User agents should
initially show all the columns except those with the initially-hidden class, but may allow
users to hide or show columns. User agents should initially display the
columns in the order given by the data provider, but may allow this order
to be changed by the user.
If columns are not being used, as might be the case if the data grid is being presented in an icon view, or if an overview of data is being read in an aural context, then the text of the first column of each row should be used to represent the row.
If none of the columns have any captions (i.e. if the data provider does
not provide a getCaptionText() method), then user
agents may avoid showing the column headers at all. This may prevent the
user from performing actions on the columns (such as reordering them,
changing the sort column, and so on).
Whatever the order used for rendering, and irrespective of
what columns are being shown or hidden, the "first column" as referred to
in this specification is always the column with index zero, and the "last
column" is always the column with the index one less than the value
returned by the getColumnCount() method of the data
provider.
If a column is sortable, then the user must
be able to invoke it to sort the data. When the user does so, then the
datagrid must invoke the data
provider's toggleColumnSortState() method,
with the column's index as the only argument. The datagrid must then act as if the
datagrid's updateEverything() method had been
invoked.
command 要素type
label
icon
hidden
disabled
checked
radiogroup
default
title attribute has special semantics on this
element.
interface HTMLCommandElement : HTMLElement {
attribute DOMString type;
attribute DOMString label;
attribute DOMString icon;
attribute boolean hidden;
attribute boolean disabled;
attribute boolean checked;
attribute DOMString radiogroup;
attribute boolean default;
void click(); // shadows HTMLElement.click()
};
Command
界面もこの要素に実装しなければなりません。
The command element represents a
command that the user can invoke.
The type
attribute indicates the kind of command: either a normal command with an
associated action, or a state or option that can be toggled, or a
selection of one item from a list of items.
The attribute's value must be either "command",
"checkbox", or "radio",
denoting each of these three types of commands respectively. The attribute
may also be omitted if the element is to represent the first of these
types, a simple command.
The label
attribute gives the name of the command, as shown to the user.
The title
attribute gives a hint describing the command, which might be shown to the
user to help him.
The icon
attribute gives a picture that represents the command. If the attribute is
specified, the attribute's value must contain a valid
URL.
The hidden
attribute is a boolean attribute that, if present,
indicates that the command is not relevant and is to be hidden.
The disabled attribute is a boolean attribute that, if present, indicates that
the command is not available in the current state.
The distinction between Disabled State and Hidden State is subtle. A command should be Disabled if, in the same context, it could be enabled if only certain aspects of the situation were changed. A command should be marked as Hidden if, in that situation, the command will never be enabled. For example, in the context menu for a water faucet, the command "open" might be Disabled if the faucet is already open, but the command "eat" would be marked Hidden since the faucet could never be eaten.
The checked attribute is a boolean attribute that, if present, indicates that
the command is selected.
The radiogroup attribute
gives the name of the group of commands that will be toggled when the
command itself is toggled, for commands whose type attribute has
the value "radio". The scope of the name is the
child list of the parent element.
If the command element is used when
generating a context
menu, then the default attribute indicates,
if present, that the command is the one that would have been invoked if
the user had directly activated the menu's subject instead of using its
context menu. The default attribute is a boolean attribute.
Need an example that shows an element that, if
double-clicked, invokes an action, but that also has a context menu,
showing the various command
attributes off, and that has a default command.
DOM 属性 type, label, icon, hidden, disabled, checked, radiogroup, default は同じ名前の内容属性を反映しなければなりません。
The click()
method's behavior depends on the value of the type attribute of the
element, as follows:
type
attribute has the value checkbox
If the element has a checked attribute, the UA must remove that
attribute. Otherwise, the UA must add a checked
attribute, with the literal value checked. The UA
must then fire a click event
at the element.
type
attribute has the value radio
If the element has a parent, then the UA must walk the list of child
nodes of that parent element, and for each node that is a command element, if that element has a radiogroup attribute whose value exactly
matches the current element's (treating missing radiogroup attributes as if they were the
empty string), and has a checked attribute, must remove that
attribute and fire a click
event at the element.
Then, the element's checked attribute attribute must be set to
the literal value checked and a click event must be fired at
the element.
The UA must fire a click
event at the element.
Firing a synthetic click event
at the element does not cause any of the actions described above to
happen.
should change all the above so it actually is just triggered by a click event, then we could remove the shadowing click() method and rely on actual events.
Need to define the command="" attribute
command elements are not
rendered unless they form part of a menu.
bb 要素type
interface HTMLBrowserButtonElement : HTMLElement {
attribute DOMString type;
readonly attribute boolean supported;
readonly attribute boolean disabled;
};
Command
界面もこの要素に実装しなければなりません。
The bb element represents a user agent
command that the user can invoke.
The type attribute
indicates the kind of command. The type attribute is an enumerated attribute. The following table lists the
keywords and states for the attribute — the keywords in the left
column map to the states listed in the cell in the second column on the
same row as the keyword.
| Keyword | State |
|---|---|
makeapp
| make application |
The missing value default state is the null state.
Each state has an action and a relevance, defined in the following sections.
When the attribute is in the null state, the action is to not do anything, and the relevance is unconditionally false.
A bb element whose type attribute is in a
state whose relevance is true must be enabled. Conversely, a
bb element whose type attribute is in a
state whose relevance is false must be disabled.
If a bb element is enabled, it must match
the :enabled pseudo-class; otherwise, it must match
the :disabled pseudo-class.
User agents should allow users to invoke bb elements when they are enabled. When a user
invokes a bb element, its type attribute's state's
action must be invoked.
When the element has no descendant element children and has no
descendant text node children of non-zero length, the element represents a
browser button with a user-agent-defined icon or text representing the
type attribute's
state's action and relevance (enabled vs disabled).
Otherwise, the element represents its descendants.
The type DOM
attribute must reflect the content attribute of the
same name.
The supported DOM attribute must
return true if the type attribute is in a state other than the null state and the
user agent supports that state's action (i.e. when the attribute's
value is one that the user agent recognises and supports), and false
otherwise.
The disabled DOM
attribute must return true if the element is disabled, and false otherwise
(i.e. it returns the opposite of the type attribute's state's relevance).
Some user agents support making sites accessible as independent applications, as if they were not Web sites at all. The make application state exists to allow Web pages to offer themselves to the user as targets for this mode of operation.
The action of the make application state is to confirm the user's intent to use the current site in a standalone fashion, and, provided the user's intent is confirmed, offer the user a way to make the resource identified by the document's address available in such a fashion.
The confirmation is needed because it is relatively easy to trick users into activating buttons. The confirmation could, e.g. take the form of asking the user where to "save" the application, or non-modal information panel that is clearly from the user agent and gives the user the opportunity to drag an icon to their system's application launcher.
The relevance of the make application state is false if the user agent is already handling the site in such a fashion, or if the user agent doesn't support making the site available in that fashion, and true otherwise.
In the following example, a few links are listed on an application's page, to allow the user perform certain actions, including making the application standalone:
<menu>
<li><a href="settings.html" onclick="panels.show('settings')">Settings</a>
<li><bb type="makeapp">Download standalone application</a>
<li><a href="help.html" onclick="panels.show('help')">Help</a>
<li><a href="logout.html" onclick="panels.show('logout')">Sign out</a>
</menu>
With the following stylesheet, it could be make to look like a single line of text with vertical bars separating the options, with the "make app" option disappearing when it's not supported or relevant:
menu li { display: none; }
menu li:enabled { display: inline; }
menu li:not(:first-child)::before { content: ' | '; }
This could look like this:

The following example shows another way to do the same thing as the previous one, this time not relying on CSS support to hide the "make app" link if it doesn't apply:
<menu>
<a href="settings.html" onclick="panels.show('settings')">Settings</a> |
<bb type="makeapp" id="makeapp"> </bb>
<a href="help.html" onclick="panels.show('help')">Help</a> |
<a href="logout.html" onclick="panels.show('logout')">Sign out</a>
</menu>
<script>
var bb = document.getElementById('makeapp');
if (bb.supported && bb.enabled) {
bb.parentNode.nextSibling.textContent = ' | ';
bb.textContent = 'Download standalone application';
} else {
bb.parentNode.removeChild(bb);
}
</script>
menu 要素type attribute is in the tool bar state: Interactive content.
menu element ancestor:
phrasing content.
menu element ancestor:
where phrasing content is expected.
li elements.
type
label
interface HTMLMenuElement : HTMLElement {
attribute DOMString type;
attribute DOMString label;
};
The menu element represents a list of
commands.
The type
attribute is an enumerated attribute indicating
the kind of menu being declared. The attribute has three states. The context keyword maps to the context menu state, in which
the element is declaring a context menu. The toolbar keyword maps to the tool bar state, in which the
element is declaring a tool bar. The attribute may also be omitted. The
missing value default is the list state, which indicates that the element is merely a list
of commands that is neither declaring a context menu nor defining a tool
bar.
If a menu element's type attribute is in the
context menu state,
then the element represents the commands of a context menu, and the user
can only interact with the commands if that context menu is activated.
If a menu element's type attribute is in the
tool bar state, then the
element represents a list of active commands that the user can immediately
interact with.
If a menu element's type attribute is in the
list state, then the element either
represents an unordered list of items (each represented by an li element), each of which represents a command that
the user may perform or activate, or, if the element has no li element children, flow
content describing available commands.
The label
attribute gives the label of the menu. It is used by user agents to
display nested menus in the UI. For example, a context menu containing
another menu would use the nested menu's label attribute for the submenu's menu label.
DOM 属性 type, label は同じ名前の内容属性を反映しなければなりません。
この節は規定の一部ではありません。
...
メニュー (やツールバー) は、次の部品の零以上の並びで構成されます。
特定の menu 要素に対応する並びは、
その子供節点に対して反復 (iteration) を行うことで構築できます。
各子供節点について、木順で、
節点の種類によって次に示すような動作が要求されます。
command element with a default
attribute, mark the command as being a default command.hr 要素value 属性が空文字列であり、
disabled 属性を有し、
その textContent が1文字以上のハイフン
(U+002D HYPHEN-MINUS) から成る文字列で構成される option
要素li 要素li 要素の子供について反復
(iteration) します。label
属性のない menu 要素select 要素menu
要素または select 要素の子供について反復 (iteration)
し、更に区切子を最後に追加します。label 属性のある
menu 要素optgroup 要素label 属性の値をメニューの名札として使います。
部分メニューは、その要素をもってこの節で説明した処理全体を用いて新たなメニューを作成することにより構築しなければなりません。We should support label in the algorithm above
-- just iterate through the contents like with li, to support input elements in
label elements. Also, optgroup elements without
labels should be ignored (maybe? or at least should say they have no label
so that they are dropped below), and select elements inside
label elements may need special processing.
利用者エージェントは、すべての節点が前述のように処理されたら、 メニューを次のように後処理しなければなりません。
The contextmenu attribute gives the
element's context menu. The
value must be the ID of a menu element in
the DOM. If the node that would be obtained by the invoking the
getElementById() method using the attribute's value as the
only argument is null or not a menu
element, then the element has no assigned context menu. Otherwise, the
element's assigned context menu is the element so identified.
When an element's context menu is requested (e.g. by the user
right-clicking the element, or pressing a context menu key), the UA must
fire a contextmenu event on
the element for which the menu was requested.
Typically, therefore, the firing of the contextmenu event will be the default
action of a mouseup or keyup event. The exact sequence of events is
UA-dependent, as it will vary based on platform conventions.
The default action of the contextmenu event depends on whether the
element has a context menu assigned (using the contextmenu
attribute) or not. If it does not, the default action must be for the user
agent to show its default context menu, if it has one.
Context menus should inherit (so clicking on a span in a paragraph with a context menu should show the menu).
If the element does have a context menu assigned, then the user
agent must fire a show event
on the relevant menu element.
The default action of this event is that the user agent must
show a context menu built from the menu element.
The user agent may also provide access to its default context menu, if any, with the context menu shown. For example, it could merge the menu items from the two menus together, or provide the page's context menu as a submenu of the default menu.
If the user dismisses the menu without making a selection, nothing in particular happens.
If the user selects a menu item that represents a command, then the UA must invoke that command's Action.
Context menus must not, while being shown, reflect changes in the DOM;
they are constructed as the default action of the show event and must remain like that until
dismissed.
User agents may provide means for bypassing the context menu processing
model, ensuring that the user can always access the UA's default context
menus. For example, the user agent could handle right-clicks that have the
Shift key depressed in such a way that it does not fire the contextmenu event and instead always shows
the default context menu.
The contextMenu attribute must reflect the contextmenu content attribute.
Toolbars are a kind of menu that is always visible.
When a menu element has a type attribute with the
value toolbar, then the user agent must build the menu
for that menu element and render it in the document in
a position appropriate for that menu
element.
The user agent must reflect changes made to the menu's DOM immediately in the UI.
A command is the abstraction behind menu items, buttons, and links. Once a command is defined, other parts of the interface can refer to the same command, allowing many access points to a single feature to share aspects such as the disabled state.
Commands are defined to have the following facets:
Commands are represented by elements in the DOM. Any element that can
define a command also implements the Command interface:
Actually even better would be to just mix it straight into those interfaces somehow.
[NoInterfaceObject] interface Command {
readonly attribute DOMString commandType;
readonly attribute DOMString id;
readonly attribute DOMString label;
readonly attribute DOMString title;
readonly attribute DOMString icon;
readonly attribute boolean hidden;
readonly attribute boolean disabled;
readonly attribute boolean checked;
void click();
readonly attribute HTMLCollection triggers;
readonly attribute Command command;
};
Command interface is implemented by any element capable of defining a command. (If an element can define a command, its definition will list this interface explicitly.) All the attributes of the Command interface are read-only. Elements implementing this interface may implement other interfaces that have attributes with identical names but that are mutable; in bindings that flatten all supported interfaces on the object, the mutable attributes must shadow the readonly attributes defined in the Command 界面。
The commandType attribute
must return a string whose value is either "command", "radio", or "checked", depending on whether the Type of the command defined by the element is
"command", "radio", or "checked" respectively. If the element does not
define a command, it must return null.
id attribute must return the command's ID, or null if the element does not define a command or defines an anonymous command. This attribute will be shadowed by the id DOM attribute on the HTMLElement 界面。
The label
attribute must return the command's Label, or null if the element does not
define a command or does not specify a Label. This attribute will be shadowed by
the label DOM attribute on option and
command elements.
title attribute must return the command's Hint, or null if the element does not define a command or does not specify a Hint. This attribute will be shadowed by the title DOM attribute on the HTMLElement 界面。
The icon
attribute must return the absolute URL of the
command's Icon. If the
element does not specify an icon, or if the element does not define a
command, then the attribute must return null. This attribute will be
shadowed by the icon DOM attribute on command elements.
The hidden attribute must
return true if the command's Hidden State is that the command is
hidden, and false if it is that the command is not hidden. If the element
does not define a command, the attribute must return false. This attribute
will be shadowed by the hidden DOM attribute on command elements.
The disabled attribute must
return true if the command's Disabled State is that the command
is disabled, and false if the command is not disabled. This attribute is
not affected by the command's Hidden State. If the element does not
define a command, the attribute must return false. This attribute will be
shadowed by the disabled attribute on
button, input, option, and command elements.
The checked attribute must
return true if the command's Checked State is that the command is
checked, and false if it is that the command is not checked. If the
element does not define a command, the attribute must return false. This
attribute will be shadowed by the checked attribute
on input and command
elements.
The click()
method must trigger the Action for the command. If the element does
not define a command, this method must do nothing. This method will be
shadowed by the click()
method on HTML elements, and is included only
for completeness.
The triggers attribute must
return a list containing the elements that can trigger the command (the
command's Triggers).
The list must be live. While the element does not
define a command, the list must be empty.
The commands attribute of the
document's HTMLDocument interface
must return an HTMLCollection
rooted at the Document node, whose filter matches only
elements that define commands and have IDs.
The following elements can define commands: a, button, input, option, command.
a element to define a commandAn a element with an href attribute defines a command.
The Type of the command is "command".
The ID of the command is the
value of the id attribute of
the element, if the attribute is present and not empty. Otherwise the
command is an anonymous command.
The Label of the command
is the string given by the element's textContent DOM attribute.
The Hint of the command is
the value of the title
attribute of the element. If the attribute is not present, the Hint is the empty string.
The Icon of the command is
the absolute URL obtained from resolving the value of the src attribute of the first
img element descendant of the element, if
there is such an element and resolving its attribute is successful.
Otherwise, there is no Icon
for the command.
The Hidden State and Disabled State facets of the command are always false. (The command is always enabled.)
The Checked State of the command is always false. (The command is never checked.)
The Action of the
command is to fire a click event at the element.
button element to define a
commandA button element always defines a command.
The Type, ID, Label, Hint, Icon, Hidden State, Checked State, and Action facets of the command are determined
as for a elements (see
the previous section).
The Disabled
State of the command mirrors the disabled state of the button.
Typically this is given by the element's disabled attribute, but certain button
types become disabled at other times too (for example, the
move-up button type is disabled when it would have no
effect).
input element to define a
commandAn input element whose type attribute is one of submit,
reset, button, radio,
checkbox, move-up, move-down,
add, and remove defines a command.
The Type of the command
is "radio" if the type attribute has
the value radio, "checkbox" if the type
attribute has the value checkbox, and "command" otherwise.
The ID of the command is the
value of the id attribute of
the element, if the attribute is present and not empty. Otherwise the
command is an anonymous command.
The Label of the command depends on the Type of the command:
If the Type is "command",
then it is the string given by the value attribute, if any, and a
UA-dependent value that the UA uses to label
the button itself if the attribute is absent.
Otherwise, the Type is
"radio" or "checkbox". If the element has a label element
associated with it, the textContent of the first such element is
the Label (in DOM terms,
this the string given by element.labels[0].textContent). Otherwise, the value
of the value attribute, if present, is the Label. Otherwise, the Label is the empty string.
The Hint of the command is
the value of the title
attribute of the input element. If the attribute is not
present, the Hint is the
empty string.
There is no Icon for the command.
The Hidden State of the command is always false. (The command is never hidden.)
The Disabled
State of the command mirrors the disabled state of the control.
Typically this is given by the element's disabled attribute, but certain input
types become disabled at other times too (for example, the
move-up input type is disabled when it would have no effect).
The Checked
State of the command is true if the command is of Type "radio" or "checkbox" and the element
has a checked attribute, and false
otherwise.
The Action of the
command is to fire a click event at the element.
option element to define a
commandAn option element with an ancestor select
element and either no value attribute
or a value attribute that is not the
empty string defines a
command.
The Type of the command
is "radio" if the option's nearest ancestor
select element has no multiple attribute, and "checkbox" if it
does.
The ID of the command is the
value of the id attribute of
the element, if the attribute is present and not empty. Otherwise the
command is an anonymous command.
The Label of the command
is the value of the option element's label attribute, if there is one, or the
value of the option element's textContent DOM attribute if it doesn't.
The Hint of the command is
the string given by the element's title attribute, if any, and the empty string if
the attribute is absent.
There is no Icon for the command.
The Hidden State of the command is always false. (The command is never hidden.)
The Disabled
State of the command is true (disabled) if the element has a disabled attribute, and false otherwise.
The Checked
State of the command is true (checked) if the element's selected DOM attribute is true, and false
otherwise.
The Action of the
command depends on its Type. If the command is of Type "radio" then this must set the selected DOM attribute of the
option element to true, otherwise it must toggle the state of
the selected DOM attribute (set it
to true if it is false and vice versa). Then a change event must be
fired on the option element's nearest ancestor
select element (if there is one), as if the selection had
been changed directly.
command element to define a
commandA command element defines a command.
The Type of the command
is "radio" if the command's type attribute is
"radio", "checkbox" if the attribute's value is
"checkbox", and "command" otherwise.
The ID of the command is the
value of the id attribute of
the element, if the attribute is present and not empty. Otherwise the
command is an anonymous command.
The Label of the command
is the value of the element's label attribute, if there is one, or the empty
string if it doesn't.
The Hint of the command is
the string given by the element's title attribute, if any, and the empty string if
the attribute is absent.
The Icon for the command
is the absolute URL obtained from resolving the value of the
element's icon
attribute, if it has such an attribute and resolving it is successful.
Otherwise, there is no Icon
for the command.
The Hidden State
of the command is true (hidden) if the element has a hidden attribute,
and false otherwise.
The Disabled
State of the command is true (disabled) if the element has either a
disabled
attribute or a hidden attribute (or both), and false otherwise.
The Checked
State of the command is true (checked) if the element has a checked
attribute, and false otherwise.
Action of the command is to invoke the behavior described in the definition of the click() method of the HTMLCommandElement 界面。
bb element to define a
commandA bb element always defines a command.
The Type of the command is "command".
The ID of the command is the
value of the id attribute of
the element, if the attribute is present and not empty. Otherwise the
command is an anonymous command.
The Label of the command
is the string given by the element's textContent DOM attribute, if that is not
the empty string, or a user-agent-defined string appropriate for the
bb element's type attribute's state.
The Hint of the command is
the value of the title
attribute of the element. If the attribute is not present, the Hint is a user-agent-defined
string appropriate for the bb element's
type attribute's
state.
The Icon of the command is
the absolute URL obtained from resolving the value of the src attribute of the first
img element descendant of the element, if
there is such an element and resolving its attribute is successful.
Otherwise, the Icon is a
user-agent-defined image appropriate for the bb element's type attribute's state.
The Hidden State
facet of the command is true if the bb
element's type
attribute's state is not null.
The Disabled
State facet of the command is true if the bb element's type attribute's state's relevance is
false, and true otherwise.
The Checked State of the command is always false. (The command is never checked.)
The Action of the
command is to perform the action of the bb element's type attribute's state.
この節は規定の一部ではありません。
...examples...
datatemplate 要素rule elements.
HTMLElement を使用。The datatemplate element
brings together the various rules that form a data template. The element
doesn't itself do anything exciting.
rule 要素datatemplate 要素の子供として。condition
mode
interface HTMLRuleElement : HTMLElement {
attribute DOMString condition;
attribute DOMString mode;
readonly attribute DOMTokenString modeList;
};
The rule element represents a template
of content that is to be used for elements when updating an element's generated content.
The condition attribute, if
specified, must contain a valid selector. It specifies which nodes in the
data tree will have the condition's template applied. [SELECTORS]
If the condition attribute is not specified, then
the condition applies to all elements, text nodes,
CDATASection nodes, and processing instructions.
The mode attribute,
if specified, must have a value that is an unordered
set of unique space-separated tokens representing the various modes
for which the rule applies. When, and only when, the mode attribute is omitted,
the rule applies if and only if the mode is the empty string. A mode is
invoked by the nest element; for the
first node (the root node) of the data tree, the mode is the empty string.
The contents of rule elements form a
template, and may be anything that, when the parent datatemplate is applied to some
conforming data, results in a conforming DOM tree.
condition DOM 属性は condition 内容属性を反映しなければなりません。
The mode and modeList DOM
attributes must reflect the mode content attribute.
nest 要素rule
element, regardless of the element's content model.
filter
mode
interface HTMLNestElement : HTMLElement {
attribute DOMString filter;
attribute DOMString mode;
};
The nest element represents a point in
a template where the user agent should recurse and start inserting the
children of the data node that matches the rule in which the nest element finds itself.
The filter
attribute, if specified, must contain a valid selector. It specifies which
of the child nodes in the data tree will be examined for further
processing at this point. [SELECTORS]
If the filter
attribute is not specified, then all elements, text nodes,
CDATASection nodes, and processing instructions are
processed.
The mode
attribute, if specified, must have a value that is a word token consisting
of one or more characters, none of which are space characters. It gives the mode which will be in effect
when looking at the rules in the data template.
filter DOM 属性は filter 内容属性を反映しなければなりません。
mode DOM 属性は mode 内容属性を反映しなければなりません。
The template
attribute may be added to an element to indicate that the template
processing model is to be applied to that element.
The template
attribute, when specified, must be a valid URL to an
XML or HTML document, or a fragment identifier pointing at another part of
the document. If there is a fragment identifier present, then the element
with that ID in the target document must be a datatemplate element, otherwise, the root
element must be a datatemplate
element.
template DOM 属性は template 内容属性を反映しなければなりません。
The ref attribute may be
specified on any element on which the template attribute is specified. If it is
specified, it must be a valid URL to an XML or HTML
document, or a fragment identifier pointing at another part of the
document.
When an element has a template attribute but no ref attribute, the element may,
instead of its usual content model, have a single element of any kind.
That element is then used as the root node of the data for the template.
ref DOM 属性は ref 内容属性を反映しなければなりません。
The registrationmark attribute
may be specified on any element that is a descendant of a rule element, except nest elements. Its value may be any string,
including the empty string (which is the value that is assumed if the
attribute is omitted). This attribute performs a role similar to
registration marks in printing presses: when the generated content is
regenerated, elements with the same registrationmark are lined up. This
allows the author to disambiguate how elements should be moved around when
generated content is regenerated in the face of changes to the data tree.
registrationMark DOM 属性は registrationmark 内容属性を反映しなければなりません。
The task source for all tasks queued by algorithms in this section and its subsections is the template task source.
originalContent DOM 属性The originalContent is set to a
DocumentFragment to hold the original children of an element
that has been replaced by content generated for a data template.
Initially, it must be null. Its value is set when the template attribute is
set to a usable value, and is unset when the attribute is removed.
The originalContent DOM attribute can thus
be used as an indicator of whether a template is currently being applied,
just as the templateElement DOM attribute can.
template 属性Setting: When an
HTML element without a
template
attribute has its template attribute set, the user agent must fetch the specified file and parse it (without a browsing context) to obtain a DOM. If the URL, when resolved, is the same as the document's
address, then the current document's DOM
must be assumed to be that parsed DOM. While this loading and parsing is
in progress, the element is said to be busy loading the template rules
or data.
If the resource specified by the template attribute is not the current
document and does not have an XML MIME type, or if an XML
parse error is found while parsing the resource, then the resource cannot
be successfully parsed, and the user agent must jump to the failed to parse
steps below.
Once the DOM in question has been parsed, assuming that it indeed can be parsed and does so successfully, the user agent must queue a task to run the following algorithm:
If the template attribute's value has a fragment
identifier, and, in the DOM in question, it identifies a
datatemplate element, then set
the templateElement DOM attribute to that
element.
Otherwise, if the template attribute value does not have a
fragment identifier, and the root element of the DOM in question is a
datatemplate element, then set
the templateElement DOM attribute to that
element.
Otherwise, jump to the failed to parse steps below.
Create a new DocumentFragment and move all the nodes that
are children of the element to that DocumentFragment
object. Set the originalContent DOM attribute on the
element to this new DocumentFragment object.
Jump to the steps below for updating the generated content.
If the resource has failed to parse, the user agent
must fire a simple event with the name error at the element on
which the template attribute was found.
Unsetting:
When an HTML element
with a template
attribute has its template attribute removed or dynamically
changed from one value to another, the user agent must run the following
algorithm:
Set the templateElement DOM attribute to
null.
If the originalContent DOM attribute of the
element is not null, run these substeps:
Remove all the nodes that are children of the element.
Append the nodes in the originalContent
DocumentFragment to the element.
Set originalContent to null.
(If the originalContent DOM attribute of the
element is null, then either there was an error loading or parsing the
previous template, or the previous template never finished loading; in
either case, there is nothing to undo.)
If the template attribute was changed (as opposed
to simply removed), then act as if it was now set to its new
value (fetching the specified page, etc, as described above).
The templateElement DOM attribute
is updated by the above algorithm to point to the currently active
datatemplate element. Initially,
the attribute must have the value null.
ref 属性Setting: When an HTML element without a
ref attribute has its ref attribute set, the user agent
must fetch the specified file and parse it (without a
browsing context) to obtain a DOM. If the URL, when resolved, is the same as the document's
address, then the current document's DOM
must be assumed to be that parsed DOM. While this loading and parsing is
in progress, the element is said to be busy loading the template rules
or data.
If the resource specified by the ref attribute is not the current
document and does not have an XML MIME type, or if an XML
parse error is found while parsing the resource, then the resource cannot
be successfully parsed, and the user agent must jump to the failed to parse steps
below.
Once the DOM in question has been parsed, assuming that it indeed can be parsed and does so successfully, the user agent must queue a task to run the following algorithm:
If the ref attribute
value does not have a fragment identifier, then set the refNode DOM attribute to
the Document node of that DOM.
Otherwise, if the ref
attribute's value has a fragment identifier, and, in the DOM in
question, that fragment identifier identifies an element, then set the
refNode DOM
attribute to that element.
Otherwise, jump to the failed to parse steps below.
Jump to the steps below for updating the generated content.
If the resource has failed
to parse, the user agent must fire a simple
event with the name error at the element on which the ref attribute was found, and must
then jump to the steps below for updating the generated content (the contents
of the element will be used instead of the specified resource).
Unsetting: When an
HTML element with a
ref attribute has its ref attribute removed or
dynamically changed from one value to another, the user agent must run the
following algorithm:
Set the refNode
DOM attribute to null.
If the ref attribute
was changed (as opposed to simply removed), then act as if it was now set to its new value
(fetching the specified page, etc, as described above). Otherwise, jump
to the steps below for updating the generated content.
The refNode DOM
attribute is updated by the above algorithm to point to the current data
tree, if one is specified explicitly. If it is null, then the data tree is
given by the originalContent DOM attribute, unless
that is also null, in which case no template is currently being applied.
Initially, the attribute must have the value null.
NodeDataTemplate 界面All objects that implement the Node interface must also
implement the NodeDataTemplate interface, whose
members must be accessible using binding-specific casting mechanisms.
interface NodeDataTemplate {
readonly attribute Node dataNode;
};
The dataNode DOM
attribute returns the node for which this node was generated. It
must initially be null. It is set on the nodes that form the content
generated during the algorithm
for updating the generated content of elements that are using the data
template feature.
An element with a non-null templateElement is said to be a data tree user of the node identified by the element's
refNode attribute,
as well as all of that node's children, or, if that attribute is null, of
the node identified by the element's originalContent, as well as all
that node's children.
Nodes that have one or more data tree users associated with them (as per the previous paragraph) are themselves termed data tree component nodes.
Whenever a data tree component node changes its name or value, or has one of its attributes change name or value, or has an attribute added or removed, or has a child added or removed, the user agent must update the generated content of all of that node's data tree users.
An element with a non-null templateElement is also said to be a
template tree user of the node identified by the
element's templateElement attribute, as well as
all of that node's children.
Nodes that have one or more template tree users associated with them (as per the previous paragraph) are themselves termed template tree component nodes.
Whenever a template tree component node changes its name or value, or has one of its attributes change name or value, or has an attribute added or removed, or has a child added or removed, the user agent must update the generated content of all of that node's template tree users.
In other words, user agents update the content generated from a template whenever either the backing data changes or the template itself changes.
When the user agent is to update the generated content of an element that uses a template, the user agent must run the following steps:
Let destination be the element whose generated content is being updated.
If the destination element is busy loading the template rules or data, then abort these steps. Either the steps will be invoked again once the loading has completed, or the loading will fail and the generated content will be removed at that point.
Let template tree be the element given by destination's templateElement DOM attribute. If it
is null, then abort these steps. There are no rules to apply.
Let data tree be the node given by destination's refNode DOM attribute. If it is null, then
let data tree be the node given by the originalContent DOM node.
Let existing nodes be a set of ordered lists of nodes, each list being identified by a tuple consisting of a node, a node type and name, and a registration mark (a string).
For each node node that is a descendant of destination, if any, add node to the
list identified by the tuple given by: node's dataNode DOM
attribute; the node's node type and, if it's an
element, its qualified name (that is, its namespace and local name), or,
if it's a processing instruction, its target name,
and the value of the node's registrationmark attribute, if it
has one, or the empty string otherwise.
Remove all the child nodes of destination, so that its child node list is empty.
Run the Levenberg data node algorithm (described below) using destination as the destination node, data tree as the source node, template tree as the rule container, the empty string as the mode, and the existing nodes lists as the lists of existing nodes.
The Levenberg algorithm consists of two algorithms that invoke each other recursively, the Levenberg data node algorithm and the Levenberg template node algorithm. These algorithms use the data structures initialized by the set of steps described above.
The Levenberg data node algorithm is as follows. It is always invoked with three DOM nodes, one string, and a set of lists as arguments: the destination node, the source node, the rule container, the mode string, and the existing nodes lists respectively.
Let condition be the first rule element child of the rule
container element, or null if there aren't any.
If condition is null, follow these substeps:
If the source node is an element, then, for each child child node of the source node element, in tree order, invoke the Levenberg data node algorithm recursively, with destination node, child node, rule container, the empty string, and existing nodes lists as the five arguments respectively.
Abort the current instance of the Levenberg data node algorithm, returning to whatever algorithm invoked it.
Let matches be a boolean with the value true.
If the condition element has a mode attribute, but the
value of that attribute is not a mode match for the current
mode string, then let matches be false.
If the condition element has a condition
attribute, and the attribute's value, when evaluated as a selector, does not match the
current source node, then let matches be false.
If matches is true, then follow these substeps:
For each child child node of the condition element, in tree order, invoke the Levenberg template node algorithm recursively, with the five arguments being destination node, source node, rule container, child node, and existing nodes lists respectively.
Abort the current instance of the Levenberg data node algorithm, returning to whatever algorithm invoked it.
Let condition be the next rule element that is a child of the rule container element, after the condition element itself, or null if there are no more
rule elements.
Jump to step 2 in this set of steps.
The Levenberg template node algorithm is as follows. It is always invoked with four DOM nodes and a set of lists as arguments: the destination node, the source node, the rule container, the template node, and the existing nodes lists respectively.
If template node is a comment node, abort the current instance of the Levenberg template node algorithm, returning to whatever algorithm invoked it.
If template node is a nest element, then run these substeps:
If source node is not an element, then abort the current instance of the Levenberg template node algorithm, returning to whatever algorithm invoked it.
If the template node has a mode attribute, then
let mode be the value of that attribute;
otherwise, let mode be the empty string.
Let child node be the first child of the source node element, or null if source node has no children.
If child node is null, abort the current instance of the Levenberg template node algorithm, returning to whatever algorithm invoked it.
If the template node element has a filter attribute,
and the attribute's value, when evaluated as a
selector, matches child node, then invoke the
Levenberg data node algorithm recursively,
with destination node, child
node, rule container, mode, and existing nodes lists as
the five arguments respectively.
Let child node be child node's next sibling, or null if child node was the last node of source node.
手順 4 in this set of substeps に戻ります。
If template node is an element, and that element
has a registrationmark attribute, then let
registration mark have the value of that attribute.
Otherwise, let registration mark be the empty
string.
If there is a list in the existing nodes lists corresponding to the tuple (source node, the node type and name of template node, registration mark), and that list is not empty, then run the following substeps. (For an element node, the name of the node is its qualified tag name, i.e. its namespace and local name. For a processing instruction, its name is the target. For other types of nodes, there is no name.)
Let new node be the first node in that list.
Remove new node from that list.
If new node is an element, remove all the child nodes of new node, so that its child node list is empty.
Otherwise, if there is no matching list, or there was, but it is now empty, then run these steps instead:
Let new node be a shallow clone of template node.
Let new node's dataNode DOM attribute be source node.
If new node is an element, run these substeps:
For each attribute on new node, if an attribute with the same qualified name is not present on template node, remove that attribute.
For each attribute attribute on template node, run these substeps:
Let expanded be the result of passing the value of attribute to the text expansion algorithm for templates along with source node.
If an attribute with the same qualified name as attribute is already present on new node, then: if its value is different from expanded, replace its value with expanded.
Otherwise, if there is no attribute with the same qualified name as attribute on new node, then add an attribute with the same namespace, prefix, and local name as attribute, with its value set to expanded's.
Otherwise, the new node is a text node,
CDATASection node, or processing instruction. Run these
substeps instead:
Let expanded be the result of passing the node
value of template node (the content of the text
node, CDATASection node, or processing instruction) to
the text expansion algorithm for
templates along with source node.
If the value of the new node is different from expanded, then set the value of new node to expanded.
Append new node to destination.
If template node is an element, then, for each child child node of the template node element, in tree order, invoke the Levenberg template node algorithm recursively, with the five arguments being new child, source node, rule container, child node, and existing nodes lists respectively.
Define: evaluated as a selector
Define: text expansion algorithm for templates
legend 要素fieldset 要素の最初の子供として。details 要素の最初の子供として。figure 要素の子供として。
ただし、その要素に他に legend
要素の子供がない場合。HTMLElement を使用。legend 要素は、
その親要素の内容の残りの部分に対する題名、説明的な見出しを表します。
div 要素HTMLElement を使用。div 要素はまったく何も表しません。
この要素は class、lang/xml:lang、title
属性と併用することによって連続する要素群に共通な意味をマーク付けすることができます。
Allowing div elements to
contain phrasing content makes it easy for authors to abuse div, using it with the class=""
attribute to the point of not having any other elements in the markup.
This is a disaster from an accessibility point of view, and it would be
nice if we could somehow make such pages non-compliant without preventing
people from using divs as the extension
mechanism that they are, to handle things the spec can't otherwise do
(like making new widgets).
この章では、 Web ブラウザに最も直接的に適用される機能について説明します。 とはいえ、この章で定義する要件は、特に断らない限り、 Web ブラウザであるか否かを問わず全ての利用者エージェントに適用されます。
閲覧文脈は1つ以上の Document
オブジェクトと1つ以上の表示の集成です。
いかなる時点においても、ある 閲覧文脈の中の Document
の1つは活性文書です。
Document の集成は閲覧文脈のセッション履歴です。
表示は、何らかの媒体における Document
オブジェクトの表現のために用いられる、特定の媒体に紐付けされた利用者エージェント界面です。
提示は対話的であっても構いません。各表示は AbstractView
オブジェクトにより現れます。各表示は閲覧文脈に属します。 [DOM2VIEWS]
表示を表す
AbstractView オブジェクトの document
属性は、その表示の閲覧文脈の活性文書の
Document オブジェクトを与えます。
[DOM2VIEWS]
UIEvent 界面を用いる事象は特定の表示
(事象が発生した表示) に関係付けられています。その表示の
AbstractView は事象オブジェクトの view
属性で与えられます。 [DOM3EVENTS]
一般的な Web ブラウザは閲覧文脈毎に1つの自明な表示、つまりブラウザの窓 (画面媒体) を持っています。
しかし、頁が印刷される場合、2つ目の、印刷媒体の表示が現れます。
2つの表示は常に同じ元の Document を共有していますが、
その文書の異なる提示を有しています。会話ブラウザも、
会話媒体での表示を有する閲覧文脈を確立します。
Document は必ずしも閲覧文脈に関連付けられているとは限りません。
特に、データ・マイニング・ツールは閲覧文脈を決して実現値化しないでしょう。
利用者が利用者エージェントと対話するために主に使用する表示が既定表示です。
Document の 既定表示は
Document オブジェクトの DocumentView
界面の defaultView
属性により与えられます。 [DOM3VIEWS]
閲覧文脈が最初に作成されたとき、
閲覧文脈はセッション履歴に番地が
about:blank で、 HTML
文書として印付けされており、文字符号化が
UTF-8 である Document
が1つある状態で作成されなければなりません。この
Document は html
節点1つだけを子供として持ち、その html
節点は body 節点だけを子供として持たなければなりません。
閲覧文脈が即座に操縦されるために特に作成された場合、
その最初の操縦は置換有効で行われます。
about:blank Document の起源は、
その Document が作成されるときに、作成された閲覧文脈が入れ子閲覧文脈であるかどうかにより、
次のように設定されます:
about:blank Document の起源は、
新しい閲覧文脈の作成の時点でのその親閲覧文脈の活性文書の起源です。about:blank Document の起点は、
新しい閲覧文脈の作成の時点でのその開き元閲覧文脈の活性文書の起点です。about:blank Document の起点は、
その新しい閲覧文脈が作成されたときに割り当てられた大域的に固有な識別子です。要素によっては (例えば iframe
要素は)、更に閲覧文脈を実現値化することができます。このようなものを入れ子の閲覧文脈と呼びます。
閲覧文脈 P がその Document の1つ
D 中に要素 E を持っていて、その要素の内側に別の閲覧文脈 C
を入れ子にしている場合、 P は C の親閲覧文脈であるといい、
C は P の子閲覧文脈であるといい、 C は D を通じて入れ子であるといい、
E は C の閲覧文脈包含子であるといいます。
閲覧文脈 A が閲覧文脈 B の祖先であるというのは、 A の子閲覧文脈である閲覧文脈 A' が存在して、それ自体が B の祖先である場合、または閲覧文脈 P があって、それが A の子閲覧文脈であり、かつ B の親閲覧文脈である場合です。
親閲覧文脈のない閲覧文脈は、 それに (直接的に、または他の入れ子閲覧文脈を通じて間接的に) 入れ子になっている閲覧文脈すべての最上位閲覧文脈です。
入れ子閲覧文脈の親閲覧文脈の推移的閉包が祖先閲覧文脈の並びを与えます。
Document が完全に活性であるというのは、
これがその閲覧文脈の活性文書であり、かつその閲覧文脈が最上位閲覧文脈であるか、
またはその閲覧文脈がそれを通じて入れ子になっているような
Document もそれ自体完全に活性であることをいいます。
子閲覧文脈は、要素を通じて入れ子になっているため、
常に親閲覧文脈中の特定の Document
と紐付けされています。利用者エージェントは、完全に活性でない
Document 中の要素の子閲覧文脈に対して利用者が対話することを認めてはなりません。
入れ子閲覧文脈には、これが
seamless
属性のある iframe
要素を通じて埋め込まれている場合、継ぎ目なし閲覧文脈旗が設定されることがあります。
閲覧文脈 b の
Window オブジェクトの top DOM
属性は、その最上位閲覧文脈の
Window
オブジェクト (その閲覧文脈自体が最上位閲覧文脈の場合、
その Window
オブジェクト自体) を返さなければなりません。
閲覧文脈 b の
Window オブジェクトの parent DOM
属性は、その親閲覧文脈があれば
(つまり b が子閲覧文脈である場合) その親閲覧文脈の
Window
オブジェクトを、そうでない場合 (つまりそれ自体が最上位閲覧文脈の場合)
閲覧文脈 b
自体の Window オブジェクトを返さなければなりません。
閲覧文脈 b の
Window オブジェクトの frameElement DOM
属性は、取得時、次の算法を走らせなければなりません。
b が子閲覧文脈でない場合、 null を返し、これらの段階を停止します。
If the parent browsing context's active document does not have the same
effective script origin as the script that is
accessing the frameElement attribute, then throw a security exception.
そうでない場合、 b の閲覧文脈包含子を返します。
ある最上位閲覧文脈に関係する新しい閲覧文脈を、 要素を通じて入れ子にせずに作成することができます。このような閲覧文脈を補助閲覧文脈と呼びます。 補助閲覧文脈は常に最上位閲覧文脈です。
補助閲覧文脈は、開闢器閲覧文脈を持ちます。これは、補助閲覧文脈を作成した閲覧文脈です。また、最遠祖先閲覧文脈も持ちます。 これは、補助閲覧文脈が作成された時の開闢器閲覧文脈の最上位閲覧文脈です。
Window オブジェクトの
opener DOM 属性は、
現在の閲覧文脈が作成された閲覧文脈 (開闢器閲覧文脈)
の Window
オブジェクトを、これがあって、まだ利用可能であれば、返さなければなりません。
利用者エージェントは、二次閲覧文脈に対応しても構いません。これは、利用者エージェントの界面の一部を形成する、 主たる内容領域とは別の閲覧文脈です。
閲覧文脈 A が2つ目の閲覧文脈 B を操縦することが認められているのは、 次の条件の1つが真である場合です。
各閲覧文脈は、零以上の直接到達可能閲覧文脈の並びを持つと定義します。 これは、次の閲覧文脈を含みます。
直接到達可能閲覧文脈である閲覧文脈すべての推移的閉包は、関連閲覧文脈の単位を形成します。
Each unit of related browsing contexts is then
further divided into the smallest number of groups such that every member
of each group has an effective script origin
that, through appropriate manipulation of the document.domain
attribute, could be made to be the same as other members of the group, but
could not be made the same as members of any other group. Each such group
is a unit of related similar-origin browsing
contexts.
閲覧文脈は閲覧文脈名を持つことができます。 既定では閲覧文脈は名前を持ちません (名前は設定されません)。
妥当な閲覧文脈名は、最低1文字を含み、 U+005F LOW LINE からはじまらない文字列です。 (下線からはじまる文字列は特別なキーワードに予約されています。)
妥当な閲覧文脈の名前かキーワードは、
妥当な閲覧文脈名であるか、または
ASCII 大文字・小文字不区別で
_blank、_self、_parent、_top
のいずれかと一致するかのどちらかである文字列です。
閲覧文脈名から閲覧文脈を選ぶ規則は次の通りです。 この規則はある閲覧文脈の文脈において適用されることを想定しています。
与えられた閲覧文脈名が空文字列であるか、_self である場合、選ばれる閲覧文脈は現在のものでなければなりません。
与えられた閲覧文脈名が _parent である場合、
選ばれる閲覧文脈は現在の閲覧文脈の親閲覧文脈があればそれでなければならず、
なければ現在の閲覧文脈でなければなりません。
与えられた閲覧文脈名が _top である場合、
選ばれる閲覧文脈は現在の閲覧文脈の一番最上位閲覧文脈でなければなりません。
与えられた閲覧文脈名が _blank
ではなく、名前が与えられた閲覧文脈名と同じである閲覧文脈が存在する場合で、
現在の閲覧文脈がその閲覧文脈を操縦することが認められており、
利用者エージェントが2つの閲覧文脈は十分関係しているので互いに到達してもよいと判断した場合、
選ばれる閲覧文脈はその閲覧文脈でなければなりません。
一致する閲覧文脈が複数ある場合、利用者エージェントは何らかの一貫した方法、
例えば最も新しく開かれたもの、最も新しく焦点を当てられたもの、
最もよく関係しているものといった方法で1つを選ぶべきです。
それ以外の場合、新しい閲覧文脈が要求されており、 利用者エージェントの設定や能力、あるいはその両方によって動作が決まります。
noreferrer
keyword
_blank, then the new top-level browsing context's name
must be the given browsing context name (otherwise, it has no name).
The chosen browsing context must be this new browsing context. If it is
immediately navigated, then the
navigation will be done with replacement
enabled.
noreferrer
keyword doesn't apply
_blank, then the new auxiliary browsing context's name
must be the given browsing context name (otherwise, it has no name).
The chosen browsing context must be this new browsing context. If it is
immediately navigated, then the
navigation will be done with replacement
enabled.
User agent implementors are encouraged to provide a way for users to configure the user agent to always reuse the current browsing context.
The AbstractView object of default views must also implement the Window and EventTarget interfaces.
[NoInterfaceObject] interface Window {
// the current browsing context
readonly attribute Window window;
readonly attribute Window self;
attribute DOMString name;
[PutForwards=href] readonly attribute Location location;
readonly attribute History history;
readonly attribute UndoManager undoManager;
Selection getSelection();
// other browsing contexts
readonly attribute Window frames;
readonly attribute unsigned long length;
[IndexGetter] Window XXX4(in unsigned long index);
readonly attribute Window top;
readonly attribute Window opener;
readonly attribute Window parent;
readonly attribute Element frameElement;
Window open();
Window open(in DOMString url);
Window open(in DOMString url, in DOMString target);
Window open(in DOMString url, in DOMString target, in DOMString features);
Window open(in DOMString url, in DOMString target, in DOMString features, in DOMString replace);
// the user agent
readonly attribute Navigator navigator;
readonly attribute Storage localStorage;
readonly attribute Storage sessionStorage;
Database openDatabase(in DOMString name, in DOMString version, in DOMString displayName, in unsigned long estimatedSize);
// user prompts
void alert(in DOMString message);
boolean confirm(in DOMString message);
DOMString prompt(in DOMString message);
DOMString prompt(in DOMString message, in DOMString default);
void print();
any showModalDialog(in DOMString url);
any showModalDialog(in DOMString url, in any arguments);
void showNotification(in DOMString title, in DOMString subtitle, in DOMString description);
void showNotification(in DOMString title, in DOMString subtitle, in DOMString description, in VoidCallback onclick);
// cross-document messaging
void postMessage(in DOMString message, in DOMString targetOrigin);
void postMessage(in DOMString message, in MessagePort messagePort, in DOMString targetOrigin);
// event handler DOM attributes
attribute EventListener onabort;
attribute EventListener onbeforeunload;
attribute EventListener onblur;
attribute EventListener onchange;
attribute EventListener onclick;
attribute EventListener oncontextmenu;
attribute EventListener ondblclick;
attribute EventListener ondrag;
attribute EventListener ondragend;
attribute EventListener ondragenter;
attribute EventListener ondragleave;
attribute EventListener ondragover;
attribute EventListener ondragstart;
attribute EventListener ondrop;
attribute EventListener onerror;
attribute EventListener onfocus;
attribute EventListener onhashchange;
attribute EventListener onkeydown;
attribute EventListener onkeypress;
attribute EventListener onkeyup;
attribute EventListener onload;
attribute EventListener onmessage;
attribute EventListener onmousedown;
attribute EventListener onmousemove;
attribute EventListener onmouseout;
attribute EventListener onmouseover;
attribute EventListener onmouseup;
attribute EventListener onmousewheel;
attribute EventListener onresize;
attribute EventListener onscroll;
attribute EventListener onselect;
attribute EventListener onstorage;
attribute EventListener onsubmit;
attribute EventListener onunload;
};
The window, frames, and self DOM attributes must all return the
Window object itself.
The Window object also provides the
scope for script execution. Each Document in a browsing context has an associated list of added properties that, when a document is active, are available on the
Document's default view's Window object. A Document object's
list of added properties must be empty when the
Document object is created.
User agents must raise a security exception
whenever any of the members of a Window
object are accessed by scripts whose effective
script origin is not the same as the Window object's browsing
context's active document's effective script origin, with the following
exceptions:
location
object
postMessage() method with two arguments
postMessage() method with three arguments
frames
attribute
XXX4 method
User agents must not allow scripts to override the location object's
setter.
The open() method on
Window objects provides a mechanism for
navigating an existing browsing context or opening and navigating an auxiliary browsing context.
The method has four arguments, though they are all optional.
The first argument, url, must be a valid URL for a page to load in the browsing context.
If no arguments are provided, or if the first argument is the empty
string, then the url argument defaults to "about:blank". The argument
must be resolved to an absolute URL (or an error) when the method is
invoked.
The second argument, target, specifies the name of the browsing
context that is to be navigated. It must be a valid
browsing context name or keyword. If fewer than two arguments are
provided, then the name argument defaults to the value
"_blank".
The third argument, features, has no effect and is supported for historical reasons only.
The fourth argument, replace, specifies whether or not the new page will replace the page currently loaded in the browsing context, when target identifies an existing browsing context (as opposed to leaving the current page in the browsing context's session history). When three or fewer arguments are provided, replace defaults to false.
When the method is invoked, the user agent must first select a browsing context to navigate by applying the rules for choosing a browsing context given a browsing context name using the target argument as the name and the browsing context of the script as the context in which the algorithm is executed, unless the user has indicated a preference, in which case the browsing context to navigate may instead be the one indicated by the user.
For example, suppose there is a user agent that supports
control-clicking a link to open it in a new tab. If a user clicks in that
user agent on an element whose onclick handler uses the window.open() API to open a
page in an iframe, but, while doing so, holds the control key down, the
user agent could override the selection of the target browsing context to
instead target a new tab.
Then, the user agent must navigate the selected browsing context to the absolute URL (or error) obtained from resolving url. If the replace is true, then replacement must be enabled; otherwise, it must not be enabled unless the browsing context was just created as part of the the rules for choosing a browsing context given a browsing context name. The navigation must be done with the script browsing context of the script that invoked the method as the source browsing context.
The method must return the Window
object of the default view of the browsing
context that was navigated, or null if no browsing context was
navigated.
The name attribute of
the Window object must, on getting,
return the current name of the browsing context,
and, on setting, set the name of the browsing
context to the new value.
The name gets reset when the browsing context is navigated to another domain.
The length DOM
attribute on the Window interface must
return the number of child
browsing contexts of the active Document.
The XXX4(index) method must return the indexth child browsing context of the
active
Document, sorted in document order of the elements nesting
those browsing contexts.
The origin of a resource and the effective script origin of a resource are both either opaque identifiers or tuples consisting of a scheme component, a host component, a port component, and optionally extra data.
The extra data could include the certificate of the site when using encrypted connections, to ensure that if the site's secure certificate changes, the origin is considered to change as well.
These characteristics are defined as follows:
The origin and effective script origin of the URL is whatever is returned by the following algorithm:
Let url be the URL for which the origin is being determined.
Parse url.
If url does not use a server-based naming authority, or if parsing url failed, or if url is not an absolute URL, then return a new globally unique identifier.
Let scheme be the <scheme> component of the URI, converted to lowercase.
If the UA doesn't support the protocol given by scheme, then return a new globally unique identifier.
If scheme is "file", then
the user agent may return a UA-specific value.
Let host be the <host> component of url.
Apply the IDNA ToASCII algorithm to host, with both the AllowUnassigned and UseSTD3ASCIIRules flags set. Let host be the result of the ToASCII algorithm.
If ToASCII fails to convert one of the components of the string, e.g. because it is too long or because it contains invalid characters, then return a new globally unique identifier. [RFC3490]
Let host be the result of converting host to lowercase.
If there is no <port> component, then let port be the default port for the protocol given by scheme. Otherwise, let port be the <port> component of url.
Return the tuple (scheme, host, port).
In addition, if the URL is in fact associated with
a Document object that was created by parsing the resource
obtained from fetching URL, and this was done over a
secure connection, then the server's secure certificate may be added to
the origin as additional data.
The origin and effective script origin of a script are determined from another resource, called the owner:
script
element
Document to which the script element belongs.
Document to which the attribute node
belongs.
javascript: URL that was returned
as the location of an HTTP redirect (or equivalent in other protocols)
javascript: URL.
javascript: URL in an attribute
Document of the element on which the
attribute is found.
javascript: URL in a style sheet
javascript: URL to which a browsing context is being navigated, the URL having been provided by the user
(e.g. by using a bookmarklet)
Document of the browsing context's active
document.
javascript: URL to which a browsing context is being navigated, the URL having been declared in markup
Document of the element (e.g. an
a or area element) that declared the URL.
javascript: URL to which a browsing context is being navigated, the URL having been provided by script
The origin of the script is then equal to the origin of the owner, and the effective script origin of the script is equal to the effective script origin of the owner.
Document objects and images
Document is in a browsing context whose sandboxed origin browsing context flag is set
Document is created.
Document or image was returned by the
XMLHttpRequest API
Document object that was the active document of the browsing context of the
Window object from which the
XMLHttpRequest constructor was invoked. (That is, they
track the Document to which the
XMLHttpRequest object's Document
pointer pointed when it was created.) [XHR]
Document or image was generated from a javascript: URL
javascript: URL.
Document or image was served over the network and
has an address that uses a URL scheme with a server-based naming
authority
Document or image.
Document or image was generated from a data: URL that was returned as the location of an HTTP
redirect (or equivalent in other protocols)
data: URL.
Document or image was generated from a data: URL found in another Document or in
a script
Document or script in
which the data: URL was found.
Document has the address "about:blank"
Document is the origin it was assigned when
its browsing context was created.
Document or image was obtained in some other
manner (e.g. a data: URL typed in by the user, a
Document created using the createDocument() API, a data: URL
returned as the location of an HTTP redirect, etc)
Document or image is created.
When a Document is created, unless stated otherwise
above, its effective script origin is
initialized to the origin of the
Document. However, the document.domain attribute can be used to
change it.
The Unicode serialization of an origin is the string obtained by applying the following algorithm to the given origin:
If the origin in question is not a scheme/host/port tuple, then return the empty string and abort these steps.
Otherwise, let result be the scheme part of the origin tuple.
Append the string "://" to result.
Apply the IDNA ToUnicode algorithm to each component of the host part of the origin tuple, and append the results — each component, in the same order, separated by U+002E FULL STOP characters (".") — to result.
If the port part of the origin tuple gives a port that is different from the default port for the protocol given by the scheme part of the origin tuple, then append a U+003A COLON character (":") and the given port, in base ten, to result.
result を返します。
The ASCII serialization of an origin is the string obtained by applying the following algorithm to the given origin:
If the origin in question is not a scheme/host/port tuple, then return the empty string and abort these steps.
Otherwise, let result be the scheme part of the origin tuple.
Append the string "://" to result.
Apply the IDNA ToASCII algorithm the host part of the origin tuple, with both the AllowUnassigned and UseSTD3ASCIIRules flags set, and append the results result.
If ToASCII fails to convert one of the components of the string, e.g. because it is too long or because it contains invalid characters, then return the empty string and abort these steps. [RFC3490]
If the port part of the origin tuple gives a port that is different from the default port for the protocol given by the scheme part of the origin tuple, then append a U+003A COLON character (":") and the given port, in base ten, to result.
result を返します。
Two origins are said to be the same origin if the following algorithm returns true:
Let A be the first origin being compared, and B be the second origin being compared.
If A and B are both opaque identifiers, and their value is equal, then return true.
Otherwise, if either A or B or both are opaque identifiers, return false.
If A and B have scheme components that are not identical, return false.
If A and B have host components that are not identical, return false.
If A and B have port components that are not identical, return false.
If either A or B have additional data, but that data is not identical for both, return false.
Return true.
The domain
attribute on Document objects must be initialized to the document's domain, if it has one, and the empty
string otherwise. On getting, the attribute must return its current value,
unless the document was created by XMLHttpRequest, in which
case it must throw an INVALID_ACCESS_ERR exception. On
setting, the user agent must run the following algorithm:
If the document was created by XMLHttpRequest, throw an
INVALID_ACCESS_ERR exception and abort these steps.
Apply the IDNA ToASCII algorithm to the new value, with both the AllowUnassigned and UseSTD3ASCIIRules flags set. Let new value be the result of the ToASCII algorithm.
If ToASCII fails to convert one of the components of the string, e.g. because it is too long or because it contains invalid characters, then throw a security exception and abort these steps. [RFC3490]
If new value is not exactly equal to the current
value of the document.domain attribute, then run these
substeps:
If the current value is an IP address, throw a security exception and abort these steps.
If new value, prefixed by a U+002E FULL STOP ("."), does not exactly match the end of the current value, throw a security exception and abort these steps.
Set the attribute's value to new value.
Set the host part of the effective script
origin tuple of the Document to new
value.
Set the port part of the effective script
origin tuple of the Document to "manual override" (a
value that, for the purposes of comparing origins, is identical to "manual override" but not
identical to any other value).
The domain of a
Document is the host part of the document's origin, if that is a scheme/host/port tuple. If it
isn't, then the document does not have a domain.
The domain attribute is used to enable pages on
different hosts of a domain to access each others' DOMs.
Various mechanisms can cause author-provided executable code to run in the context of a document. These mechanisms include, but are probably not limited to:
script elements.
javascript: URLs (e.g. the src attribute of img elements, or an @import
rule in a CSS style element block).
addEventListener(), by explicit event
handler content attributes, by event handler DOM
attributes, or otherwise.
When a script is created, it is associated with a script execution context, a script browsing context, and a script document context.
The script execution context of a script is
defined when that script is created. In this specification, it is either a
Window object or an empty object; other
specifications might make the script execution context be some other
object.
When the script execution context of a script is an empty object, it can't do anything that interacts with the environment.
A script execution context always has an
associated browsing context, known as the script browsing context. If the script
execution context is a Window
object, then that object's browsing context is
it. Otherwise, the script execution context is
associated explicitly with a browsing context
when it is created.
Every script whose script execution context is a
Window object is also associated with a
Document object, known as its script document
context. It is used to resolve URLs. The document is assigned when the script is
created, as with the script browsing context.
It is said that scripting is disabled in a script execution context when any of the following conditions are true:
designMode
enabled.
A node is said to be without script if either the
Document object of the node (the node itself, if it is itself
a Document object) does not have an associated browsing context, or scripting
is disabled in that browsing context.
A node is said to be with script if it is not without script.
If you can find a better pair of terms than "with script" and "without script" let me know. The only things I can find that are less confusing are also way, way longer.
When a script is to be executed in a script execution context in which scripting is disabled, the script must do nothing and return nothing (a void return value).
Thus, for instance, enabling designMode
will disable any event handler attributes, event listeners, timeouts, etc,
that were set by scripts in the document.
To coordinate events, user interaction, scripts, rendering, networking, and so forth, user agents must use event loops as described in this section.
There must be at least one event loop per user agent, and at most one event loop per unit of related similar-origin browsing contexts.
An event loop always has at least one browsing context. If an event loop's browsing contexts all go away, then the event loop goes away as well. A browsing context always has an event loop coordinating its activities.
An event loop has one or more task queues. A task queue is an ordered list of tasks, which can be:
Asynchronously dispatching an Event object at a
particular EventTarget object is a task.
Not all events are dispatched using the task queue, many are dispatched synchronously during other tasks.
The HTML parser tokenising a single byte, and then processing any resulting tokens, is a task.
Calling a callback asynchronously is a task.
When an algorithm fetches a resource, if the fetching occurs asynchronously then the processing of the resource once some or all of the resource is available is a task.
Some elements have tasks that trigger in response to DOM manipulation, e.g. when that element is inserted into the document.
When a user agent is to queue a task, it must add the given task to one of the task queues of the relevant event loop. All the tasks from one particular task source (e.g. the callbacks generated by timers, the events dispatched for mouse movements, the tasks queued for the parser) must always be added to the same task queue, but tasks from different task sources may be placed in different task queues.
For example, a user agent could have one task queue for mouse and key events (the user interaction task source, not defined in this specification), and another for everything else. The user agent could then give keyboard and mouse events preference over other tasks three quarters of the time, keeping the interface responsive but not starving other task queues, and never processing events from any one task source out of order.
An event loop must continually run through the following steps for as long as it exists:
Run the oldest task on one of the event loop's task queues. The user agent may pick any task queue.
Remove that task from its task queue.
If necessary, update the rendering or user interface of any
Document or browsing context to
reflect the current state.
Return to the first step of the event loop.
Define security exception.
javascript: protocolA URL using the javascript: protocol must, if and
when dereferenced, be
evaluated by executing the script obtained using the content retrieval
operation defined for javascript: URLs. [JSURL]
When a browsing context is navigated to a javascript: URL, and the active document of that browsing context has the same origin as the script given by that URL, the
script execution context must be the Window object of the browsing context being navigated, and the script document context must be that active document.
When a browsing context is navigated to a javascript: URL, and the active document of that browsing context has an origin that is not the same as that of the script given by the URL, the
script execution context must be an empty object,
and the script browsing context must be the browsing context being navigated.
Otherwise, if the Document object of the element,
attribute, or style sheet from which the javascript: URL was
reached has an associated browsing context, the
script execution context must be an empty object,
and the script execution context's associated browsing context must be that browsing context.
Otherwise, the script is not executed and its return value is void.
If the result of executing the script is void (there is no return value), then the URL must be treated in a manner equivalent to an HTTP resource with an HTTP 204 No Content response.
Otherwise, the URL must be treated in a manner equivalent to an HTTP
resource with a 200 OK response whose Content-Type metadata is text/html and whose response body is the return value
converted to a string value.
Certain contexts, in particular img elements, ignore the Content-Type metadata.
So for example a javascript: URL for a src attribute of an img element would be evaluated in the context of
an empty object as soon as the attribute is set; it would then be sniffed
to determine the image type and decoded as an image.
A javascript: URL in an href attribute of an a element would only be evaluated when the link was
followed.
The src
attribute of an iframe element would
be evaluated in the context of the iframe's own browsing
context; once evaluated, its return value (if it was not void) would
replace that browsing context's document, thus
changing the variables visible in that browsing
context.
The rules for handling script execution in a script execution context include making the script not execute (and just return void) in certain cases, e.g. in a sandbox or when the user has disabled scripting altogether.
We need to define how to handle events that are to be
fired on a Document that is no longer the active document of its browsing
context, and for Documents that have no browsing context. Do the events
fire? Do the handlers in that document not fire? Do we just define
scripting to be disabled when the document isn't active, with events still
running as is? See also the script
element section, which says scripts don't run when the document isn't
active.
HTML elements can have event handler attributes specified. These act as bubbling event listeners for the element on which they are specified.
Each event handler attribute has two parts, an event handler content
attribute and an event handler DOM attribute. Event handler attributes must
initially be set to null. When their value changes (through the changing
of their event handler content attribute or their event handler DOM
attribute), they will either be null, or have an
EventListener object assigned to them.
Objects other than Element objects, in particular Window, only have event handler DOM attribute (since they have
no content attributes).
Event handler content attributes, when specified,
must contain valid ECMAScript code matching the ECMAScript FunctionBody production. [ECMA262]
When an event handler content attribute is set, if the element is owned
by a Document that is in a browsing
context, its new value must be interpreted as the body of an anonymous
function with a single argument called event, with the new
function's scope chain being linked from the activation object of the
handler, to the element, to the element's form element if it
is a form control, to the Document object, to the Window object of the browsing context of that Document. The
function's this parameter must be the Element
object representing the element. The resulting function must then be set
as the value of the corresponding event handler attribute, and the new
value must be set as the value of the content attribute. If the given
function body fails to compile, then the corresponding event handler
attribute must be set to null instead (the content attribute must still be
updated to the new value, though).
活性化オブジェクトの詳細については、 ECMA 262 第3版の 10.1.6 節と 10.2.3 節を参照してください。 [ECMA262]
事象取扱器のスクリプト実行文脈は、
適用範囲鎖の最後の Window
オブジェクトでなければなりません。事象取扱器のスクリプト文書文脈は、
設定された事象取扱器内容属性を所有する Document
オブジェクトでなければなりません。
When an event handler content attribute is set on an element owned by a
Document that is not in a browsing
context, the corresponding event handler attribute is not changed.
Removing an event handler content attribute does not reset the corresponding event handler attribute either.
How do we allow non-JS event handlers?
Event handler DOM attributes, on setting, must set the corresponding event handler attribute to their new value, and on getting, must return whatever the current value of the corresponding event handler attribute is (possibly null).
次に示すのは、すべての HTML 要素で内容属性としても DOM
属性としても対応しなければならず、 Window
オブジェクトで DOM 属性として対応しなければならない事象取扱器属性です。
onabort
abort 事象が当該要素を対象としているか、泡立って当該要素を通過する時には、
常に呼び出されなければなりません。
onbeforeunload
beforeunload 事象が当該要素を対象としているか、泡立って当該要素を通過する時には、
常に呼び出されなければなりません。
onblurblur 事象が当該要素を対象としているか、泡立って当該要素を通過する時には、
常に呼び出されなければなりません。
onchangechange 事象が当該要素を対象としているか、泡立って当該要素を通過する時には、
常に呼び出されなければなりません。
onclickclick 事象が当該要素を対象としているか、泡立って当該要素を通過する時には、
常に呼び出されなければなりません。
oncontextmenucontextmenu 事象が当該要素を対象としているか、泡立って当該要素を通過する時には、
常に呼び出されなければなりません。
ondblclickdblclick 事象が当該要素を対象としているか、泡立って当該要素を通過する時には、
常に呼び出されなければなりません。
ondrag
drag 事象が当該要素を対象としているか、泡立って当該要素を通過する時には、
常に呼び出されなければなりません。
ondragend
dragend 事象が当該要素を対象としているか、泡立って当該要素を通過する時には、
常に呼び出されなければなりません。
ondragenter
dragenter 事象が当該要素を対象としているか、泡立って当該要素を通過する時には、
常に呼び出されなければなりません。
ondragleave
dragleave 事象が当該要素を対象としているか、泡立って当該要素を通過する時には、
常に呼び出されなければなりません。
ondragover
dragover 事象が当該要素を対象としているか、泡立って当該要素を通過する時には、
常に呼び出されなければなりません。
ondragstartdragstart 事象が当該要素を対象としているか、泡立って当該要素を通過する時には、
常に呼び出されなければなりません。
ondrop
drop 事象が当該要素を対象としているか、泡立って当該要素を通過する時には、
常に呼び出されなければなりません。
onerrorerror 事象が当該要素を対象としているか、泡立って当該要素を通過する時には、
常に呼び出されなければなりません。
onerror 取扱器はスクリプト誤りの報告にも使われます。
onfocusfocus 事象が当該要素を対象としているか、泡立って当該要素を通過する時には、
常に呼び出されなければなりません。
onhashchangehashchange 事象が当該要素を対象としているか、泡立って当該要素を通過する時には、
常に呼び出されなければなりません。
onkeydownkeydown 事象が当該要素を対象としているか、泡立って当該要素を通過する時には、
常に呼び出されなければなりません。
onkeypresskeypress 事象が当該要素を対象としているか、泡立って当該要素を通過する時には、
常に呼び出されなければなりません。
onkeyupkeyup 事象が当該要素を対象としているか、泡立って当該要素を通過する時には、
常に呼び出されなければなりません。
onloadload 事象が当該要素を対象としているか、泡立って当該要素を通過する時には、
常に呼び出されなければなりません。
onmessagemessage 事象が当該要素を対象としているか、泡立って当該要素を通過する時には、
常に呼び出されなければなりません。
onmousedownmousedown 事象が当該要素を対象としているか、泡立って当該要素を通過する時には、
常に呼び出されなければなりません。
onmousemovemousemove 事象が当該要素を対象としているか、泡立って当該要素を通過する時には、
常に呼び出されなければなりません。
onmouseoutmouseout 事象が当該要素を対象としているか、泡立って当該要素を通過する時には、
常に呼び出されなければなりません。
onmouseovermouseover 事象が当該要素を対象としているか、泡立って当該要素を通過する時には、
常に呼び出されなければなりません。
onmouseupmouseup 事象が当該要素を対象としているか、泡立って当該要素を通過する時には、
常に呼び出されなければなりません。
onmousewheelmousewheel 事象が当該要素を対象としているか、泡立って当該要素を通過する時には、
常に呼び出されなければなりません。
onresizeresize 事象が当該要素を対象としているか、泡立って当該要素を通過する時には、
常に呼び出されなければなりません。
onscrollscroll 事象が当該要素を対象としているか、泡立って当該要素を通過する時には、
常に呼び出されなければなりません。
onselectselect 事象が当該要素を対象としているか、泡立って当該要素を通過する時には、
常に呼び出されなければなりません。
onstoragestorage 事象が当該要素を対象としているか、泡立って当該要素を通過する時には、
常に呼び出されなければなりません。
onsubmitsubmit 事象が当該要素を対象としているか、泡立って当該要素を通過する時には、
常に呼び出されなければなりません。
onunloadunload 事象が当該要素を対象としているか、泡立って当該要素を通過する時には、
常に呼び出されなければなりません。
事象取扱器属性が呼び出される時、その引数には当該事象の Event
オブジェクトを設定しなければなりません。関数がブール値の偽そのものを返した場合には、
事象の preventDefault() メソッドを呼び出さなければなりません。
例外: 歴史的理由により、 HTML mouseover
事象に関しては、 preventDefault() メソッドは、
代わりに関数が真を返した時に呼び出されなければなりません。
要素のすべての事象取扱器属性は、 null に設定されている場合も関数が設定されている場合も、
要素が作成された時に Element オブジェクトの EventTarget
界面の
addEventListenerNS()
メソッドが事象型 (type 引数) は前述の並び中で当該事象取扱属性について示した型、
名前空間 (namespaceURI 引数) は
null、聴取器は対象位相と泡立ち位相の聴取器として (useCapture 引数は偽)、
事象群は既定群として (evtGroup 引数は null)、
事象聴取器自体 (listener 引数) は事象取扱器属性が
null の場合はなにもしないとして、それ以外の場合は事象取扱器属性に関連付けられた関数を呼び出すとして
(listener 引数は事象取扱器属性自体ではないと強調しておきます。)
呼び出した場合のように要素の事象取扱器として登録されなければなりません。
maybe this should be moved higher up (terminology? conformance? DOM?) Also, the whole terminology thing should be changed so that we don't define any specific events here, we only define 'simple event', 'progress event', 'mouse event', 'key event', and the like, and have the actual dispatch use those generic terms when firing events.
Certain operations and methods are defined as firing events on elements.
For example, the click() method on the HTMLElement interface is defined as firing
a click event on the element. [DOM3EVENTS]
Firing a click event means that a click
event with no namespace, which bubbles and is cancelable, and which uses
the MouseEvent interface, must be dispatched at the given
element. The event object must have its screenX,
screenY, clientX, clientY, and button attributes set
to 0, its ctrlKey, shiftKey,
altKey, and metaKey attributes
set according to the current state of the key input device, if any (false
for any keys that are not available), its detail
attribute set to 1, and its relatedTarget attribute
set to null. The getModifierState() method on the
object must return values appropriately describing the state of the key
input device at the time the event is created.
Firing a change event means that a change
event with no namespace, which bubbles but is not cancelable, and which
uses the Event interface, must be dispatched at the given
element.
Firing a contextmenu event means that a contextmenu event with no namespace, which
bubbles and is cancelable, and which uses the Event
interface, must be dispatched at the given element.
Firing a simple event called
e means that an event with the name e, with no namespace, which does not bubble but is
cancelable (unless otherwise stated), and which uses the
Event interface, must be dispatched at the given element.
Firing a show event means firing a simple event called show. Actually this
should fire an event that has modifier information (shift/ctrl etc), as
well as having a pointer to the node on which the menu was fired, and with
which the menu was associated (which could be an ancestor of the
former).
Firing a load event means firing a simple event called load.
Firing an error event means firing a simple event called error.
Firing a progress event called e means something that hasn't yet been defined, in the [PROGRESS] spec.
The default action of these event is to do nothing unless otherwise stated.
If you dispatch a custom "click" event at an element that would normally have default actions, should they get triggered? If so, we need to go through the entire spec and make sure that any default actions are defined in terms of any event of the right type on that element, not those that are dispatched in expected ways.
Window objectWhen an event is dispatched at a DOM node in a Document in
a browsing context, if the event is not a load event, the user agent
must also dispatch the event to the Window, as follows:
Window object before being dispatched to any of
the nodes.
Window object at the end of the phase, unless
bubbling has been prevented.
This section only applies to user agents that support scripting in general and ECMAScript in particular.
Whenever a runtime script error occurs in one of the scripts associated
with the document, the value of the onerror event handler DOM
attribute of the Window object
must be processed, as follows:
The function referenced by the onerror attribute must be invoked with three
arguments, before notifying the user of the error.
The three arguments passed to the function are all
DOMStrings; the first must give the message that the UA is
considering reporting, the second must give the absolute URL of the resource in which the error
occurred, and the third must give the line number in that resource on
which the error occurred.
If the function returns false, then the error should not be reported to the user. Otherwise, if the function returns another value (or does not return at all), the error should be reported to the user.
Any exceptions thrown or errors caused by this function must be reported to the user immediately after the error that the function was called for, without calling the function again.
null
The error should not reported to the user.
The error should be reported to the user.
The initial value of onerror must be undefined.
The alert(message) method, when invoked, must show the
given message to the user. The user agent may make the
method wait for the user to acknowledge the message before returning; if
so, the user agent must pause while the method is
waiting.
The confirm(message) method, when invoked, must show the
given message to the user, and ask the user to respond
with a positive or negative response. The user agent must then pause as the method waits for the user's response. If
the user responds positively, the method must return true, and if the user
responds negatively, the method must return false.
The prompt(message, default) method,
when invoked, must show the given message to the user,
and ask the user to either respond with a string value or abort. The user
agent must then pause as the method waits for the
user's response. The second argument is optional. If the second argument
(default) is present, then the response must be
defaulted to the value given by default. If the user
aborts, then the method must return null; otherwise, the method must
return the string that the user responded with.
The print() method,
when invoked, must run the printing steps.
User agents should also run the printing steps whenever the user attempts to obtain a physical form (e.g. printed copy), or the representation of a physical form (e.g. PDF copy), of a document.
The printing steps are as follows:
The user agent may display a message to the user and/or may abort these steps.
For instance, a kiosk browser could silently ignore any
invocations of the print() method.
For instance, a browser on a mobile device could detect that there are no printers in the vicinity and display a message saying so before continuing to offer a "save to PDF" option.
The user agent must fire a simple event called
beforeprint at the Window object of the browsing context of the
Document that is being printed, as well as any nested browsing
contexts in it.
The beforeprint
event can be used to annotate the printed copy, for instance adding the
time at which the document was printed.
The user agent should offer the user the opportunity to obtain a physical form (or the representation of a physical form) of the document. The user agent may wait for the user to either accept or decline before returning; if so, the user agent must pause while the method is waiting. Even if the user agent doesn't wait at this point, the user agent must use the state of the relevant documents as they are at this point in the algorithm if and when it eventually creates the alternate form.
The user agent must fire a simple event called
afterprint at the Window object of the browsing context of the
Document that is being printed, as well as any nested browsing
contexts in it.
The afterprint event
can be used to revert annotations added in the earlier event, as well as
showing post-printing UI. For instance, if a page is walking the user
through the steps of applying for a home loan, the script could
automatically advance to the next step after having printed a form or
other.
The showModalDialog(url,
arguments)
method, when invoked, must cause the user agent to run the following
steps:
If the user agent is configured such that this invocation of showModalDialog() is somehow
disabled, then the method returns the empty string; abort these steps.
User agents are expected to disable this method in certain cases to avoid user annoyance. For instance, a user agent could require that a site be white-listed before enabling this method, or the user agent could be configured to only allow one modal dialog at a time.
Let the list of background browsing contexts be a list of all the browsing contexts that:
Window object on which the showModalDialog() method was called,
and that
showModalDialog() method at the time
the method was called,...as well as any browsing contexts that are nested inside any of the browsing contexts matching those conditions.
Disable the user interface for all the browsing contexts in the list of background browsing contexts. This should prevent the user from navigating those browsing contexts, causing events to to be sent to those browsing context, or editing any content in those browsing contexts. However, it does not prevent those browsing contexts from receiving events from sources other than the user, from running scripts, from running animations, and so forth.
Create a new auxiliary browsing context,
with the opener browsing context being the
browsing context of the Window object
on which the showModalDialog() method was called.
The new auxiliary browsing context has no name.
This browsing context implements the ModalWindow interface.
Let the dialog arguments of the new browsing context be set to the value of arguments.
Let the dialog arguments' origin be the origin of the script that called the showModalDialog() method.
Navigate the new browsing context to url, with replacement enabled, and with the script browsing context of the script that invoked the method as the source browsing context.
Wait for the browsing context to be closed. (The user agent must allow the user to indicate that the browsing context is to be closed.)
Reenable the user interface for all the browsing contexts in the list of background browsing contexts.
Return the auxiliary browsing context's return value.
Browsing contexts created by the above algorithm must implement the
ModalWindow interface:
[XXX] interface ModalWindow {
readonly attribute any dialogArguments;
attribute DOMString returnValue;
};
Such browsing contexts have associated dialog
arguments, which are stored along with the dialog
arguments' origin. These values are set by the showModalDialog() method in the
algorithm above, when the browsing context is created, based on the
arguments provided to the method.
The dialogArguments
DOM attribute, on getting, must check whether its browsing context's active document's origin is the
same as the dialog arguments' origin. If it is, then the browsing
context's dialog arguments must be returned
unchanged. Otherwise, if the dialog arguments are
an object, then the empty string must be returned, and if the dialog arguments are not an object, then the
stringification of the dialog arguments must be
returned.
These browsing contexts also have an associated return value. The return value of a browsing context must be initialized to the empty string when the browsing context is created.
The returnValue DOM
attribute, on getting, must return the return value
of its browsing context, and on setting, must set the return value to the given new value.
Notifications are short, transient messages that bring the user's attention to new information, or remind the user of scheduled events.
Since notifications can be annoying if abused, this specification defines a mechanism that scopes notifications to a site's existing rendering area unless the user explicitly indicates that the site can be trusted.
To this end, each origin can be flagged as being a trusted notification source. By default origins should not be flagged as such, but user agents may allow users to whitelist origins or groups of origins as being trusted notification sources. Only origins flagged as trusted in this way are allowed to show notification UI outside of their tab.
For example, a user agent could allow a user to mark all subdomains and ports of example.org as trusted notification sources. Then, mail.example.org and calendar.example.org would both be able to show notifications, without the user having to flag them individually.
The showNotification(title, subtitle, description, onclick)
method, when invoked, must cause the user agent to show a notification.
If the method was invoked from a script whose script browsing context has the sandboxed annoyances browsing context flag set, then the notification must be shown within that browsing context. The notification is said to be a sandboxed notification.
Otherwise, if the origin of the script browsing context of the script that invoked the method is not flagged as being a trusted notification source, then the notification should be rendered within the top-level browsing context of the script browsing context of the script that invoked the method. The notification is said to be a normal notification. User agents should provide a way to set the origin's trusted notification source flag from the notification, so that the user can benefit from notifications even when the user agent is not the active application.
Otherwise, the origin is flagged as a trusted notification source, and the notification should be shown using the platform conventions for system-wide notifications. The notification is said to be a trusted notification. User agents may provide a way to unset the origin's trusted notification source flag from within the notification, so as to allow users to easily disable notifications from sites that abuse the privilege.
For example, if a site contains a gadget of a mail application in a
sandboxed iframe and that frame
triggers a notification upon the receipt of a new e-mail message, that
notification would be displayed on top of the gadget only.
However, if the user then goes to the main site of that mail application, the notification would be displayed over the entire rendering area of the tab for the site.
The notification, in this case, would have a button on it to let the user indicate that he trusts the site. If the user clicked this button, the next notification would use the system-wide notification system, appearing even if the tab for the mail application was buried deep inside a minimised window.
The style of notifications varies from platform to platform. On some, it is typically displayed as a "toast" window that slides in from the bottom right corner. In others, notifications are shown as semi-transparent white-on-grey overlays centered over the screen. Other schemes could include simulated ticker tapes, and speech-synthesis playback.
When a normal notification (but not a sandboxed notification) is shown, the user agent may bring the user's attention to the top-level browsing context of the script browsing context of the script that invoked the method, if that would be useful; but user agents should not use system-wide notification mechanisms to do so.
When a trusted notification is shown, the user agent should bring the user's attention to the notification and the script browsing context of the script that invoked the method, as per the platform conventions for attracting the user's attention to applications.
In the case of normal notifications, typically the only attention-grabbing device that would be employed would be something like flashing the tab's caption, or making it bold, or some such.
In addition, in the case of a trusted notification, the entire window could flash, or the browser's application icon could bounce or flash briefly, or a short sound effect could be played.
Notifications should include the following content:
icon, if any are available.
If a new notification from one browsing context has title, subtitle, and description strings that are identical to the title, subtitle, and description strings of an already-active notification from the same browsing context or another browsing context with the same origin, the user agent should not display the new notification, but should instead add an indicator to the already-active notification that another identical notification would otherwise have been shown.
For instance, if a user has his mail application open in three windows, and thus the same "New Mail" notification is fired three times each time a mail is received, instead of displaying three identical notifications each time, the user agent could just show one, with the title "New Mail x3".
Notifications should have a lifetime based on the platform conventions for notifications. However, the lifetime of a notification should not begin until the user has had the opportunity to see it, so if a notification is spawned for a browsing context that is hidden, it should be shown for its complete lifetime once the user brings that browsing context into view.
User agents should support multiple notifications at once.
User agents should support user interaction with notifications, if and as appropriate given the platform conventions. If a user activates a notification, and the onclick callback argument was present and is not null, then the script browsing context of the function given by onclick should be brought to the user's attention, and the onclick callback should then be invoked.
The navigator
attribute of the Window interface must
return an instance of the Navigator
interface, which represents the identity and state of the user agent (the
client), and allows Web pages to register themselves as potential protocol
and content handlers:
interface Navigator {
// client identification
readonly attribute DOMString appName;
readonly attribute DOMString appVersion;
readonly attribute DOMString platform;
readonly attribute DOMString userAgent;
// system state
readonly attribute boolean onLine;
void registerProtocolHandler(in DOMString protocol, in DOMString url, in DOMString title);
void registerContentHandler(in DOMString mimeType, in DOMString url, in DOMString title);
};
In certain cases, despite the best efforts of the entire industry, Web browsers have bugs and limitations that Web authors are forced to work around.
This section defines a collection of attributes that can be used to determine, from script, the kind of user agent in use, in order to work around these issues.
Client detection should always be limited to detecting known current versions; future versions and unknown versions should always be assumed to be fully compliant.
appName
Must return either the string "Netscape" or the
full name of the browser, e.g. "Mellblom
Browsernator".
appVersion
Must return either the string "4.0" or a string
representing the version of the browser in detail, e.g. "1.0 (VMS; en-US) Mellblomenator/9000".
platform
Must return either the empty string or a string representing the
platform on which the browser is executing, e.g. "MacIntel", "Win32", "FreeBSD i386", "WebTV OS".
userAgent
Must return the string used for the value of the "User-Agent" header in HTTP requests, or the empty string
if no such header is ever sent.
The registerProtocolHandler()
method allows Web sites to register themselves as possible handlers for
particular protocols. For example, an online fax service could register
itself as a handler of the fax: protocol ([RFC2806]), so that if the user clicks on such a
link, he is given the opportunity to use that Web site. Analogously, the
registerContentHandler()
method allows Web sites to register themselves as possible handlers for
content in a particular MIME type. For example, the same online fax
service could register itself as a handler for image/g3fax
files ([RFC1494]), so that if the user has no
native application capable of handling G3 Facsimile byte streams, his Web
browser can instead suggest he use that site to view the image.
User agents may, within the constraints described in this section, do whatever they like when the methods are called. A UA could, for instance, prompt the user and offer the user the opportunity to add the site to a shortlist of handlers, or make the handlers his default, or cancel the request. UAs could provide such a UI through modal UI or through a non-modal transient notification interface. UAs could also simply silently collect the information, providing it only when relevant to the user.
There is an example of how these methods could be presented to the user below.
The arguments to the methods have the following meanings:
registerProtocolHandler()
only)
A scheme, such as ftp or fax. The scheme
must be compared in an ASCII case-insensitive
manner by user agents for the purposes of comparing with the scheme part
of URLs that they consider against the list of registered handlers.
The protocol value, if it contains a colon (as in
"ftp:"), will never match anything, since schemes don't
contain colons.
registerContentHandler() only)
A MIME type, such as model/vrml or
text/richtext. The MIME type must be compared in an ASCII case-insensitive manner by user agents for the
purposes of comparing with MIME types of documents that they consider
against the list of registered handlers.
User agents must compare the given values only to the MIME type/subtype parts of content types, not to the complete type including parameters. Thus, if mimeType values passed to this method include characters such as commas or whitespace, or include MIME parameters, then the handler being registered will never be used.
The URL of the page that will handle the requests.
When the user agent uses this URL, it must replace the first occurrence
of the exact literal string "%s" with an escaped version of
the URL of the content in question (as defined below), then resolve the resulting URL
(using the document base URL of the script document context of the script that
originally invoked the registerContentHandler() or
registerProtocolHandler()
method), and then fetch the resulting URL using the
GET method (or equivalent for non-HTTP URLs).
To get the escaped version of the URL of the content in question, the user agent must resolve the URL, and then every character in the URL that doesn't match the <query> production defined in RFC 3986 must be replaced by the percent-encoded form of the character. [RFC3986]
If the user had visited a site at http://example.com/ that made the following call:
navigator.registerContentHandler('application/x-soup', 'soup?url=%s', 'SoupWeb™')
...and then, much later, while visiting http://www.example.net/, clicked on a link such as:
<a href="chickenkïwi.soup">Download our Chicken Kiwi soup!</a>
...then, assuming this chickenkïwi.soup file was
served with the MIME type application/x-soup, the UA might
navigate to the following URL:
http://example.com/soup?url=http://www.example.net/chickenk%C3%AFwi.soup
This site could then fetch the chickenkïwi.soup
file and do whatever it is that it does with soup (synthesize it and
ship it to the user, or whatever).
A descriptive title of the handler, which the UA might use to remind the user what the site in question is.
User agents should raise security exceptions if the methods are called with protocol or mimeType values that the UA
deems to be "privileged". For example, a site attempting to register a
handler for http URLs or text/html content in a
Web browser would likely cause an exception to be raised.
User agents must raise a SYNTAX_ERR exception if the url argument passed to one of these methods does not
contain the exact literal string "%s".
User agents must not raise any other exceptions (other than binding-specific exceptions, such as for an incorrect number of arguments in an ECMAScript implementation).
This section does not define how the pages registered by these methods are used, beyond the requirements on how to process the url value (see above). To some extent, the processing model for navigating across documents defines some cases where these methods are relevant, but in general UAs may use this information wherever they would otherwise consider handing content to native plugins or helper applications.
UAs must not use registered content handlers to handle content that was returned as part of a non-GET transaction (or rather, as part of any non-idempotent transaction), as the remote site would not be able to fetch the same data.
These mechanisms can introduce a number of concerns, in particular privacy concerns.
Hijacking all Web usage. User agents should not allow
protocols that are key to its normal operation, such as http
or https, to be rerouted through third-party sites. This
would allow a user's activities to be trivially tracked, and would allow
user information, even in secure connections, to be collected.
Hijacking defaults. It is strongly recommended that user agents do not automatically change any defaults, as this could lead the user to send data to remote hosts that the user is not expecting. New handlers registering themselves should never automatically cause those sites to be used.
Registration spamming. User agents should consider the
possibility that a site will attempt to register a large number of
handlers, possibly from multiple domains (e.g. by redirecting through a
series of pages each on a different domain, and each registering a handler
for video/mpeg — analogous practices abusing other Web
browser features have been used by pornography Web sites for many years).
User agents should gracefully handle such hostile attempts, protecting the
user.
Misleading titles. User agents should not rely wholly
on the title argument to the methods when presenting
the registered handlers to the user, since sites could easily lie. For
example, a site hostile.example.net could claim that it was
registering the "Cuddly Bear Happy Content Handler". User agents should
therefore use the handler's domain in any UI along with any title.
Hostile handler metadata. User agents should protect against typical attacks against strings embedded in their interface, for example ensuring that markup or escape characters in such strings are not executed, that null bytes are properly handled, that over-long strings do not cause crashes or buffer overruns, and so forth.
Leaking Intranet URLs. The mechanism described in this section can result in secret Intranet URLs being leaked, in the following manner:
No actual confidential file data is leaked in this manner, but the URLs
themselves could contain confidential information. For example, the URL
could be
http://www.corp.example.com/upcoming-aquisitions/the-sample-company.egf,
which might tell the third party that Example Corporation is intending to
merge with The Sample Company. Implementors might wish to consider
allowing administrators to disable this feature for certain subdomains,
content types, or protocols.
Leaking secure URLs. User agents should not send HTTPS
URLs to third-party sites registered as content handlers, in the same way
that user agents do not send Referer headers from secure
sites to third-party sites.
Leaking credentials. User agents must never send username or password information in the URLs that are escaped and included sent to the handler sites. User agents may even avoid attempting to pass to Web-based handlers the URLs of resources that are known to require authentication to access, as such sites would be unable to access the resources in question without prompting the user for credentials themselves (a practice that would require the user to know whether to trust the third-party handler, a decision many users are unable to make or even understand).
この節は規定の一部ではありません。
A simple implementation of this feature for a desktop Web browser might work as follows.
The registerProtocolHandler()
method could display a modal dialog box:
||[ Protocol Handler Registration ]||||||||||||||||||||||||||| | | | This Web page: | | | | Kittens at work | | http://kittens.example.org/ | | | | ...would like permission to handle the protocol "x-meow:" | | using the following Web-based application: | | | | Kittens-at-work displayer | | http://kittens.example.org/?show=%s | | | | Do you trust the administrators of the "kittens.example. | | org" domain? | | | | ( Trust kittens.example.org ) (( Cancel )) | |____________________________________________________________|
...where "Kittens at work" is the title of the page that invoked the
method, "http://kittens.example.org/" is the URL of that page, "x-meow" is
the string that was passed to the registerProtocolHandler()
method as its first argument (protocol),
"http://kittens.example.org/?show=%s" was the second argument (url), and "Kittens-at-work displayer" was the third
argument (title).
If the user clicks the Cancel button, then nothing further happens. If the user clicks the "Trust" button, then the handler is remembered.
When the user then attempts to fetch a URL that uses the "x-meow:" scheme, then it might display a dialog as follows:
||[ Unknown Protocol ]|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||| | | | You have attempted to access: | | | | x-meow:S2l0dGVucyBhcmUgdGhlIGN1dGVzdCE%3D | | | | How would you like FerretBrowser to handle this resource? | | | | (o) Contact the FerretBrowser plugin registry to see if | | there is an official way to handle this resource. | | | | ( ) Pass this URL to a local application: | | [ /no application selected/ ] ( Choose ) | | | | ( ) Pass this URL to the "Kittens-at-work displayer" | | application at "kittens.example.org". | | | | [ ] Always do this for resources using the "x-meow" | | protocol in future. | | | | ( Ok ) (( Cancel )) | |____________________________________________________________|
...where the third option is the one that was primed by the site registering itself earlier.
If the user does select that option, then the browser, in accordance with the requirements described in the previous two sections, will redirect the user to "http://kittens.example.org/?show=x-meow%3AS2l0dGVucyBhcmUgdGhlIGN1dGVzdCE%253D".
The registerContentHandler() method
would work equivalently, but for unknown MIME types instead of unknown
protocols.
この節は規定の一部ではありません。
...
An application cache is a collection of resources. An application cache is identified by the absolute URL of a resource manifest which is used to populate the cache.
Application caches are versioned, and there can be different instances of caches for the same manifest URL, each having a different version. A cache is newer than another if it was created after the other (in other words, caches in a group have a chronological order).
Each group of application caches for the same manifest URL have a common update status, which is one of the following: idle, checking, downloading.
A browsing context can be associated with an application cache. A child browsing context is always associated with the same application cache as its parent browsing context, if any. A top-level browsing context is associated with the application cache appropriate for its active document. (A browsing context's associated cache thus can change during session history traversal.)
A Document initially has no appropriate cache, but steps in the parser and in the navigation sections cause cache selection to occur
early in the page load process.
An application cache consists of:
One of more resources (including their out-of-band metadata, such as HTTP headers, if any), identified by URLs, each falling into one (or more) of the following categories:
manifest
attribute.
html element's manifest
attribute. The manifest is fetched and processed during the application cache update process. All the implicit entries
have the same origin as
the manifest.
manifest attribute but that it doesn't
point at this cache's manifest.
add() method.
A URL in the list can be flagged with multiple different types, and thus an entry can end up being categorized as multiple entries. For example, an entry can be an explicit entry and a dynamic entry at the same time.
Multiple application caches can contain the same resource, e.g. if their manifests all reference that resource. If the user agent is to select an application cache from a list of caches that contain a resource, that the user agent must use the application cache that the user most likely wants to see the resource from, taking into account the following:
この節は規定の一部ではありません。
This example manifest requires two images and a style sheet to be cached and whitelists a CGI script.
CACHE MANIFEST # the above line is required # this is a comment # there can be as many of these anywhere in the file # they are all ignored # comments can have spaces before them # but most be alone on the line # blank lines are ignored too # these are files that need to be cached they can either be listed # first, or a "CACHE:" header could be put before them, as is done # lower down. images/sound-icon.png images/background.png # note that each file has to be put on its own line # here is a file for the online whitelist -- it isn't cached, and # references to this file will bypass the cache, always hitting the # network (or trying to, if the user is offline). NETWORK: comm.cgi # here is another set of files to cache, this time just the CSS file. CACHE: style/default.css
Manifests must be served using the text/cache-manifest MIME type. All resources served using
the text/cache-manifest MIME type must follow the
syntax of application cache manifests, as described in this section.
An application cache manifest is a text file, whose text is encoded using UTF-8. Data in application cache manifests is line-based. Newlines must be represented by U+000A LINE FEED (LF) characters, U+000D CARRIAGE RETURN (CR) characters, or U+000D CARRIAGE RETURN (CR) U+000A LINE FEED (LF) pairs.
This is a willful double violation of RFC2046. [RFC2046]
The first line of an application cache manifest must consist of the string "CACHE", a single U+0020 SPACE character, the string "MANIFEST", and zero or more U+0020 SPACE and U+0009 CHARACTER TABULATION (tab) characters. The first line may optionally be preceded by a U+FEFF BYTE ORDER MARK (BOM) character. If any other text is found on the first line, the user agent will ignore the entire file.
Subsequent lines, if any, must all be one of the following:
Blank lines must consist of zero or more U+0020 SPACE and U+0009 CHARACTER TABULATION (tab) characters only.
Comment lines must consist of zero or more U+0020 SPACE and U+0009 CHARACTER TABULATION (tab) characters, followed by a single U+0023 NUMBER SIGN (#) character, followed by zero or more characters other than U+000A LINE FEED (LF) and U+000D CARRIAGE RETURN (CR) characters.
Comments must be on a line on their own. If they were to be included on a line with a URL, the "#" would be mistaken for part of a fragment identifier.
Section headers change the current section. There are three possible section headers:
CACHE:
FALLBACK:
NETWORK:
Section header lines must consist of zero or more U+0020 SPACE and U+0009 CHARACTER TABULATION (tab) characters, followed by one of the names above (including the U+003A COLON (:) character) followed by zero or more U+0020 SPACE and U+0009 CHARACTER TABULATION (tab) characters.
Ironically, by default, the current section is the explicit section.
The format that data lines must take depends on the current section.
When the current section is the explicit section or the online whitelist section, data lines must consist of zero or more U+0020 SPACE and U+0009 CHARACTER TABULATION (tab) characters, a valid URL identifying a resource other than the manifest itself, and then zero or more U+0020 SPACE and U+0009 CHARACTER TABULATION (tab) characters.
When the current section is the fallback section, data lines must consist of zero or more U+0020 SPACE and U+0009 CHARACTER TABULATION (tab) characters, a valid URL identifying a resource other than the manifest itself, one or more U+0020 SPACE and U+0009 CHARACTER TABULATION (tab) characters, another valid URL identifying a resource other than the manifest itself, and then zero or more U+0020 SPACE and U+0009 CHARACTER TABULATION (tab) characters.
The URLs in data lines can't be empty strings, since those would be relative URLs to the manifest itself. Such lines would be confused with blank or invalid lines, anyway.
Manifests may contain sections more than once. Sections may be empty.
URLs that are to be fallback pages associated with opportunistic caching namespaces, and those namespaces themselves, must be given in fallback sections, with the namespace being the first URL of the data line, and the corresponding fallback page being the second URL. All the other pages to be cached must be listed in explicit sections.
Opportunistic caching namespaces must have the same origin as the manifest itself.
An opportunistic caching namespace must not be listed more than once.
URLs that the user agent is to put into the online whitelist must all be specified in online whitelist sections. (This is needed for any URL that the page is intending to use to communicate back to the server.)
URLs in the online whitelist section must not also be listed in explicit section, and must not be listed as fallback entries in the fallback section. (URLs in the online whitelist section may match opportunistic caching namespaces, however.)
Relative URLs must be given relative to the manifest's own URL.
URLs in manifests must not have fragment identifiers (i.e. the U+0023 NUMBER SIGN character isn't allowed in URLs in manifests).
When a user agent is to parse a manifest, it means that the user agent must run the following steps:
The user agent must decode the byte stream corresponding with the manifest to be parsed, treating it as UTF-8. Bytes or sequences of bytes that are not valid UTF-8 sequences must be interpreted as a U+FFFD REPLACEMENT CHARACTER.
Let explicit URLs be an initially empty list of explicit entries.
Let fallback URLs be an initially empty mapping of opportunistic caching namespaces to fallback entries.
Let online whitelist URLs be an initially empty list of URLs for a online whitelist.
Let input be the decoded text of the manifest's byte stream.
Let position be a pointer into input, initially pointing at the first character.
If position is pointing at a U+FEFF BYTE ORDER MARK (BOM) character, then advance position to the next character.
If the characters starting from position are "CACHE", followed by a U+0020 SPACE character, followed by "MANIFEST", then advance position to the next character after those. Otherwise, this isn't a cache manifest; abort this algorithm with a failure while checking for the magic signature.
Collect a sequence of characters that are U+0020 SPACE or U+0009 CHARACTER TABULATION (tab) characters.
If position is not past the end of input and the character at position is neither a U+000A LINE FEED (LF) characters nor a U+000D CARRIAGE RETURN (CR) character, then this isn't a cache manifest; abort this algorithm with a failure while checking for the magic signature.
This is a cache manifest. The algorithm cannot fail beyond this point (though bogus lines can get ignored).
Let mode be "explicit".
Start of line: If position is past the end of input, then jump to the last step. Otherwise, collect a sequence of characters that are U+000A LINE FEED (LF), U+000D CARRIAGE RETURN (CR), U+0020 SPACE, or U+0009 CHARACTER TABULATION (tab) characters.
Now, collect a sequence of characters that are not U+000A LINE FEED (LF) or U+000D CARRIAGE RETURN (CR) characters, and let the result be line.
Drop any trailing U+0020 SPACE, or U+0009 CHARACTER TABULATION (tab) characters at the end of line.
If line is the empty string, then jump back to the step labeled "start of line".
If the first character in line is a U+0023 NUMBER SIGN (#) character, then jump back to the step labeled "start of line".
If line equals "CACHE:" (the word "CACHE" followed by a U+003A COLON (:) character), then set mode to "explicit" and jump back to the step labeled "start of line".
If line equals "FALLBACK:" (the word "FALLBACK" followed by a U+003A COLON (:) character), then set mode to "fallback" and jump back to the step labeled "start of line".
If line equals "NETWORK:" (the word "NETWORK" followed by a U+003A COLON (:) character), then set mode to "online whitelist" and jump back to the step labeled "start of line".
If line ends with a U+003A COLON (:) character, then set mode to "unknown" and jump back to the step labeled "start of line".
This is either a data line or it is syntactically incorrect.
Let position be a pointer into line, initially pointing at the start of the string.
Let tokens be a list of strings, initially empty.
While position doesn't point past the end of line and the character at position is either a U+0020 SPACE or a U+0009 CHARACTER TABULATION (tab) character, advance position to the next character in input.
While position doesn't point past the end of line:
Let current token be an empty string.
While position doesn't point past the end of line and the character at position is neither a U+0020 SPACE nor a U+0009 CHARACTER TABULATION (tab) character, add the character at position to current token and advance position to the next character in input.
Add current token to the tokens list.
While position doesn't point past the end of line and the character at position is either a U+0020 SPACE or a U+0009 CHARACTER TABULATION (tab) character, advance position to the next character in input.
Process tokens as follows:
Resolve the first item in tokens; ignore the rest.
If this fails, then jump back to the step labeled "start of line".
If the resulting absolute URL has a different <scheme> component than the manifest's URL (compared in an ASCII case-insensitive manner), then jump back to the step labeled "start of line".
Drop the <fragment> component of the resulting absolute URL, if it has one.
Add the resulting absolute URL to the explicit URLs.
Let part one be the first token in tokens, and let part two be the second token in tokens.
Resolve part one and part two.
If either fails, then jump back to the step labeled "start of line".
If the absolute URL corresponding to part one does not have the same origin as the manifest's URL, then jump back to the step labeled "start of line".
If the resulting absolute URL for part two has a different <scheme> component than the manifest's URL (compared in an ASCII case-insensitive manner), then jump back to the step labeled "start of line".
Drop any the <fragment> components of the resulting absolute URLs.
If the absolute URL corresponding to part one is already in the fallback URIs mapping as an opportunistic caching namespace, then jump back to the step labeled "start of line".
Otherwise, add the absolute URL corresponding to part one to the fallback URIs mapping as an opportunistic caching namespace, mapped to the absolute URL corresponding to part two as the fallback entry.
Resolve the first item in tokens; ignore the rest.
If this fails, then jump back to the step labeled "start of line".
If the resulting absolute URL has a different <scheme> component than the manifest's URL (compared in an ASCII case-insensitive manner), then jump back to the step labeled "start of line".
Drop the <fragment> component of the resulting absolute URL, if it has one.
Add the resulting absolute URL to the online whitelist URLs.
Do nothing. The line is ignored.
Jump back to the step labeled "start of line". (That step jumps to the next, and last, step when the end of the file is reached.)
Return the explicit URLs list, the fallback URLs mapping, and the online whitelist URLs.
If a resource is listed in both the online whitelist and in the explicit section, then that resource will be fetched and cached, but when the page tries to use this resource, the user agent will ignore the cached copy and attempt to fetch the file from the network. Indeed, the cached copy will only be used if it is opened from a top-level browsing context.
When the user agent is required (by other parts of this specification) to start the application cache update process, the user agent must run the following steps:
the event stuff needs to be more consistent -- something about showing every step of the ui or no steps or something; and we need to deal with showing ui for browsing contexts that open when an update is already in progress, and we may need to give applications control over the ui the first time they cache themselves (right now the original cache is done without notifications to the browsing contexts)
Let manifest URL be the URL of the manifest of the cache to be updated.
Let cache group be the group of application caches identified by manifest URL.
Let cache be the most recently updated application cache identified by manifest URL (that is, the newest version found in cache group).
If the status of the cache group is either checking or downloading, then abort these steps, as an update is already in progress for them. Otherwise, set the status of this group of caches to checking. This entire step must be performed as one atomic operation so as to avoid race conditions.
If there is already a resource with the URL of manifest URL in cache, and that resource is categorized as a manifest, then this is an upgrade attempt. Otherwise, this is a cache attempt.
If this is a cache attempt, then cache is forcibly the only application cache in cache group, and it hasn't ever been populated from its manifest (i.e. this update is an attempt to download the application for the first time). It also can't have any browsing contexts associated with it.
Fire a simple event called checking at the ApplicationCache singleton of each
top-level browsing context that is associated
with a cache in cache group. The default action of
this event should be the display of some sort of user interface
indicating to the user that the user agent is checking for the
availability of updates.
Fetch the resource from manifest URL, and let manifest be that resource.
If the resource is labeled with the MIME type text/cache-manifest, parse manifest
according to the rules for
parsing manifests, obtaining a list of explicit entries, fallback entries
and the opportunistic caching namespaces
that map to them, and entries for the online whitelist.
If the previous step fails (e.g. the server returns a 4xx or 5xx
response or equivalent, or there is a DNS error, or the connection times
out, or the user cancels the download, or the parser for manifests fails
when checking the magic signature), or if the resource is labeled with a
MIME type other than text/cache-manifest, then run
the cache failure steps.
If this is an upgrade attempt and the newly downloaded manifest is byte-for-byte identical to the manifest found in cache, or if the server reported it as "304 Not Modified" or equivalent, then run these substeps:
Fire a simple event called noupdate at the ApplicationCache singleton of each
top-level browsing context that is associated
with a cache in cache group. The default action of
this event should be the display of some sort of user interface
indicating to the user that the application is up to date.
If there are any pending downloads of implicit entries that are being stored in the cache, then wait for all of them to have completed. If any of these downloads fail (e.g. the server returns a 4xx or 5xx response or equivalent, or there is a DNS error, or the connection times out, or the user cancels the download), then run the cache failure steps.
Let the status of the group of caches to which cache belongs be idle. If appropriate, remove any user interface indicating that an update for this cache is in progress.
Abort the update process.
Set the status of cache group to downloading.
Fire a simple event called downloading at the ApplicationCache singleton of each
top-level browsing context that is associated
with a cache in cache group. The default action of
this event should be the display of some sort of user interface
indicating to the user that a new version is being downloaded.
If this is an upgrade attempt, then let new cache be a newly created application cache identified by manifest URL, being a new version in cache group. Otherwise, let new cache and cache be the same version of the application cache.
Let file list be an empty list of URLs with flags.
Add all the URLs in the list of explicit entries obtained by parsing manifest to file list, each flagged with "explicit entry".
Add all the URLs in the list of fallback entries obtained by parsing manifest to file list, each flagged with "fallback entry".
If this is an upgrade attempt, then add all the URLs of opportunistically cached entries in cache that match the opportunistic caching namespaces obtained by parsing manifest to file list, each flagged with "opportunistic entry".
If this is an upgrade attempt, then add all the URLs of implicit entries in cache to file list, each flagged with "implicit entry".
If this is an upgrade attempt, then add all the URLs of dynamic entries in cache to file list, each flagged with "dynamic entry".
If any URL is in file list more than once, then merge the entries into one entry for that URL, that entry having all the flags that the original entries had.
For each URL in file list, run the following steps. These steps may be run in parallel for two or more of the URLs at a time.
Fire a simple event called progress at the
ApplicationCache
singleton of each top-level browsing context
that is associated with a cache in cache group.
The default action of this event should be the display of some sort of
user interface indicating to the user that a file is being downloaded
in preparation for updating the application.
Fetch the resource. If this is an upgrade attempt, then use cache as an HTTP cache, and honor HTTP caching semantics (such as expiration, ETags, and so forth) with respect to that cache. User agents may also have other caches in place that are also honored.
If the resource in question is already being downloaded for other reasons then the existing download process can be used for the purposes of this step, as defined by the fetching algorithm.
An example of a resource that might already be being
downloaded is a large image on a Web page that is being seen for the
first time. The image would get downloaded to satisfy the img element on the page, as well as being
listed in the cache manifest. According to the rules for fetching that image only need be
downloaded once, and it can be used both for the cache and for the
rendered Web page.
If the previous steps fails (e.g. the server returns a 4xx or 5xx response or equivalent, or there is a DNS error, or the connection times out, or the user cancels the download), then run the cache failure steps.
Otherwise, the fetching succeeded. Store the resource in the new cache.
If the URL being processed was flagged as an "explicit entry" in file list, then categorize the entry as an explicit entry.
If the URL being processed was flagged as a "fallback entry" in file list, then categorize the entry as a fallback entry.
If the URL being processed was flagged as a "opportunistic entry" in file list, then categorize the entry as an opportunistically cached entry.
If the URL being processed was flagged as an "implicit entry" in file list, then categorize the entry as a implicit entry.
If the URL being processed was flagged as an "dynamic entry" in file list, then categorize the entry as a dynamic entry.
Store manifest in new cache, if it's not there already, and categorize this entry (whether newly added or not) as the manifest.
Store the list of opportunistic caching namespaces, and the URLs of the fallback entries that they map to, in the new cache.
Store the URLs that form the new online whitelist in the new cache.
Wait for all pending downloads of implicit entries that are being stored in the cache to have completed.
For example, if the top-level browsing context's active document isn't itself listed in the cache manifest, then it might still be being downloaded.
If any of these downloads fail (e.g. the server returns a 4xx or 5xx response or equivalent, or there is a DNS error, or the connection times out, or the user cancels the download), then run the cache failure steps.
If this is a cache attempt, then:
Associate any Document
objects that were flagged as
candidates for this manifest URL's caches with cache.
Fire a simple event called cached at the ApplicationCache singleton of each
top-level browsing context that is associated
with a cache in cache group. The default action of
this event should be the display of some sort of user interface
indicating to the user that the application has been cached and that
they can now use it offline.
Set the status of cache group to idle.
Otherwise, this is an upgrade attempt:
Fire a simple event called updateready at the ApplicationCache singleton of each
top-level browsing context that is associated
with a cache in cache group. The default action of
this event should be the display of some sort of user interface
indicating to the user that a new version is available and that they can
activate it by reloading the page.
Set the status of cache group to idle.
The cache failure steps are as follows:
Fire a simple event called error at the ApplicationCache singleton of each
top-level browsing context that is associated
with a cache in cache group. The default action of
this event should be the display of some sort of user interface
indicating to the user that the user agent failed to save the
application for offline use.
If this is a cache attempt, then discard cache and abort the update process.
Otherwise, let the status of the group of caches to which cache belongs be idle. If appropriate, remove any user interface indicating that an update for this cache is in progress. Abort the update process.
The processing model of application caches for offline support in Web applications is part of the navigation model, but references the algorithms defined in this section.
A URL matches an opportunistic caching namespace if there exists an application cache whose manifest's URL has the same origin as the URL in question, and if that application cache has an opportunistic caching namespace with a <path> component that exactly matches the start of the <path> component of the URL being examined. If multiple opportunistic caching namespaces match the same URL, the one with the longest <path> component is the one that matches. A URL looking for an opportunistic caching namespace can match more than one application cache at a time, but only matches one namespace in each cache.
If a manifest http://example.com/app1/manifest
declares that http://example.com/resources/images
should be opportunistically cached, and the user navigates to http://example.com/resources/images/cat.png, then the
user agent will decide that the application cache identified by http://example.com/app1/manifest contains a namespace
with a match for that URL.
When the application cache selection algorithm algorithm is invoked with a manifest URL, the user agent must run the first applicable set of steps from the following list:
As an optimization, if the resource was loaded from an application cache, and the manifest URL of that cache doesn't match the manifest URL with which the algorithm was invoked, then the user agent should mark the entry in that application cache corresponding to the resource that was just loaded as being foreign.
Other than that, nothing special happens with respect to application caches.
Associate the Document with the cache from which it was
loaded. Invoke the application cache update
process.
Mark the entry for this resource in the application cache from which it was loaded as foreign.
Restart the current navigation from the top of the navigation algorithm, undoing any changes that were made as part of the initial load (changes can be avoided by ensuring that the step to update the session history with the new page is only ever completed after the application cache selection algorithm is run, though this is not required).
The navigation will not result in the same resource being loaded, because "foreign" entries are never picked during navigation.
User agents may notify the user of the inconsistency between the cache manifest and the resource's own metadata, to aid in application development.
If the manifest URL does not have the same origin as the resource's own URL, then invoke the application cache selection algorithm again, but without a manifest, and abort these steps.
If there is already an application cache
identified by this manifest URL, and the most up to date version of
that application cache contains a resource
with the URL of the manifest, and that resource is categorized as a manifest,
then: store the resource in the matching cache, categorized as an implicit entry,
associate the Document with that cache, invoke the application cache update process, and abort
these steps.
Flag the resource's Document as a candidate for this
manifest URL's caches, so that it will be associated with an application
cache identified by this manifest URL later, when such an application cache is ready.
If there is already an application cache identified by this manifest URL, then the most up to date version of that application cache does not yet contain a resource with the URL of the manifest, or it does but that resource is not yet categorized as a manifest: store the resource in that cache, categorized as an implicit entry (replacing the file's previous contents if it was already in the cache, but not removing any other categories it might have), and abort these steps. (An application cache update process is already in progress.)
Otherwise, there is no matching application cache: create a new application cache identified by this manifest URL, store the resource in that cache, categorized as an implicit entry, and then invoke the application cache update process.
Invoke the application cache selection algorithm again, but without a manifest.
When the application cache selection
algorithm is invoked without a manifest, then: if the
resource is being loaded as part of navigation of a top-level browsing context, and the resource was
fetched from a particular application cache,
then the user agent must associate the Document with that
application cache and invoke the application cache
update process for that cache; otherwise, nothing special happens with
respect to application caches.
When a browsing context is associated with an application cache, any and all resource loads must go through the following steps instead of immediately invoking the mechanisms appropriate to that resource's scheme:
If the resource is not to be fetched using the HTTP GET mechanism or equivalent, then fetch the resource normally and abort these steps.
If the resource's URL, ignoring its fragment identifier if any, is listed in the application cache's online whitelist, then fetch the resource normally and abort these steps.
If the resource's URL is an implicit entry, the manifest, an explicit entry, a fallback entry, an opportunistically cached entry, or a dynamic entry in the application cache, then get the resource from the cache (instead of fetching it), and abort these steps.
If the resource's URL has the same origin as the manifest's URL, and the start of the resource's URL's <path> component is exactly matched by the <path> component of an opportunistic caching namespace in the application cache, then:
Fetch the resource normally. If this results 4xx or 5xx status codes or equivalent, or if there were network errors (but not if the user canceled the download), then instead get, from the cache, the resource of the fallback entry corresponding to the namespace with the longest matching <path> component. Abort these steps.
Fail the resource load.
The above algorithm ensures that resources that are not present in the manifest will always fail to load (at least, after the cache has been primed the first time), making the testing of offline applications simpler.
interface ApplicationCache {
// update status
const unsigned short UNCACHED = 0;
const unsigned short IDLE = 1;
const unsigned short CHECKING = 2;
const unsigned short DOWNLOADING = 3;
const unsigned short UPDATEREADY = 4;
readonly attribute unsigned short status;
// updates
void update();
void swapCache();
// dynamic entries
readonly attribute unsigned long length;
DOMString item(in unsigned long index);
void add(in DOMString url);
void remove(in DOMString url);
// events
attribute EventListener onchecking;
attribute EventListener onerror;
attribute EventListener onnoupdate;
attribute EventListener ondownloading;
attribute EventListener onprogress;
attribute EventListener onupdateready;
attribute EventListener oncached;
};
Objects implementing the ApplicationCache interface must also
implement the EventTarget interface.
There is a one-to-one mapping from Document objects to
ApplicationCache objects. The
applicationCache attribute
on Window objects must return the
ApplicationCache object
associated with the active document of the Window's browsing
context.
An ApplicationCache object
might be associated with an application cache.
When the Document object that the ApplicationCache object maps to is
associated with an application cache, then that is the application cache
with which the ApplicationCache object is associated.
Otherwise, the ApplicationCache object is associated
with the application cache that the Document object's browsing context is associated with, if any.
The status
attribute, on getting, must return the current state of the application cache ApplicationCache object is associated
with, if any. This must be the appropriate value from the following list:
UNCACHED (数値 0)The ApplicationCache
object is not associated with an application
cache at this time.
IDLE (数値 1)The ApplicationCache
object is associated with an application
cache whose group is in the idle update status, and that application
cache is the newest cache in its group that contains a resource
categorized as a manifest.
CHECKING (数値 2)The ApplicationCache
object is associated with an application
cache whose group is in the checking update status.
DOWNLOADING (数値 3)The ApplicationCache
object is associated with an application
cache whose group is in the downloading update status.
UPDATEREADY (数値 4)The ApplicationCache
object is associated with an application
cache whose group is in the idle update status, but that application
cache is not the newest cache in its group that contains a
resource categorized as a manifest.
The length
attribute must return the number of dynamic entries in the application cache with which the ApplicationCache object is associated,
if any, and zero if the object is not associated with any application
cache.
The dynamic
entries in the application cache are
ordered in the same order as they were added to the cache by the add() method, with the
oldest entry being the zeroth entry, and the most recently added entry
having the index length-1.
The item(index) method must return the absolute URL of the dynamic entry with index index from the application
cache, if one is associated with the ApplicationCache object. If the object
is not associated with any application cache, or if the index argument is lower than zero or greater than
length-1, the method must instead raise
an INDEX_SIZE_ERR exception.
The add(url) method must run the following steps:
If the ApplicationCache
object is not associated with any application cache, then raise an
INVALID_STATE_ERR exception and abort these steps.
Resolve the url argument. If this fails, raise a
SYNTAX_ERR exception and abort these steps.
If there is already a resource in in the application cache with which the ApplicationCache object is
associated that has the address url, then ensure
that entry is categorized as a dynamic entry and return and abort
these steps.
If url has a different <scheme> component than the manifest's URL, then raise a security exception.
Return, but do not abort these steps.
Fetch the resource referenced by url.
If this results 4xx or 5xx status codes or equivalent, or if there were network errors, or if the user canceled the download, then abort these steps.
Wait for there to be no running scripts, or at least no running
scripts that can reach an ApplicationCache object associated
with the application cache with which this
ApplicationCache object is
associated.
Add the fetched resource to the application cache and categorize it as a dynamic entry before letting any such scripts resume.
We can make the add() API more usable (i.e. make it possible to detect progress and distinguish success from errors without polling and timeouts) if we have the method return an object that is a target of Progress Events, much like the XMLHttpRequestEventTarget interface. This would also make this far more complex to spec and implement.
The remove(url) method must resolve the url argument
and, if that is successful, remove the dynamic entry categorization of any
entry whose address is the resulting absolute URL
in the application cache with which the
ApplicationCache object is
associated. If this removes the last categorization of an entry in that
cache, then the entry must be removed entirely (such that if it is
re-added, it will be loaded from the network again). If the ApplicationCache object is not
associated with any application cache, then the method must raise an
INVALID_STATE_ERR exception instead.
If the update() method is invoked,
the user agent must invoke the application cache
update process, in the background, for the application cache with which the ApplicationCache object is associated.
If there is no such application cache, then the method must raise an
INVALID_STATE_ERR exception instead.
If the swapCache() method is
invoked, the user agent must run the following steps:
Let document be the Document with
which the ApplicationCache
object is associated.
Check that document is associated with an application cache. If it is not, then raise an
INVALID_STATE_ERR exception and abort these steps.
This is not the same thing as the ApplicationCache object being itself
associated with an application cache! In
particular, the Document with which the ApplicationCache object is
associated can only itself be associated with an application cache if it
is in a top-level browsing context.
Let cache be the application cache with which the ApplicationCache object is
associated. (By definition, this is the same as the one that was found
in the previous step.)
Check that there is an application cache in the same group as cache which has an entry categorized as a manifest that
has is newer than cache. If there is not, then raise
an INVALID_STATE_ERR exception and abort these steps.
Let new cache be the newest application cache in the same group as cache which has an entry categorized as a manifest.
Unassociate document from cache and instead associate it with new cache.
The following are the event handler DOM attributes
that must be supported by objects implementing the ApplicationCache interface:
onchecking
Must be invoked whenever an checking
event is targeted at or bubbles through the ApplicationCache object.
onerror
Must be invoked whenever an error event is targeted at or bubbles through
the ApplicationCache
object.
onnoupdate
Must be invoked whenever an noupdate
event is targeted at or bubbles through the ApplicationCache object.
ondownloading
Must be invoked whenever an downloading event is targeted at or
bubbles through the ApplicationCache object.
onprogress
Must be invoked whenever an progress event is targeted at or bubbles
through the ApplicationCache object.
onupdateready
Must be invoked whenever an updateready event is targeted at or
bubbles through the ApplicationCache object.
oncached
cached 事象が当該 ApplicationCache オブジェクトを対象としているか、泡立って当該オブジェクトを通過する時に、
呼び出されなければなりません。
The navigator.onLine attribute
must return false if the user agent will not contact the network when the
user follows links or when a script requests a remote page (or knows that
such an attempt would fail), and must return true otherwise.
When the value that would be returned by the navigator.onLine attribute of the
Window changes from true to false, the
user agent must fire a simple event called offline at the body element.
On the other hand, when the value that would be returned by the navigator.onLine attribute of the
Window changes from false to true, the
user agent must fire a simple event called online at the body element.
The sequence of Documents in a browsing context is its session
history.
History objects provide a
representation of the pages in the session history of browsing contexts. Each browsing context has
a distinct session history.
Each Document object in a browsing context's session
history is associated with a unique instance of the History object, although they all must model
the same underlying session history.
The history
attribute of the Window interface must
return the object implementing the History interface for that Window object's active
document.
History objects represent their browsing context's session history as a flat list of
session history
entries. Each session history entry consists of
either a URL or a state object, or
both, and may in addition have a title, a Document object,
form data, a scroll position, and other information associated with it.
This does not imply that the user interface need be linear. See the notes below.
URLs without associated state objects are added to the session history as the user (or script) navigates from page to page.
A state object is an object representing a user interface state.
Pages can add state objects between their entry in the session history and the next ("forward") entry. These are then returned to the script when the user (or script) goes back in the history, thus enabling authors to use the "navigation" metaphor even in one-page applications.
Every Document in the session history is defined to have a
last activated entry, which is the state object entry associated with that
Document which was most recently activated. Initially, the last activated entry of a Document
must be the first entry for the Document, representing the
fact that no state object entry has yet been
activated.
At any point, one of the entries in the session history is the current entry. This is the entry representing the active document of the browsing
context. The current entry is usually an entry
for the location of the
Document. However, it can also be one of the entries for state objects added to the history
by that document.
Entries that consist of state
objects share the same Document as the entry for the page
that was active when they were added.
Contiguous entries that differ just by fragment identifier also share
the same Document.
All entries that share the same Document (and
that are therefore merely different states of one particular document) are
contiguous by definition.
User agents may discard the Document objects of entries other
than the current entry that are not referenced
from any script, reloading the pages afresh when the user or script
navigates back to such pages. This specification does not specify when
user agents should discard Document objects and when they
should cache them.
Entries that have had their Document objects discarded
must, for the purposes of the algorithms given below, act as if they had
not. When the user or script navigates back or forwards to a page which
has no in-memory DOM objects, any other entries that shared the same
Document object with it must share the new object as well.
When state object entries are added, a URL can be provided. This URL is
used to replace the state object entry if the Document is
evicted.
When a user agent discards the Document object from an
entry in the session history, it must also discard all the entries that
share that Document but do not have an associated URL (i.e.
entries that only have a state object). Entries that
shared that Document object but had a state object and have a
different URL must then have their state objects removed. Removed
entries are not recreated if the user or script navigates back to the
page. If there are no state object entries for that Document
object then no entries are removed.
History 界面interface History {
readonly attribute long length;
void go(in long delta);
void go();
void back();
void forward();
void pushState(in DOMObject data, in DOMString title);
void pushState(in DOMObject data, in DOMString title, in DOMString url);
void clearState();
};
The length
attribute of the History interface
must return the number of entries in this session
history.
The actual entries are not accessible from script.
The go(delta) method causes the UA to move the number
of steps specified by delta in the session history.
If the index of the current entry plus delta is less than zero or greater than or equal to the number of items in the session history, then the user agent must do nothing.
If the delta is zero, then the user agent must act
as if the location.reload() method
was called instead.
Otherwise, the user agent must cause the current browsing context to traverse the history to the specified entry. The specified entry is the one whose index equals the index of the current entry plus delta.
When the user navigates through a browsing
context, e.g. using a browser's back and forward buttons, the user
agent must translate this action into the equivalent invocations of the
history.go(delta) method on the various affected window objects.
Some of the other members of the History interface are defined in terms of the
go() method, as
follows:
| Member | Definition |
|---|---|
go()
| Must do the same as go(0)
|
back()
| Must do the same as go(-1)
|
forward()
| Must do the same as go(1)
|
The pushState(data, title, url) method adds a state object to the
history.
When this method is invoked, the user agent must run the following steps:
If a third argument is specified, run these substeps:
pushState() steps.
pushState()
steps.
For the purposes of the comparison in the above substeps, the <path> and <query> components can only be the same if the URLs use a hierarchical <scheme>.
Remove from the session history any entries for
the Document from the entry after the current entry up to the last entry in the session
history that references the same Document object, if any.
If the current entry is the last entry in the
session history, or if there are no entries after the current entry that reference the same
Document object, then no entries are removed.
Add a state object entry to the session history, after the current entry, with the specified data as the state object, the given title as the title, and, if the third argument is present, the absolute URL that was found in the first step as the URL of the entry.
Set this new entry as being the last
activated entry for the Document.
Update the current entry to be the this newly added entry.
title is purely advisory. User agents might use the title in the user 界面。
User agents may limit the number of state objects added to the session
history per page. If a page hits the UA-defined limit, user agents must
remove the entry immediately after the first entry for that
Document object in the session history after having added the
new entry. (Thus the state history acts as a FIFO buffer for eviction, but
as a LIFO buffer for navigation.)
The clearState() method
removes all the state objects for the Document object from
the session history.
When this method is invoked, the user agent must remove from the session
history all the entries from the first state object entry for that
Document object up to the last entry that references that
same Document object, if any.
Then, if the current entry was removed in the
previous step, the current entry must be set to
the last entry for that Document object in the session
history.
When an entry in the session history is activated (which happens during session traversal, as described above), the user agent must run the following steps:
First, the user agent must set this new entry as being the last activated entry for the
Document to which the entry belongs.
If the entry is a state object entry, let state be that state object. Otherwise, the entry is the
first entry for the Document; let state
be null.
The user agent must then fire a popstate event in no namespace
on the body element using the PopStateEvent interface, with the state
attribute set to the value of state. This event
bubbles but is not cancelable and has no default action.
interface PopStateEvent : Event {
readonly attribute DOMObject state;
void initPopStateEvent(in DOMString typeArg, in boolean canBubbleArg, in boolean cancelableArg, in DOMObject stateArg);
void initPopStateEventNS(in DOMString namespaceURIArg, in DOMString typeArg, in boolean canBubbleArg, in boolean cancelableArg, in DOMObject stateArg);
};
initPopStateEvent()
メソッドと initMessageEventNS()
メソッドは、 DOM3 事象界面の似たような名前のメソッドと同じような方法で事象を初期化しなければなりません。
[DOM3EVENTS]
The state attribute
represents the context information for the event, or null, if the state
represented is the initial state of the Document.
Location 界面Each Document object in a browsing
context's session history is associated with a unique instance of a
Location object.
The location attribute of the
HTMLDocument interface must
return the Location object for that
Document object, if it is in a browser context,
and null otherwise.
The location
attribute of the Window interface must
return the Location object for that
Window object's active document.
Location objects provide a
representation of their document's
address, and allow the current entry of the
browsing context's session history to be changed,
by adding or replacing entries in the history object.
interface Location {
readonly attribute DOMString href;
void assign(in DOMString url);
void replace(in DOMString url);
void reload();
// URL decomposition attributes
attribute DOMString protocol;
attribute DOMString host;
attribute DOMString hostname;
attribute DOMString port;
attribute DOMString pathname;
attribute DOMString search;
attribute DOMString hash;
};
The href
attribute must return the
address of the page represented by the associated
Document object, as an absolute URL.
On setting,
the user agent must act as if the assign() method had been called with the new
value as its argument.
When the assign(url) method is invoked, the UA must navigate the browsing
context to the specified url.
When the replace(url) method is invoked, the UA must navigate the browsing
context to the specified url with replacement enabled.
Navigation for the assign() and replace() methods must be done with the script browsing context of the script that invoked the
method as the source browsing context.
The Location interface also has
the complement of URL decomposition
attributes, protocol, host, port, hostname, pathname, search, and hash. These must follow the
rules given for URL decomposition attributes, with the input being the address of the page represented by
the associated Document object, as an absolute URL (same as the href attribute), and
the common setter action
being the same as setting the href attribute to the new output value.
User agents must raise a security exception
whenever any of the members of a Location object are accessed by scripts whose
effective script origin is not the same as the Location object's associated
Document's effective script origin,
with the following exceptions:
href
setter, if the script is running in a browsing
context that is allowed to navigate the
browsing context with which the Location object is associated
User agents must not allow scripts to override the href attribute's
setter.
この節は規定の一部ではありません。
The History interface is not meant
to place restrictions on how implementations represent the session history
to the user.
For example, session history could be implemented in a tree-like manner,
with each page having multiple "forward" pages. This specification doesn't
define how the linear list of pages in the history object are derived from the actual
session history as seen from the user's perspective.
Similarly, a page containing two iframes has a history object distinct from the iframes' history objects, despite the fact that typical
Web browsers present the user with just one "Back" button, with a session
history that interleaves the navigation of the two inner frames and the
outer page.
Security: It is suggested that to avoid letting a page
"hijack" the history navigation facilities of a UA by abusing pushState(),
the UA provide the user with a way to jump back to the previous page
(rather than just going back to the previous state). For example, the back
button could have a drop down showing just the pages in the session
history, and not showing any of the states. Similarly, an aural browser
could have two "back" commands, one that goes back to the previous state,
and one that jumps straight back to the previous page.
In addition, a user agent could ignore calls to pushState()
that are invoked on a timer, or from event handlers that do not represent
a clear user action, or that are invoked in rapid succession.
Certain actions cause the browsing context to navigate to a new resource. Navigation always involves source browsing context, which is the browsing context which was responsible for starting the navigation.
For example, following a hyperlink, form
submission, and the window.open() and location.assign()
methods can all cause a browsing context to navigate.
A user agent may provide various ways for the user to explicitly cause a browsing context to navigate, in addition to those defined in this specification.
When a browsing context is navigated to a new resource, the user agent must run the following steps:
If the source browsing context is not the same as the browsing context being navigated, and the source browsing context is not one of the ancestor browsing contexts of the browsing context being navigated, and the source browsing context has its sandboxed navigation browsing context flag set, then abort these steps. The user agent may offer to open the new resource in a new top-level browsing context or in the top-level browsing context of the source browsing context, at the user's option, in which case the user agent must navigate that designated top-level browsing context to the new resource as if the user had requested it independently.
If the source browsing context is the same as the browsing context being navigated, and this browsing context has its seamless browsing context flag set, then find the nearest ancestor browsing context that does not have its seamless browsing context flag set, and continue these steps as if that browsing context was the one that was going to be navigated instead.
Cancel any preexisting attempt to navigate the browsing context.
If the new resource is to be handled by displaying some sort of inline content, e.g. an error message because the specified scheme is not one of the supported protocols, or an inline prompt to allow the user to select a registered handler for the given scheme, then display the inline content and abort these steps.
If the new resource is to be handled using a mechanism that does not affect the browsing context, e.g. ignoring the navigation request altogether because the specified scheme is not one of the supported protocols, then abort these steps and proceed with that mechanism instead.
If the new resource is to be fetched using HTTP GET or equivalent, and if the browsing context being navigated is a top-level browsing context, then check if there are any application caches that have a manifest with the same origin as the URL in question, and that have this URL as one of their entries (excluding entries marked as foreign), and that already contain their manifest, categorized as a manifest. If so, then the user agent must then get the resource from the most appropriate application cache of those that match.
Otherwise, fetch the new resource. If this results in a redirect, return to the step labeled "fragment identifiers" with the new resource.
For example, imagine an HTML page with an associated application cache displaying an image and a form, where the image is also used by several other application caches. If the user right-clicks on the image and chooses "View Image", then the user agent could decide to show the image from any of those caches, but it is likely that the most useful cache for the user would be the one that was used for the aforementioned HTML page. On the other hand, if the user submits the form, and the form does a POST submission, then the user agent will not use an application cache at all; the submission will be made to the network.
If fetching the resource is synchronous (i.e. for javascript: URLs and about:blank), then this must be
synchronous, but if fetching the resource depends on external resources,
as it usually does for URLs that use HTTP or other networking protocols,
then at this point the user agents must yield to whatever script invoked
the navigation steps, if they were invoked by script.
Wait for one or more bytes to be available or for the user agent to establish that the resource in question is empty. During this time, the user agent may allow the user to cancel this navigation attempt or start other navigation attempts.
If the resource was not fetched from an application cache, and was to be fetched using HTTP GET or equivalent, and its URL matches the opportunistic caching namespace of one or more application caches, and the user didn't cancel the navigation attempt during the previous step, then:
Let candidate be the fallback resource specified for the opportunistic caching namespace in question. If multiple application caches match, the user agent must use the fallback of the most appropriate application cache of those that match.
If candidate is not marked as foreign, then the user agent must discard the failed load and instead continue along these steps using candidate as the resource.
For the purposes of session history (and features that depend on session history, e.g. bookmarking) the user agent must use the URL of the resource that was requested (the one that matched the opportunistic caching namespace), not the fallback resource. However, the user agent may indicate to the user that the original page load failed, that the page used was a fallback resource, and what the URL of the fallback resource actually is.
Once the download is complete, if there were no errors and the user didn't cancel the request, the user agent must cache the resource in all the application caches that have a matching opportunistic caching namespace, categorized as opportunistically cached entries. Meanwhile, the user must continue along these steps.
If the document's out-of-band metadata (e.g. HTTP headers), not counting any type information (such as the Content-Type HTTP header), requires some sort of processing that will not affect the browsing context, then perform that processing and abort these steps.
Such processing might be triggered by, amongst other things, the following:
Let type be the sniffed type of the resource.
If the user agent has been configured to process resources of the given type using some mechanism other than rendering the content in a browsing context, then skip this step. Otherwise, if the type is one of the following types, jump to the appropriate entry in the following list, and process the resource as described there:
Otherwise, the document's type is such that the resource will not affect the browsing context, e.g. because the resource is to be handed to an external application. Process the resource appropriately.
Some of the sections below, to which the above algorithm defers in certain cases, require the user agent to update the session history with the new page. When a user agent is required to do this, it must follows the set of steps given below that is appropriate for the situation at hand. From the point of view of any script, these steps must occur atomically.
pause for scripts -- but don't use the "pause" definition since that involves not running script!
onbeforeunload, and if present set flag that we will kill document
onunload, and if present set flag that we will kill document
if flag is set: discard the Document
Replace the entry being updated with a new entry representing the
new resource and its Document object and related state.
The user agent may propagate state from the old entry to the new
entry (e.g. scroll position).
Traverse the history to the new entry.
Remove all the entries after the current
entry in the browsing context's
Document object's History object.
This doesn't necessarily have to affect the user agent's user interface.
Append a new entry at the end of the History object representing the new
resource and its Document object and related state.
Traverse the history to the new entry.
If the navigation was initiated with replacement enabled, remove the entry immediately before the new current entry in the session history.
HTML 文書が閲覧文脈に読み込まれるとき、
利用者エージェントは、 Document オブジェクトを作成し、
それに HTML
文書であるとの印を付け、HTML 構文解析器を作成し、
これをその文書と関連付け、
その文書に対して提供されたバイト列を構文解析器の入力ストリームとして使い始めなければなりません。
入力ストリームはバイト列を文字列に変換し、 字句化器で使用できるようにします。この過程は、部分的に、 資源の実際の Content-Type メタデータに現れる文字符号化情報に依存しています。 ここでは「探知型」は使用しません。
それ以上のバイトが存在しなくなると、暗黙の EOF 文字の存在が仮定され、
それによって load 事象が発火されることとなります。
Document オブジェクトが作成された後に、
頁が構文解析を完了される前でも構いませんが、
利用者エージェントは、新しい頁によりセッション履歴を更新しなければなりません。
アプリケーション・キャッシュの選択が HTML 構文解析器の中で起こります。
利用者エージェントは、 XML ファイルを行内で表示することになったとき、
まず Document オブジェクトを XML と XML 名前空間の勧告、
RFC 3023、DOM3 中核、その他関連する仕様書に従って作成しなければなりません。
[XML] [XMLNS] [RFC3023] [DOM3CORE]
The actual HTTP headers and other metadata, not the headers as mutated or implied by the algorithms given in this specification, are the ones that must be used when determining the character encoding according to the rules given in the above specifications. Once the character encoding is established, the document's character encoding must be set to that character encoding.
If the root element, as parsed according to the XML specifications cited
above, is found to be an html element
with an attribute manifest, then, as soon as the element is
inserted into the DOM, the user agent must resolve the value of that attribute, and if that
is successful, must run the application cache selection
algorithm with the resulting absolute URL as
the manifest URL. Otherwise, if the attribute is absent or resolving it
fails, then as soon as the root element is inserted into the DOM, the user
agent must run the application cache selection
algorithm with no manifest.
Because the processing of the manifest attribute
happens only once the root element is parsed, any URLs referenced by
processing instructions before the root element (such as <?xml-styleesheet?> and <?xbl?> PIs) will be fetched from the network and
cannot be cached.
User agents may examine the namespace of the root Element
node of this Document object to perform namespace-based
dispatch to alternative processing tools, e.g. determining that the
content is actually a syndication feed and passing it to a feed handler.
If such processing is to take place, abort the steps in this section, and
jump to the next step (labeled
"non-document content") in the navigate steps
above.
そうでない場合には、利用者エージェントは、新たに作成された
Document によって、
新しい頁によりセッション履歴を更新しなければなりません。
利用者エージェントは、これを文書全体が構文解析される前に行って
(逐次的レンダリングを実現して) も構いません。
構文解析過程の誤りメッセージ (例えば名前空間整形式性誤り)
は Document を変異させることによって行内で報告して構いません。
When a plain text document is to be loaded in a browsing context, the user agent should create a
Document object, mark it as being an HTML document, create an HTML
parser, associate it with the document, act as if the tokeniser had
emitted a start tag token with the tag name "pre", set the tokenization stage's content
model flag to PLAINTEXT, and begin to pass the stream of
characters in the plain text document to that tokeniser.
The rules for how to convert the bytes of the plain text document into actual characters are defined in RFC 2046, RFC 2646, and subsequent versions thereof. [RFC2046] [RFC2646]
The document's character encoding must be set to the character encoding used to decode the document.
Upon creation of the Document object, the user agent must
run the application cache selection
algorithm with no manifest.
When no more character are available, an EOF character is implied, which
eventually causes a load event to be fired.
Document オブジェクトが作成された後に、
頁が構文解析を完了される前でも構いませんが、
利用者エージェントは、新しい頁によりセッション履歴を更新しなければなりません。
User agents may add content to the head
element of the Document, e.g. linking to stylesheet or an XBL
binding, providing script, giving the document a title, etc.
When an image resource is to be loaded in a browsing context, the user agent should create a
Document object, mark it as being an HTML document, append an html element to the Document, append
a head element and a body element to the html element, append an img to the body
element, and set the src attribute of the img element to the address of the image.
Then, the user agent must act as if it had stopped parsing.
Upon creation of the Document object, the user agent must
run the application cache selection
algorithm with no manifest.
After creating the Document object, but potentially before
the page has finished fully loading, the user agent must update the session history with the new page.
User agents may add content to the head
element of the Document, or attributes to the img element, e.g. to link to stylesheet or an XBL
binding, to provide a script, to give the document a title, etc.
When a resource that requires an external resource to be rendered is to
be loaded in a browsing context, the user agent
should create a Document object, mark it as being an HTML document, append an html element to the Document, append
a head element and a body element to the html element, append an embed to the body element, and set the src attribute of the
embed element to the address of the
resource.
Then, the user agent must act as if it had stopped parsing.
Upon creation of the Document object, the user agent must
run the application cache selection
algorithm with no manifest.
After creating the Document object, but potentially before
the page has finished fully loading, the user agent must update the session history with the new page.
User agents may add content to the head
element of the Document, or attributes to the embed element, e.g. to link to stylesheet or an
XBL binding, or to give the document a title.
When the user agent is to display a user agent page inline in a browsing context, the user agent should create a
Document object, mark it as being an HTML document, and then either associate that
Document with a custom rendering that is not rendered using
the normal Document rendering rules, or mutate that
Document until it represents the content the user agent wants
to render.
Once the page has been set up, the user agent must act as if it had stopped parsing.
Upon creation of the Document object, the user agent must
run the application cache selection
algorithm with no manifest.
After creating the Document object, but potentially before
the page has been completely set up, the user agent must update the session history with the new page.
When a user agent is supposed to navigate to a fragment identifier, then
the user agent must update the session history with the
new page, where "the new page" has the same Document as
before but with the URL having the newly specified fragment identifier.
Part of that algorithm involves the user agent having to scroll to the fragment identifier, which is the important part for this step.
When the user agent is required to scroll to the fragment identifier, it must change the scrolling position of the document, or perform some other action, such that the indicated part of the document is brought to the user's attention. If there is no indicated part, then the user agent must not scroll anywhere.
The indicated part of the document is the one that the fragment identifier, if any, identifies. The semantics of the fragment identifier in terms of mapping it to a specific DOM Node is defined by the MIME type specification of the document's MIME Type (for example, the processing of fragment identifiers for XML MIME types is the responsibility of RFC3023).
For HTML documents (and the text/html MIME type), the
following processing model must be followed to determine what the indicated part of the document is.
Parse the URL, and let fragid be the <fragment> component of the URL.
If fragid is the empty string, then the indicated part of the document is the top of the document.
If there is an element in the DOM that has an ID exactly equal to fragid, then the first such element in tree order is the indicated part of the document; stop the algorithm here.
If there is an a element in the DOM that
has a name attribute whose value is
exactly equal to fragid, then the first such element in tree
order is the indicated part of the
document; stop the algorithm here.
Otherwise, there is no indicated part of the document.
For the purposes of the interaction of HTML with Selectors' :target pseudo-class, the target element is the indicated part of the document, if that is
an element; otherwise there is no target element. [SELECTORS]
When a user agent is required to traverse the history to a specified entry, the user agent must act as follows:
If there is no longer a Document object for the entry in
question, the user agent must navigate the
browsing context to the location for that entry to perform an entry update of that entry, and abort these steps. The
"navigate" algorithm reinvokes this "traverse"
algorithm to complete the traversal, at which point there is a
Document object and so this step gets skipped. The
navigation must be done using the same source
browsing context as was used the first time this entry was created.
If appropriate, update the current entry in
the browsing context's Document
object's History object to reflect
any state that the user agent wishes to persist.
For example, some user agents might want to persist the scroll position, or the values of form controls.
If the specified entry has a different Document
object than the current entry then the user
agent must run the following substeps:
Window object to the active
document's Document's list of
added properties.
Document of the specified entry is not the same as the origin of the Document of the current entry, then the following sub-sub-steps
must be run:
Document objects with the same
origin as the active document and
that are contiguous with the current entry.
Document object the active
document of the browsing context. (If it
is a top-level browsing context, this might change which application cache it is associated with.)
Document
objects with the same origin as the new active document, and that are contiguous with the
specified entry, must be cleared.
Document's list of added properties to browsing context's
default view's Window object.
If there are any entries with state objects between the last activated entry for the
Document of the specified entry and the specified
entry itself (not inclusive), then the user agent must iterate
through every entry between that last
activated entry and the specified entry, starting with the
entry closest to the current entry, and ending
with the one closest to the specified entry. For each entry, if
the entry is a state object, the user agent must activate the state object.
If the specified entry is a state object or the first entry for
a Document, the user agent must activate that entry.
If the specified entry has a URL that differs from the current entry's only by its fragment identifier,
and the two share the same Document object, then fire a simple event with the name hashchange at the
body element, and, if the new URL has a fragment
identifier, scroll to the fragment identifier.
User agents may also update other aspects of the document view when the location changes in this way, for instance the scroll position, values of form fields, etc.
The current entry is now the specified entry.
how does the changing of the global attributes affect .watch() when seen from other Windows?
Closing a browsing context and discarding it (vs closing it and keeping it around in memory).
when a browsing context is closed, all session history
entries' Document objects must be discarded.
When a user agent is to discard a
Document, any frozen timers, intervals,
XMLHttpRequests, database transactions, etc, must be killed, and any
MessagePorts owned by the Window object must be unentangled.
Also, unload events
should fire.
この節は規定の一部ではありません。
This specification introduces two related mechanisms, similar to HTTP session cookies, for storing structured data on the client side. [RFC2109] [RFC2965]
The first is designed for scenarios where the user is carrying out a single transaction, but could be carrying out multiple transactions in different windows at the same time.
Cookies don't really handle this case well. For example, a user could be buying plane tickets in two different windows, using the same site. If the site used cookies to keep track of which ticket the user was buying, then as the user clicked from page to page in both windows, the ticket currently being purchased would "leak" from one window to the other, potentially causing the user to buy two tickets for the same flight without really noticing.
To address this, this specification introduces the sessionStorage DOM attribute. Sites can
add data to the session storage, and it will be accessible to any page
from the same site opened in that window.
For example, a page could have a checkbox that the user ticks to indicate that he wants insurance:
<label> <input type="checkbox" onchange="sessionStorage.insurance = checked"> I want insurance on this trip. </label>
A later page could then check, from script, whether the user had checked the checkbox or not:
if (sessionStorage.insurance) { ... }
If the user had multiple windows opened on the site, each one would have its own individual copy of the session storage object.
The second storage mechanism is designed for storage that spans multiple windows, and lasts beyond the current session. In particular, Web applications may wish to store megabytes of user data, such as entire user-authored documents or a user's mailbox, on the client side for performance reasons.
Again, cookies do not handle this case well, because they are transmitted with every request.
The localStorage DOM attribute is used to
access a page's local storage area.
The site at example.com can display a count of how many times the user has loaded its page by putting the following at the bottom of its page:
<p>
You have viewed this page
<span id="count">an untold number of</span>
time(s).
</p>
<script>
if (!localStorage.pageLoadCount)
localStorage.pageLoadCount = 0;
localStorage.pageLoadCount = parseInt(localStorage.pageLoadCount, 10) + 1;
document.getElementById('count').textContent = localStorage.pageLoadCount;
</script>
Each site has its own separate storage area.
Storage areas (both session storage and local storage) store strings. To store structured data in a storage area, you must first convert it to a string.
Storage 界面interface Storage {
readonly attribute unsigned long length;
[IndexGetter] DOMString key(in unsigned long index);
[NameGetter] DOMString getItem(in DOMString key);
[NameSetter] void setItem(in DOMString key, in DOMString data);
[XXX] void removeItem(in DOMString key);
void clear();
};
Each Storage object provides access
to a list of key/value pairs, which are sometimes called items. Keys and
values are strings. Any string (including the empty string) is a valid
key.
To store more structured data, authors may consider using the SQL interfaces instead.
Each Storage object is associated
with a list of key/value pairs when it is created, as defined in the
sections on the sessionStorage and localStorage
attributes. Multiple separate objects implementing the Storage interface can all be associated with
the same list of key/value pairs simultaneously.
The length
attribute must return the number of key/value pairs currently present in
the list associated with the object.
The key(n) method must return the name of the nth key in the list. The order of keys is user-agent
defined, but must be consistent within an object between changes to the
number of keys. (Thus, adding or removing a key may change the order of
the keys, but merely changing the value of an existing key must not.)
If n is less than zero or greater than or equal to the
number of key/value pairs in the object, then this method must raise an
INDEX_SIZE_ERR exception.
The getItem(key) method must return the current value
associated with the given key. If the given key does not exist in the list associated with the object
then this method must return null.
The setItem(key, value) method must
first check if a key/value pair with the given key
already exists in the list associated with the object.
If it does not, then a new key/value pair must be added to the list, with the given key and value.
If the given key does exist in the list, then it must have its value updated to the value given in the value argument.
If it couldn't set the new value, the method must raise an
INVALID_ACCESS_ERR exception. (Setting could fail if, e.g.,
the user has disabled storage for the domain, or if the quota has been
exceeded.)
The removeItem(key) method must cause the key/value pair with
the given key to be removed from the list associated
with the object, if it exists. If no item with that key exists, the method
must do nothing.
The setItem() and removeItem()
methods must be atomic with respect to failure. That is, changes to the
data storage area must either be successful, or the data storage area must
not be changed at all.
The clear()
method must atomically cause the list associated with the object to be
emptied of all key/value pairs.
When the setItem(), removeItem(), and clear() methods are
invoked, events are fired on other HTMLDocument objects that can access the
newly stored or removed data, as defined in the sections on the sessionStorage and localStorage
attributes.
sessionStorage 属性The sessionStorage attribute
represents the set of storage areas specific to the current top-level browsing context.
Each top-level browsing context has a unique set of session storage areas, one for each origin.
User agents should not expire data from a browsing context's session storage areas, but may do so when the user requests that such data be deleted, or when the UA detects that it has limited storage space, or for security reasons. User agents should always avoid deleting data while a script that could access that data is running. When a top-level browsing context is destroyed (and therefore permanently inaccessible to the user) the data stored in its session storage areas can be discarded with it, as the API described in this specification provides no way for that data to ever be subsequently retrieved.
The lifetime of a browsing context can be unrelated to the lifetime of the actual user agent process itself, as the user agent may support resuming sessions after a restart.
When a new HTMLDocument is
created, the user agent must check to see if the document's top-level browsing context has allocated a session
storage area for that document's origin. If it has
not, a new storage area for that document's origin
must be created.
The Storage object for the
document's associated Window object's
sessionStorage attribute must then be
associated with that origin's session storage area
for that top-level browsing context.
When a new top-level browsing context is created by cloning an existing browsing context, the new browsing context must start with the same session storage areas as the original, but the two sets must from that point on be considered separate, not affecting each other in any way.
When a new top-level browsing context is
created by a script in an existing browsing
context, or by the user following a link in an existing browsing
context, or in some other way related to a specific HTMLDocument, then the session storage
area of the origin of that HTMLDocument must be copied into the new
browsing context when it is created. From that point on, however, the two
session storage areas must be considered separate, not affecting each
other in any way.
When the setItem(), removeItem(), and clear() methods are
called on a Storage object x that is associated with a session storage area, then in
every HTMLDocument object whose
Window object's sessionStorage attribute's Storage object is associated with the same
storage area, other than x, a storage event must be
fired, as described below.
localStorage 属性The localStorage object provides a
Storage object for an origin.
User agents must have a set of local storage areas, one for each origin.
User agents should expire data from the local storage areas only for security reasons or when requested to do so by the user. User agents should always avoid deleting data while a script that could access that data is running. Data stored in local storage areas should be considered potentially user-critical. It is expected that Web applications will use the local storage areas for storing user-written documents.
When the localStorage attribute is accessed, the
user agent must check to see if it has allocated local storage area for
the for the origin of the active
document of the browsing context of the
Window object on which the method was
invoked. If it has not, a new storage area for that origin must be created.
The user agent must then create a Storage object associated with that origin's
local storage area, and return it.
When the setItem(), removeItem(), and clear() methods are
called on a Storage object x that is associated with a local storage area, then in
every HTMLDocument object whose
Window object's localStorage
attribute's Storage object is
associated with the same storage area, other than x, a
storage event
must be fired, as described
below.
storage 事象storage
事象は、 HTMLDocument
において、ストレージ領域が変化した時に。前の2つの節
(セッション・ストレージ対象、局所ストレージ対象)
で説明したように発火されます。
利用者エージェントは、これが起こる時、名前
storage、
名前空間なし、
泡立たず取消し可能で StorageEvent
を使った事象を、関係する活性 HTMLDocument
オブジェクトそれぞれの文書
body 要素に対して発送しなければなりません。
If the event is being fired due to an invocation of the setItem() or removeItem()
methods, the event must have its key attribute set to the name of the key in
question, its oldValue attribute set to the old value of the
key in question, or null if the key is newly added, and its newValue attribute set to the new
value of the key in question, or null if the key was removed.
Otherwise, if the event is being fired due to an invocation of the clear() method, the
event must have its key, oldValue, and newValue attributes set to null.
In addition, the event must have its url attribute set to the address of the page whose
Storage object was affected, and its
source
attribute set to the Window object of
the browsing context that that document is in, if
the two documents are in the same unit of related
browsing contexts, or null otherwise.
interface StorageEvent : Event {
readonly attribute DOMString key;
readonly attribute DOMString oldValue;
readonly attribute DOMString newValue;
readonly attribute DOMString url;
readonly attribute Window source;
void initStorageEvent(in DOMString typeArg, in boolean canBubbleArg, in boolean cancelableArg, in DOMString keyArg, in DOMString oldValueArg, in DOMString newValueArg, in DOMString urlArg, in Window sourceArg);
void initStorageEventNS(in DOMString namespaceURI, in DOMString typeArg, in boolean canBubbleArg, in boolean cancelableArg, in DOMString keyArg, in DOMString oldValueArg, in DOMString newValueArg, in DOMString urlArg, in Window sourceArg);
};
initStorageEvent()
メソッドと initMessageEventNS()
メソッドは、 DOM3 事象界面の似たような名前のメソッドと同じような方法で事象を初期化しなければなりません。
[DOM3EVENTS]
key
属性は、変化する鍵を表します。
oldValue
属性は、変化する鍵の古い値を表します。
newValue
属性は、変化する鍵の新しい値を表します。
url
属性は、鍵を変更した文書の番地を表します。
source 属性は、
鍵を変更した Window
を表します。
複数の閲覧文脈は、局所ストレージ領域に同時に予測可能な方法でアクセスできなければなりません。 スクリプトが並行スクリプト実行を検知可能であってはなりません。
これは Storage
オブジェクトの length
属性があるスクリプトの実行中にスクリプト自体が予期可能な形以外で決して代わらないことを保証するために要求されます。
There are various ways of implementing this requirement. One is to just have one event loop for all browsing contexts. Another is that if a script running in one browsing context accesses a storage area, the user agent blocks scripts in other browsing contexts when they try to access the same storage area until the event loop running the first script has completed running the task that started that script. Another (potentially more efficient but certainly more complex) implementation strategy is to use optimistic transactional script execution. This specification does not require any particular implementation strategy, so long as the requirement above is met.
この節は規定の一部ではありません。
...
各起源は、それに関連付けられたデータベースの集合を持ちます。 各データベースは、名前と現在の版を持ちます。 この API を使ってあるドメインに利用可能なデータベースを列挙したり、 削除したりする方法はありません。
各データベースはある時点で1つの版を持ち、 1つのデータベースの複数の版が同時に存在することはできません。 版は著者がスキーマの変更を随時、非破壊的に、 かつ古い符号 (例えば他のブラウザ窓中のもの) が誤った仮定の下でデータベースに書き込もうとする危険なしで行えるようにすることを意図したものです。
openDatabase()
メソッドは
Database
オブジェクトを返します。
このメソッドは、データベース名、データベース版、
表示名、データベース中に蓄積されるデータの大きさの見積もり (バイト単位)
の4つの引数を取ります。
openDatabase()
メソッドは、それが呼び出された Window
オブジェクトの閲覧文脈の活性文書の起源からのデータベースを使用・作成しなければなりません。
指定されたデータベースの版が空文字列でない場合で、
データベースが既に存在し、
異なる版を持つ場合、
メソッドは
INVALID_STATE_ERR
例外を発生させなければなりません。
利用者エージェントは、要求が方針決定に反する場合 (例えば、頁がデータベースを開くことを認めないように利用者エージェントが設定されている場合) 、 保安性例外を発生させても構いません。
そうでない場合、指定されたデータベースの版が空文字列の場合、
またはデータベースがまだ存在しない場合、
またはデータベースが存在し、 openDatabase()
メソッドに指定されて版がデータベースに関連付けられている現在の版と同じである場合には、
メソッドは、指定された名前を持つデータベースを表す
Database
オブジェクトを返さなければなりません。
そのようなデータベースが存在しない場合、
まずそれを作らなければなりません。
空文字列を含むすべての文字列は妥当なデータベース名です。 データベース名は大文字・小文字を区別した形で比較しなければなりません。
実装は、すべての文字列の部分集合をデータベース名として扱う環境であっても、 データベース名を対応している名前の集合に写像する (例えばハッシュ算法を使う) ことにより、これに対応することができます。
利用者エージェントに対しては、表示名とデータベースの大きさの見積もりを、 利用者の体験の最適化のために使うことを期待しています。 例えば、利用者エージェントは、利用者に対して最初の割当量を提示するために大きさの見積もりを使うことができます。 それによって、はじめから数百メガバイトを使うであろうことがわかっているサイトがそれを予め宣言しておけば、 利用者エージェントは5メガバイト毎に割当量を増やすかどうかを利用者に問わなくてもよくなります。
interface Database {
void transaction(in SQLTransactionCallback callback);
void transaction(in SQLTransactionCallback callback, in SQLTransactionErrorCallback errorCallback);
void transaction(in SQLTransactionCallback callback, in SQLTransactionErrorCallback errorCallback, in VoidCallback successCallback);
readonly attribute DOMString version;
void changeVersion(in DOMString oldVersion, in DOMString newVersion, in SQLTransactionCallback callback, in SQLTransactionErrorCallback errorCallback, in VoidCallback successCallback);
};
interface SQLTransactionCallback {
void handleEvent(in SQLTransaction transaction);
};
interface SQLTransactionErrorCallback {
void handleEvent(in SQLError error);
};
transaction()
メソッドは1つか2つの引数を取ります。
このメソッドは、呼び出された時、
すぐに返り、それから非同期に、
取引呼び戻しを最初の引数とし、
誤り呼び戻しを2つ目の引数があればそれとし、
成功呼び戻しを3つ目の引数があればそれとし、
飛行前操作と飛行後操作はなしとして、
取引段階を走らせなければなりません。
The version that the database was opened with is the expected version of this
Database object. It can be the empty
string, in which case there is no expected version — any version is
fine.
On getting, the version attribute must
return the current version of the database (as opposed to the expected
version of the Database object).
The changeVersion() method
allows scripts to atomically verify the version number and change it at
the same time as doing a schema update. When the method is invoked, it
must immediately return, and then asynchronously run the transaction steps with the transaction
callback being the third argument, the error callback being the
fourth argument, the success callback being the fifth argument, the
preflight operation being the following:
Check that the value of the first argument to the changeVersion() method exactly matches
the database's actual version. If it does not, then the preflight
operation fails.
...and the postflight operation being the following:
changeVersion() method.
Database object's
expected version to the value of the second argument to the changeVersion() method.
The transaction() and changeVersion() methods invoke callbacks
with SQLTransaction objects.
typedef sequence<Object> ObjectArray;
interface SQLTransaction {
void executeSql(in DOMString sqlStatement);
void executeSql(in DOMString sqlStatement, in ObjectArray arguments);
void executeSql(in DOMString sqlStatement, in ObjectArray arguments, in SQLStatementCallback callback);
void executeSql(in DOMString sqlStatement, in ObjectArray arguments, in SQLStatementCallback callback, in SQLStatementErrorCallback errorCallback);
};
interface SQLStatementCallback {
void handleEvent(in SQLTransaction transaction, in SQLResultSet resultSet);
};
interface SQLStatementErrorCallback {
boolean handleEvent(in SQLTransaction transaction, in SQLError error);Or should these arguments be the other way around? Either way we're inconsistent with _something_. What should we be consistent with?
};
When the executeSql(sqlStatement, arguments, callback, errorCallback)
method is invoked, the user agent must run the following algorithm. (This
algorithm is relatively simple and doesn't actually execute any SQL
— the bulk of the work is actually done as part of the transaction steps.)
If the method was not invoked during the execution of a SQLTransactionCallback,
SQLStatementCallback,
or SQLStatementErrorCallback
then raise an INVALID_STATE_ERR exception. (Calls from
inside a SQLTransactionErrorCallback
thus raise an exception. The SQLTransactionErrorCallback
handler is only called once a transaction has failed, and no SQL
statements can be added to a failed transaction.)
Parse the first argument to the method (sqlStatement) as an SQL statement, with the exception
that ? characters can be used in place of literals
in the statement. [SQL]
Replace each ? placeholder with the value of the
argument in the arguments array with the same
position. (So the first ? placeholder gets
replaced by the first value in the arguments array,
and generally the nth ?
placeholder gets replaced by the nth value in the
arguments array.)
If the second argument is omitted or null, then treat the arguments array as empty.
The result is the statement.
Implementation feedback is requested on what to do with arguments that are of types that are not supported by the underlying SQL backend. For example, SQLite doesn't support booleans, so what should the UA do if passed a boolean? The Gears team suggests failing, not silently converting types.
If the syntax of sqlStatement is not valid (except
for the use of ? characters in the place of
literals), or the statement uses features that are not supported (e.g.
due to security reasons), or the number of items in the arguments array is not equal to the number of ? placeholders in the statement, or the statement cannot
be parsed for some other reason, then mark the statement as
bogus.
If the Database object that the
SQLTransaction object was
created from has an expected version that is
neither the empty string nor the actual version of the database, then
mark the statement as bogus. (Error code 2.)
Queue up the statement in the transaction, along with the third argument (if any) as the statement's result set callback and the fourth argument (if any) as the error callback.
The user agent must act as if the database was hosted in an otherwise completely empty environment with no resources. For example, attempts to read from or write to the file system will fail.
SQL inherently supports multiple concurrent connections. Authors should make appropriate use of the transaction features to handle the case of multiple scripts interacting with the same database simultaneously (as could happen if the same page was opened in two different browsing contexts).
User agents must consider statements that use the BEGIN, COMMIT, and ROLLBACK SQL features as being unsupported (and thus will
mark them as bogus), so as to not let these statements interfere with the
explicit transactions managed by the database API itself.
A future version of this specification will probably define the exact SQL subset required in more detail.
The executeSql() method
invokes its callback with a SQLResultSet object as an argument.
interface SQLResultSet {
readonly attribute int insertId;
readonly attribute int rowsAffected;
readonly attribute SQLResultSetRowList rows;
};
The insertId attribute must
return the row ID of the row that the SQLResultSet object's SQL statement
inserted into the database, if the statement inserted a row. If the
statement inserted multiple rows, the ID of the last row must be the one
returned. If the statement did not insert a row, then the attribute must
instead raise an INVALID_ACCESS_ERR exception.
The rowsAffected
attribute must return the number of rows that were affected by the SQL
statement. If the statement did not affected any rows, then the attribute
must return zero. For "SELECT" statements, this returns zero (querying the
database doesn't affect any rows).
The rows
attribute must return a SQLResultSetRowList representing
the rows returned, in the order returned by the database. If no rows were
returned, then the object will be empty (its length
will be zero).
interface SQLResultSetRowList {
readonly attribute unsigned long length;
[IndexGetter] DOMObject item(in unsigned long index);
};
SQLResultSetRowList
objects have a length attribute
that must return the number of rows it represents (the number of rows
returned by the database).
The item(index) attribute must return the row with the
given index index. If there is no such row, then the
method must raise an INDEX_SIZE_ERR exception.
Each row must be represented by a native ordered dictionary data type.
In the ECMAScript binding, this must be Object. Each row object must have one property
(or dictionary entry) per column, with those properties enumerating in the
order that these columns were returned by the database. Each property must
have the name of the column and the value of the cell, as they were
returned by the database.
Errors in the database API are reported using callbacks that have a
SQLError object as one of their
arguments.
interface SQLError {
readonly attribute unsigned int code;
readonly attribute DOMString message;
};
The code DOM
attribute must return the most appropriate code from the following table:
| Code | Situation |
|---|---|
| 0 | The transaction failed for reasons unrelated to the database itself and not covered by any other error code. |
| 1 | The statement failed for database reasons not covered by any other error code. |
| 2 | The statement failed because the expected version of the database didn't match the actual database version. |
| 3 | The statement failed because the data returned from the database was too large. The SQL "LIMIT" modifier might be useful to reduce the size of the result set. |
| 4 | The statement failed because there was not enough remaining storage space, or the storage quota was reached and the user declined to give more space to the database. |
| 5 | The statement failed because the transaction's first statement was a read-only statement, and a subsequent statement in the same transaction tried to modify the database, but the transaction failed to obtain a write lock before another transaction obtained a write lock and changed a part of the database that the former transaction was depending upon. |
| 6 | An INSERT, UPDATE, or
REPLACE statement failed due to a constraint
failure. For example, because a row was being inserted and the value
given for the primary key column duplicated the value of an existing
row.
|
We should define a more thorough list of codes. Implementation feedback is requested to determine what codes are needed.
The message DOM attribute must
return an error message describing the error encountered. The message
should be localized to the user's language.
The transaction steps are as follows. These steps must be run asynchronously. These steps are invoked with a transaction callback, optionally an error callback, optionally a success callback, optionally a preflight operation, and optionally a postflight operation.
Open a new SQL transaction to the database, and create a SQLTransaction object that represents
that transaction.
If an error occurred in the opening of the transaction, jump to the last step.
If a preflight operation was defined for this instance of the
transaction steps, run that. If it fails, then jump to the last step.
(This is basically a hook for the changeVersion() method.)
Queue a task to invoke the transaction
callback with the aforementioned SQLTransaction object as its only
argument, and wait for that task to be run.
If the callback couldn't be called (e.g. it was null), or if the callback was invoked and raised an exception, jump to the last step.
While there are any statements queued up in the transaction, perform the following steps for each queued up statement in the transaction, oldest first. Each statement has a statement, optionally a result set callback, and optionally an error callback.
If the statement is marked as bogus, jump to the "in case of error" steps below.
Execute the statement in the context of the transaction. [SQL]
If the statement failed, jump to the "in case of error" steps below.
Create a SQLResultSet
object that represents the result of the statement.
If the statement has a result set callback, queue a
task to invoke it with the SQLTransaction object as its first
argument and the new SQLResultSet object as its second
argument, and wait for that task to be run.
If the callback was invoked and raised an exception, jump to the last step in the overall steps.
Move on to the next statement, if any, or onto the next overall step otherwise.
In case of error (or more specifically, if the above substeps say to jump to the "in case of error" steps), run the following substeps:
If the statement had an associated error callback, then queue a task to invoke that error callback with the
SQLTransaction object and a
newly constructed SQLError object
that represents the error that caused these substeps to be run as the
two arguments, respectively, and wait for the task to be run.
If the error callback returns false, then move on to the next statement, if any, or onto the next overall step otherwise.
Otherwise, the error callback did not return false, or there was no error callback. Jump to the last step in the overall steps.
If a postflight operation was defined for this instance of the
transaction steps, run that. If it fails, then jump to the last step.
(This is basically a hook for the changeVersion() method.)
Commit the transaction.
If an error occurred in the committing of the transaction, jump to the last step.
Queue a task to invoke the success callback.
End these steps. The next step is only used when something goes wrong.
Queue a task to invoke the error callback
with a newly constructed SQLError
object that represents the last error to have occurred in this
transaction. Rollback the transaction. Any still-pending statements in
the transaction are discarded.
User agents should limit the total amount of space allowed for storage areas and databases.
User agents should guard against sites storing data in the storage areas or databases of subdomains, e.g. storing up to the limit in a1.example.com, a2.example.com, a3.example.com, etc, circumventing the main example.com storage limit.
User agents may prompt the user when quotas are reached, allowing the user to grant a site more space. This enables sites to store many user-created documents on the user's computer, for instance.
User agents should allow users to see how much space each domain is using.
A mostly arbitrary limit of five megabytes per domain is recommended. Implementation feedback is welcome and will be used to update this suggestion in future.
A third-party advertiser (or any entity capable of getting content distributed to multiple sites) could use a unique identifier stored in its local storage area or in its client-side database to track a user across multiple sessions, building a profile of the user's interests to allow for highly targeted advertising. In conjunction with a site that is aware of the user's real identity (for example an e-commerce site that requires authenticated credentials), this could allow oppressive groups to target individuals with greater accuracy than in a world with purely anonymous Web usage.
There are a number of techniques that can be used to mitigate the risk of user tracking:
Blocking third-party storage: user agents may restrict access to the
localStorage and database objects to
scripts originating at the domain of the top-level document of the browsing context, for instance denying access to
the API for pages from other domains running in iframes.
Expiring stored data: user agents may automatically delete stored data after a period of time.
For example, a user agent could treat third-party local storage areas as session-only storage, deleting the data once the user had closed all the browsing contexts that could access it.
This can restrict the ability of a site to track a user, as the site would then only be able to track the user across multiple sessions when he authenticates with the site itself (e.g. by making a purchase or logging in to a service).
However, this also puts the user's data at risk.
Treating persistent storage as cookies: user agents should present the persistent storage and database features to the user in a way that does not distinguish them from HTTP session cookies. [RFC2109] [RFC2965]
This might encourage users to view persistent storage with healthy suspicion.
Site-specific white-listing of access to local storage areas and databases: user agents may allow sites to access session storage areas in an unrestricted manner, but require the user to authorize access to local storage areas and databases.
Origin-tracking of persistent storage data: user agents may record the origins of sites that contained content from third-party origins that caused data to be stored.
If this information is then used to present the view of data currently in persistent storage, it would allow the user to make informed decisions about which parts of the persistent storage to prune. Combined with a blacklist ("delete this data and prevent this domain from ever storing data again"), the user can restrict the use of persistent storage to sites that he trusts.
Shared blacklists: user agents may allow users to share their persistent storage domain blacklists.
This would allow communities to act together to protect their privacy.
While these suggestions prevent trivial use of these APIs for user tracking, they do not block it altogether. Within a single domain, a site can continue to track the user during a session, and can then pass all this information to the third party along with any identifying information (names, credit card numbers, addresses) obtained by the site. If a third party cooperates with multiple sites to obtain such information, a profile can still be created.
However, user tracking is to some extent possible even with no cooperation from the user agent whatsoever, for instance by using session identifiers in URLs, a technique already commonly used for innocuous purposes but easily repurposed for user tracking (even retroactively). This information can then be shared with other sites, using using visitors' IP addresses and other user-specific data (e.g. user-agent headers and configuration settings) to combine separate sessions into coherent user profiles.
If the user interface for persistent storage presents data in the persistent storage features separately from data in HTTP session cookies, then users are likely to delete data in one and not the other. This would allow sites to use the two features as redundant backup for each other, defeating a user's attempts to protect his privacy.
Because of the potential for DNS spoofing attacks, one cannot guarantee that a host claiming to be in a certain domain really is from that domain. To mitigate this, pages can use SSL. Pages using SSL can be sure that only pages using SSL that have certificates identifying them as being from the same domain can access their local storage areas and databases.
Different authors sharing one host name, for example users hosting
content on geocities.com, all share one persistent storage
object and one set of databases. There is no feature to restrict the
access by pathname. Authors on shared hosts are therefore recommended to
avoid using the persistent storage features, as it would be trivial for
other authors to read from and write to the same storage area or database.
Even if a path-restriction feature was made available, the usual DOM scripting security model would make it trivial to bypass this protection and access the data from any path.
The two primary risks when implementing these persistent storage features are letting hostile sites read information from other domains, and letting hostile sites write information that is then read from other domains.
Letting third-party sites read data that is not supposed to be read from their domain causes information leakage, For example, a user's shopping wishlist on one domain could be used by another domain for targeted advertising; or a user's work-in-progress confidential documents stored by a word-processing site could be examined by the site of a competing company.
Letting third-party sites write data to the storage areas of other domains can result in information spoofing, which is equally dangerous. For example, a hostile site could add items to a user's wishlist; or a hostile site could set a user's session identifier to a known ID that the hostile site can then use to track the user's actions on the victim site.
Thus, strictly following the origin model described in this specification is important for user security.
User agent implementors are strongly encouraged to audit all their
supported SQL statements for security implications. For example, LOAD DATA INFILE is likely to pose security risks and
there is little reason to support it.
In general, it is recommended that user agents not support features that control how databases are stored on disk. For example, there is little reason to allow Web authors to control the character encoding used in the disk representation of the data, as all data in ECMAScript is implicitly UTF-16.
Authors are strongly recommended to make use of the ? placeholder feature of the executeSql() method, and to never construct
SQL statements on the fly.
The a, area, and link
elements can, in certain situations described in the definitions of those
elements, represent hyperlinks.
The href
attribute on a hyperlink element must have a value that is a valid URL. This URL is the destination
resource of the hyperlink.
The href
attribute on a and area elements is not required; when those
elements do not have href attributes they do not represent
hyperlinks.
The href
attribute on the link element
is required, but whether a link
element represents a hyperlink or not depends on the value of the rel attribute of that
element.
The target attribute, if
present, must be a valid browsing context name or
keyword. User agents use this name when following hyperlinks.
The ping
attribute, if present, gives the URLs of the resources that are interested
in being notified if the user follows the hyperlink. The value must be a
space separated list of one or more valid URLs. The value is
used by the user agent when following
hyperlinks.
For a and area elements that represent hyperlinks, the
relationship between the document containing the hyperlink and the
destination resource indicated by the hyperlink is given by the value of
the element's rel
attribute, which must be a set of space-separated
tokens. The allowed values and their meanings
are defined below. The rel attribute has no default value. If the
attribute is omitted or if none of the values in the attribute are
recognized by the UA, then the document has no particular relationship
with the destination resource other than there being a hyperlink between
the two.
The media
attribute describes for which media the target document was designed. It
is purely advisory. The value must be a valid media
query. [MQ] The default, if the media attribute
is omitted, is all.
The hreflang attribute on
hyperlink elements, if present, gives the language of the linked resource.
It is purely advisory. The value must be a valid RFC 3066 language code.
[RFC3066] User agents must not consider this
attribute authoritative — upon fetching the resource, user agents
must use only language information associated with the resource to
determine its language, not metadata included in the link to the resource.
The type
attribute, if present, gives the MIME type of the linked resource. It is
purely advisory. The value must be a valid MIME type, optionally with
parameters. [RFC2046] User agents must not
consider the type attribute authoritative — upon
fetching the resource, user agents must not use metadata included in the
link to the resource to determine its type.
When a user follows a hyperlink, the user agent must navigate a browsing context
to the URL given by the href attribute of
that hyperlink. In the case of server-side image maps, the URL of the
hyperlink must further have its hyperlink
suffix appended to it.
If the user indicated a specific browsing context when following the hyperlink, or if the user agent is configured to follow hyperlinks by navigating a particular browsing context, then that must be the browsing context that is navigated.
Otherwise, if the hyperlink element is an a or area element
that has a target attribute, then the browsing context
that is navigated must be chosen by applying the
rules for choosing a browsing context given a browsing context name,
using the value of the target attribute as the browsing context name.
If these rules result in the creation of a new browsing context, it must be navigated with replacement enabled.
Otherwise, if the hyperlink element is a sidebar hyperlink and the user agent implements a feature that can be considered a secondary browsing context, such a secondary browsing context may be selected as the browsing context to be navigated.
Otherwise, if the hyperlink element is an a or area element
with no target attribute, but one of the child nodes of
the head element is a base element with a target attribute, then
the browsing context that is navigated must be chosen by applying the rules for choosing a browsing context given a
browsing context name, using the value of the target attribute of
the first such base element as the
browsing context name. If these rules result in the creation of a new browsing context, it must be navigated with replacement enabled.
Otherwise, the browsing context that must be navigated is the same browsing context as the one which the hyperlink element itself is in.
The navigation must be done with the browsing
context that contains the Document object with which the
hyperlink's element in question is associated as the source browsing context.
利用者エージェントは、a や area のハイパーリンク要素が ping 属性を持つ場合で、
利用者が当該ハイパーリンクをたどった場合、ping
属性の値をもってこの文字列を間隔で分割し、
得られた字句のそれぞれを解決しなければならず、
その後、得られた絶対
URL のそれぞれについて要求 (後述) を送信するべきです。
(解決に失敗した字句は無視します。)
これは主たる要求と並列に行っても構わず、
主たる要求の結果とは独立したものです。
利用者エージェントは、利用者にこの動作の調整、例えば HTTP Referer 頭部の送信を無効化する設定と組み合わせることを認めるべきです。
利用者エージェントは、利用者の設定に基づき、ping
属性全体を無視するか、または並び中の一部の URL
を選択的に無視 (例えば第3者 URL を無視) するかのいずれかを行って構いません。
For URLs that are HTTP URLs, the requests must be performed by fetching the specified URLs using the POST method, with an empty entity body in the request. All relevant cookie and HTTP authentication headers must be included in the request. Which other headers are required depends on the URLs involved.
Document オブジェクトの番地と同じ起源の場合Ping-From HTTP 頭部を、
含んでいる文書の番地を値として含めなければなりません。
要求は Referer HTTP 頭部を含んではなりません。Referer HTTP 頭部 [ママ]
をハイパーリンクを含んでいる文書の所在を値として、 Ping-From HTTP
頭部を同じ値として、 Ping-To HTTP 頭部をハイパーリンクの対象の番地を値として、
含めなければなりません。Ping-To HTTP
頭部を、ハイパーリンクの対象の番地を値として含めなければなりません。
要求は、 Referer HTTP 頭部を含んでも、
Ping-From HTTP 頭部を含んでもなりません。実装者は、帯域を節約するため、 Accept などの省略可能な頭部をこれらの要求から省くことを検討するといいかもしれません。
User agents must, unless otherwise specified by the user, honor the HTTP headers (including, in particular, redirects and HTTP cookie headers), but must ignore any entity bodies returned in the responses. User agents may close the connection prematurely once they start receiving an entity body. [RFC2109] [RFC2965]
For URLs that are not HTTP URLs, the requests must be performed by fetching the specified URL normally, and discarding the results.
利用者エージェントは、ping
属性が存在する場合、ハイパーリンクをたどると二次要求も背景で送られることになることも、
例えば実際の対象 URL の一覧を含めることにより、明確に示すべきです。
ping
属性は、 HTTP リダイレクトや JavaScript で Web 頁がサイト外のリンクのどれが人気が高いかを調べたり、
広告主がクリック通過率を追跡したりできるようにします。
しかし、 ping 属性はこれらの代替案に対して利用者に次のような利点を与えます。
ですから、この機能をなしに利用者を追跡することも可能ですが、
ping 属性を使い、
利用者エージェントが利用者の体験を向上させられるようにすることを著者にはお勧めします。
The following table summarizes the link types that are defined by this specification. This table is non-normative; the actual definitions for the link types are given in the next few sections.
In this section, the term referenced document refers to the resource identified by the element representing the link, and the term current document refers to the resource within which the element representing the link finds itself.
To determine which link types apply to a link, a, or area element, the element's rel attribute must be split on spaces. The resulting tokens are the link
types that apply to that element.
Unless otherwise specified, a keyword must not be specified more than
once per rel attribute.
| Link type | Effect on... | Brief description | |
|---|---|---|---|
link
| a and area
| ||
alternate |
Hyperlink | Hyperlink | Gives alternate representations of the current document. |
archives
| Hyperlink | Hyperlink | Provides a link to a collection of records, documents, or other materials of historical interest. |
author
| Hyperlink | Hyperlink | Gives a link to the current document's author. |
bookmark |
not allowed | Hyperlink | Gives the permalink for the nearest ancestor section. |
external |
not allowed | Hyperlink | Indicates that the referenced document is not part of the same site as the current document. |
feed
| Hyperlink | Hyperlink | Gives the address of a syndication feed for the current document. |
first
| Hyperlink | Hyperlink | Indicates that the current document is a part of a series, and that the first document in the series is the referenced document. |
help
| Hyperlink | Hyperlink | Provides a link to context-sensitive help. |
icon |
External Resource | not allowed | Imports an icon to represent the current document. |
index |
Hyperlink | Hyperlink | Gives a link to the document that provides a table of contents or index listing the current document. |
last
| Hyperlink | Hyperlink | Indicates that the current document is a part of a series, and that the last document in the series is the referenced document. |
license |
Hyperlink | Hyperlink | Indicates that the current document is covered by the copyright license described by the referenced document. |
next
| Hyperlink | Hyperlink | Indicates that the current document is a part of a series, and that the next document in the series is the referenced document. |
nofollow |
not allowed | Hyperlink | Indicates that the current document's original author or publisher does not endorse the referenced document. |
noreferrer
| not allowed | Hyperlink | Requires that the user agent not send an HTTP Referer header if the user follows the hyperlink.
|
pingback
| External Resource | not allowed | Gives the address of the pingback server that handles pingbacks to the current document. |
prefetch
| External Resource | not allowed | Specifies that the target resource should be preemptively cached. |
prev |
Hyperlink | Hyperlink | Indicates that the current document is a part of a series, and that the previous document in the series is the referenced document. |
search |
Hyperlink | Hyperlink | Gives a link to a resource that can be used to search through the current document and its related pages. |
stylesheet |
External Resource | not allowed | Imports a stylesheet. |
sidebar |
Hyperlink | Hyperlink | Specifies that the referenced document, if retrieved, is intended to be shown in the browser's sidebar (if it has one). |
tag |
Hyperlink | Hyperlink | Gives a tag (identified by the given address) that applies to the current document. |
up
| Hyperlink | Hyperlink | Provides a link to a document giving the context for the current document. |
Some of the types described below list synonyms for these values. These are to be handled as specified by user agents, but must not be used in documents.
alternate"The alternate
keyword may be used with link, a, and area
elements. For link elements, if the rel attribute does not also
contain the keyword stylesheet, it creates a hyperlink; but if it
does also contain the keyword stylesheet, the alternate keyword instead modifies the
meaning of the stylesheet keyword in the way described for
that keyword, and the rest of this subsection doesn't apply.
The alternate
keyword indicates that the referenced document is an alternate
representation of the current document.
The nature of the referenced document is given by the media, hreflang,
and type
attributes.
If the alternate keyword is used with the media attribute,
it indicates that the referenced document is intended for use with the
media specified.
If the alternate keyword is used with the hreflang
attribute, and that attribute's value differs from the root element's language,
it indicates that the referenced document is a translation.
If the alternate keyword is used with the type attribute, it
indicates that the referenced document is a reformulation of the current
document in the specified format.
The media, hreflang, and type attributes can
be combined when specified with the alternate keyword.
For example, the following link is a French translation that uses the PDF format:
<link rel=alternate type=application/pdf hreflang=fr href=manual-fr>
If the alternate keyword is used with the type attribute set
to the value application/rss+xml or the value application/atom+xml, then the user agent must treat the
link as it would if it had the feed keyword specified as well.
The alternate
link relationship is transitive — that is, if a document links to
two other documents with the link type "alternate", then, in addition to implying
that those documents are alternative representations of the first
document, it is also implying that those two documents are alternative
representations of each other.
archives"The archives
keyword may be used with link, a, and area
elements. For link elements, it creates a
hyperlink.
The archives
keyword indicates that the referenced document describes a collection of
records, documents, or other materials of historical interest.
A blog's index page could link to an index of the blog's
past posts with rel="archives".
Synonyms: For historical reasons, user agents must also
treat the keyword "archive" like the archives keyword.
author"The author keyword
may be used with link, a, and area
elements. For link elements, it creates a
hyperlink.
For a and area elements, the author keyword indicates that the referenced
document provides further information about the author of the section that
the element defining the hyperlink applies
to.
For link elements, the author keyword indicates
that the referenced document provides further information about the author
for the page as a whole.
The "referenced document" can be, and often is, a mailto: URL giving the e-mail address of the author. [MAILTO]
Synonyms: For historical reasons, user agents must also
treat link, a, and area elements
that have a rev attribute with the value
"made" as having the author keyword specified as a link relationship.
bookmark"The bookmark
keyword may be used with a and area elements.
The bookmark
keyword gives a permalink for the nearest ancestor article element of the linking element in
question, or of the section the linking
element is most closely associated with, if there are no ancestor
article elements.
The following snippet has three permalinks. A user agent could determine which permalink applies to which part of the spec by looking at where the permalinks are given.
...
<body>
<h1>Example of permalinks</h1>
<div id="a">
<h2>First example</h2>
<p><a href="a.html" rel="bookmark">This</a> permalink applies to
only the content from the first H2 to the second H2. The DIV isn't
exactly that section, but it roughly corresponds to it.</p>
</div>
<h2>Second example</h2>
<article id="b">
<p><a href="b.html" rel="bookmark">This</a> permalink applies to
the outer ARTICLE element (which could be, e.g., a blog post).</p>
<article id="c">
<p><a href="c.html" rel="bookmark">This</a> permalink applies to
the inner ARTICLE element (which could be, e.g., a blog comment).</p>
</article>
</article>
</body>
...
external"The external
keyword may be used with a and area elements.
The external
keyword indicates that the link is leading to a document that is not part
of the site that the current document forms a part of.
feed"The feed keyword may be
used with link, a, and area
elements. For link elements, it creates a
hyperlink.
The feed keyword
indicates that the referenced document is a syndication feed. If the alternate link type is
also specified, then the feed is specifically the feed for the current
document; otherwise, the feed is just a syndication feed, not necessarily
associated with a particular Web page.
The first link, a, or area element
in the document (in tree order) that creates a hyperlink with the link
type feed must be treated
as the default syndication feed for the purposes of feed autodiscovery.
The feed
keyword is implied by the alternate link type in certain cases (q.v.).
The following two link elements are
equivalent: both give the syndication feed for the current page:
<link rel="alternate" type="application/atom+xml" href="data.xml">
<link rel="feed alternate" href="data.xml">
The following extract offers various different syndication feeds:
<p>You can access the planets database using Atom feeds:</p> <ul> <li><a href="recently-visited-planets.xml" rel="feed">Recently Visited Planets</a></li> <li><a href="known-bad-planets.xml" rel="feed">Known Bad Planets</a></li> <li><a href="unexplored-planets.xml" rel="feed">Unexplored Planets</a></li> </ul>
help"The help keyword may be
used with link, a, and area
elements. For link elements, it creates a
hyperlink.
For a and area elements, the help keyword indicates that the referenced
document provides further help information for the parent of the element
defining the hyperlink, and its children.
In the following example, the form control has associated context-sensitive help. The user agent could use this information, for example, displaying the referenced document if the user presses the "Help" or "F1" key.
<p><label> Topic: <input name=topic> <a href="help/topic.html" rel="help">(Help)</a></label></p>
For link elements, the help keyword indicates that the
referenced document provides help for the page as a whole.
icon"The icon keyword may be
used with link elements, for which it
creates an external
resource link.
specified resource is an icon representing the page or site, and should be used by the user agent when representing the page in the user 界面。
Icons could be auditory icons, visual icons, or other kinds of icons. If
multiple icons are provided, the user agent must select the most
appropriate icon according to the type, media, and sizes attributes. If there are multiple equally
appropriate icons, user agents must use the last one declared in tree order. If the user agent tries to use an icon
but that icon is determined, upon closer examination, to in fact be
inappropriate (e.g. because it uses an unsupported format), then the user
agent must try the next-most-appropriate icon as determined by the
attributes.
There is no default type for resources given by the icon keyword. However, for the
purposes of determining the type of
the resource, user agents must expect the resource to be an image.
The sizes
attribute gives the sizes of icons for visual media.
If specified, the attribute must have a value that is an unordered set of unique space-separated tokens. The
values must all be either any or a value that consists of two valid non-negative
integers that do not have a leading U+0030 DIGIT ZERO (0) character
and that are separated by a single U+0078 LATIN SMALL LETTER X character.
The keywords represent icon sizes.
To parse and process the attribute's value, the user agent must first split the attribute's value on spaces, and must then parse each resulting keyword to determine what it represents.
The any keyword
represents that the resource contains a scalable icon, e.g. as provided by
an SVG image.
Other keywords must be further parsed as follows to determine what they represent:
If the keyword doesn't contain exactly one U+0078 LATIN SMALL LETTER X character, then this keyword doesn't represent anything. Abort these steps for that keyword.
Let width string be the string before the "x".
Let height string be the string after the "x".
If either width string or height string start with a U+0030 DIGIT ZERO (0) character or contain any characters other than characters in the range U+0030 DIGIT ZERO (0) to U+0039 DIGIT NINE (9), then this keyword doesn't represent anything. Abort these steps for that keyword.
Apply the rules for parsing non-negative integers to width string to obtain width.
Apply the rules for parsing non-negative integers to height string to obtain height.
The keyword represents that the resource contains a bitmap icon with a width of width device pixels and a height of height device pixels.
The keywords specified on the sizes attribute must not represent icon sizes
that are not actually available in the linked resource.
If the attribute is not specified, then the user agent must assume that the given icon is appropriate, but less appropriate than an icon of a known and appropriate size.
The following snippet shows the top part of an application with several icons.
<!DOCTYPE HTML> <html> <head> <title>lsForums — Inbox</title> <link rel=icon href=favicon.png sizes="16x16"> <link rel=icon href=windows.ico sizes="32x32 48x48"> <link rel=icon href=mac.icns sizes="128x128 512x512 8192x8192 32768x32768"> <link rel=icon href=iphone.png sizes="59x60"> <link rel=icon href=gnome.svg sizes="any"> <link rel=stylesheet href=lsforums.css> <script src=lsforums.js></script> <meta name=application-name content="lsForums"> </head> <body> ...
license"The license
keyword may be used with link, a, and area
elements. For link elements, it creates a
hyperlink.
The license
keyword indicates that the referenced document provides the copyright
license terms under which the current document is provided.
Synonyms: For historical reasons, user agents must also
treat the keyword "copyright" like the license keyword.
nofollow"The nofollow
keyword may be used with a and area elements.
The nofollow
keyword indicates that the link is not endorsed by the original author or
publisher of the page, or that the link to the referenced document was
included primarily because of a commercial relationship between people
affiliated with the two pages.
noreferrer"The noreferrer keyword may be used with a and area elements.
If a user agent follows a link defined by an a or area element
that has the noreferrer keyword, the user agent must not
include a Referer HTTP header (or equivalent for
other protocols) in the request.
This keyword also causes the opener attribute to remain null if the
hyperlink creates a new browsing context.
pingback"The pingback
keyword may be used with link elements,
for which it creates an external resource link.
For the semantics of the pingback keyword, see the Pingback 1.0
specification. [PINGBACK]
prefetch"The prefetch
keyword may be used with link elements,
for which it creates an external resource link.
The prefetch
keyword indicates that preemptively fetching and caching the specified
resource is likely to be beneficial, as it is highly likely that the user
will require this resource.
There is no default type for resources given by the prefetch keyword.
search"The search keyword
may be used with link, a, and area
elements. For link elements, it creates a
hyperlink.
The search keyword
indicates that the referenced document provides an interface specifically
for searching the document and its related resources.
OpenSearch description documents can be used with link elements and the search link type to enable user agents to
autodiscover search interfaces. [OPENSEARCH]
stylesheet"The stylesheet keyword may be used with link elements, for which it creates an external resource link
that contributes to the styling processing model.
The specified resource is a resource that describes how to present the document. Exactly how the resource is to be processed depends on the actual type of the resource.
If the alternate keyword is also specified on the
link element, then the link is an
alternative stylesheet; in this case, the title attribute must be specified on the link element, with a non-empty value.
The default type for resources given by the stylesheet keyword
is text/css.
Quirk: If the document has been set to quirks mode and the Content-Type metadata of the external resource is
not a supported style sheet type, the user agent must instead assume it to
be text/css.
sidebar"The sidebar
keyword may be used with link, a, and area
elements. For link elements, it creates a
hyperlink.
The sidebar
keyword indicates that the referenced document, if retrieved, is intended
to be shown in a secondary browsing context (if
possible), instead of in the current browsing
context.
A hyperlink element with with
the sidebar keyword
specified is a sidebar
hyperlink.
tag"The tag keyword may be
used with link, a, and area
elements. For link elements, it creates a
hyperlink.
The tag keyword indicates
that the tag that the referenced document represents applies to
the current document.
Some documents form part of a hierarchical structure of documents.
A hierarchical structure of documents is one where each document can have various subdocuments. The document of which a document is a subdocument is said to be the document's parent. A document with no parent forms the top of the hierarchy.
A document may be part of multiple hierarchies.
index"The index keyword may
be used with link, a, and area
elements. For link elements, it creates a
hyperlink.
The index keyword
indicates that the document is part of a hierarchical structure, and that
the link is leading to the document that is the top of the hierarchy. It
conveys more information when used with the up keyword (q.v.).
Synonyms: For historical reasons, user agents must also
treat the keywords "top", "contents", and "toc" like the index keyword.
up"The up keyword may be used
with link, a, and area
elements. For link elements, it creates a
hyperlink.
The up keyword indicates
that the document is part of a hierarchical structure, and that the link
is leading to the document that is the parent of the current document.
The up keyword may be
repeated within a rel attribute to indicate the hierarchical
distance from the current document to the referenced document. Each
occurrence of the keyword represents one further level. If the index keyword is also
present, then the number of up
keywords is the depth of the current page relative to the top of the
hierarchy. Only one link is created for the set of one or more up keywords and, if present, the
index keyword.
If the page is part of multiple hierarchies, then they should be
described in different paragraphs. User agents must scope any interpretation
of the up and index keywords together
indicating the depth of the hierarchy to the paragraph in which the link finds itself, if any, or
to the document otherwise.
When two links have both the up and index keywords specified together in the same
scope and contradict each other by having a different number of up keywords, the link with the
greater number of up keywords
must be taken as giving the depth of the document.
This can be used to mark up a navigation style sometimes known as bread crumbs. In the following example, the current page can be reached via two paths.
<nav> <p> <a href="/" rel="index up up up">Main</a> > <a href="/products/" rel="up up">Products</a> > <a href="/products/dishwashers/" rel="up">Dishwashers</a> > <a>Second hand</a> </p> <p> <a href="/" rel="index up up">Main</a> > <a href="/second-hand/" rel="up">Second hand</a> > <a>Dishwashers</a> </p> </nav>
The relList DOM attribute (e.g. on the a element) does not currently represent multiple
up keywords (the interface
hides duplicates).
Some documents form part of a sequence of documents.
A sequence of documents is one where each document can have a previous sibling and a next sibling. A document with no previous sibling is the start of its sequence, a document with no next sibling is the end of its sequence.
A document may be part of multiple sequences.
first"The first keyword may
be used with link, a, and area
elements. For link elements, it creates a
hyperlink.
The first keyword
indicates that the document is part of a sequence, and that the link is
leading to the document that is the first logical document in the
sequence.
Synonyms: For historical reasons, user agents must also
treat the keywords "begin" and "start" like the first keyword.
last"The last keyword may be
used with link, a, and area
elements. For link elements, it creates a
hyperlink.
The last keyword
indicates that the document is part of a sequence, and that the link is
leading to the document that is the last logical document in the sequence.
Synonyms: For historical reasons, user agents must also
treat the keyword "end" like the last keyword.
next"The next keyword may be
used with link, a, and area
elements. For link elements, it creates a
hyperlink.
The next keyword
indicates that the document is part of a sequence, and that the link is
leading to the document that is the next logical document in the sequence.
prev"The prev keyword may be
used with link, a, and area
elements. For link elements, it creates a
hyperlink.
The prev keyword
indicates that the document is part of a sequence, and that the link is
leading to the document that is the previous logical document in the
sequence.
Synonyms: For historical reasons, user agents must also
treat the keyword "previous" like the prev keyword.
Other than the types defined above, only types defined as extensions in
the WHATWG Wiki
RelExtensions page may be used with the rel
attribute on link, a, and area
elements. [WHATWGWIKI]
Anyone is free to edit the WHATWG Wiki RelExtensions page at any time to add a type. Extension types must be specified with the following information:
The actual value being defined. The value should not be confusingly similar to any other defined value (e.g. differing only in case).
link
One of the following:
link elements.
link element; it creates a hyperlink link.
link element; it creates a external resource link.
a and area
One of the following:
a and area
elements.
a and
area elements.
A short description of what the keyword's meaning is.
A link to a more detailed description of the keyword's semantics and requirements. It could be another page on the Wiki, or a link to an external page.
A list of other keyword values that have exactly the same processing requirements. Authors must not use the values defined to be synonyms, they are only intended to allow user agents to support legacy content.
One of the following:
link" and "Effect on... a and area"
information should be set to "not allowed".
If a keyword is added with the "proposal" status and found to be redundant with existing values, it should be removed and listed as a synonym for the existing value. If a keyword is added with the "proposal" status and found to be harmful, then it should be changed to "rejected" status, and its "Effect on..." information should be changed accordingly.
Conformance checkers must use the information given on the WHATWG Wiki RelExtensions page to establish if a value not explicitly defined in this specification is allowed or not. When an author uses a new type not defined by either this specification or the Wiki page, conformance checkers should offer to add the value to the Wiki, with the details described above, with the "proposal" status.
This specification does not define how new values will get approved. It is expected that the Wiki will have a community that addresses this.
This section describes various features that allow authors to enable users to edit documents and parts of documents interactively.
この節は規定の一部ではありません。
Would be nice to explain how these features work together.
irrelevant 属性All elements may have the irrelevant content attribute set. The irrelevant
attribute is a boolean attribute. When specified
on an element, it indicates that the element is not yet, or is no longer,
relevant. User agents should not render elements that have the irrelevant
attribute specified.
In the following skeletal example, the attribute is used to hide the Web game's main screen until the user logs in:
<h1>The Example Game</h1>
<section id="login">
<h2>Login</h2>
<form>
...
<!-- calls login() once the user's credentials have been checked -->
</form>
<script>
function login() {
// switch screens
document.getElementById('login').irrelevant = true;
document.getElementById('game').irrelevant = false;
}
</script>
</section>
<section id="game" irrelevant>
...
</section>
The irrelevant attribute must not be used to
hide content that could legitimately be shown in another presentation. For
example, it is incorrect to use irrelevant to hide panels in a tabbed
dialog, because the tabbed interface is merely a kind of overflow
presentation — showing all the form controls in one big page with a
scrollbar would be equivalent, and no less correct.
Elements in a section hidden by the irrelevant attribute are still active, e.g.
scripts and form controls in such sections still render execute and submit
respectively. Only their presentation to the user changes.
The irrelevant DOM attribute must reflect the content attribute of the same name.
The click() method must fire a click event at the element, whose
default action is the firing of a
further DOMActivate event at
the same element, whose own default action is to go through all the
elements the DOMActivate event
bubbled through (starting at the target node and going towards the
Document node), looking for an element with an activation behavior; the first element, in reverse
tree order, to have one, must have its activation behavior executed.
The scrollIntoView([top]) method, when called, must cause the
element on which the method was called to have the attention of the user
called to it.
In a speech browser, this could happen by having the current playback position move to the start of the given element.
In visual user agents, if the argument is present and has the value false, the user agent should scroll the element into view such that both the bottom and the top of the element are in the viewport, with the bottom of the element aligned with the bottom of the viewport. If it isn't possible to show the entire element in that way, or if the argument is omitted or is true, then the user agent should instead align the top of the element with the top of the viewport. If the entire scrollable part of the content is visible all at once (e.g. if a page is shorter than the viewport), then the user agent should not scroll anything. Visual user agents should further scroll horizontally as necessary to bring the element to the attention of the user.
Non-visual user agents may ignore the argument, or may treat it in some media-specific manner most useful to the user.
When an element is focused, key events received by the document
must be targeted at that element. There may be no element focused; when no
element is focused, key events received by the document must be targetted
at the body element.
User agents may track focus for each browsing
context or Document individually, or may support only one
focused elment per top-level browsing context
— user agents should follow platform conventions in this regard.
Which element(s) within a top-level browsing context currently has focus must be independent of whether or not the top-level browsing context itself has the system focus.
The focusing steps are as follows:
If focusing the element will remove the focus from another element, then run the unfocusing steps for that element.
Make the element the currently focused element in its top-level browsing context.
Some elements, most notably area, can
correspond to more than one distinct focusable area. If a particular
area was indicated when the element was focused, then that is the area
that must get focus; otherwise, e.g. when using the focus() method, the first
such region in tree order is the one that must be focused.
Fire a simple event that doesn't bubble called
focus at the element.
User agents must run the focusing steps for an element whenever the user moves the focus to a focusable element.
The unfocusing steps are as follows:
Unfocus the element.
Fire a simple event that doesn't bubble called
blur at the element.
User agents should run the unfocusing steps for an element whenever the user moves the focus away from any focusable element.
The focus() method,
when invoked, must run the following algorithm:
If the element is marked as locked for focus, then abort these steps.
If the element is not focusable, then abort these steps.
Mark the element as locked for focus.
If the element is not already focused, run the focusing steps for the element.
Unmark the element as locked for focus.
The blur() method, when
invoked, should run the unfocusing steps for the
element. User agents may selectively or uniformly ignore calls to this
method for usability reasons.
The activeElement
attribute must return the element in the document that is focused. If no
element in the Document is focused, this must return the body element.
The hasFocus() method must
return true if the document, one of its nested browsing contexts, or any element in the
document or its browsing contexts currently has the system focus.
The tabindex
content attribute specifies whether the element is focusable, whether it
can be reached using sequential focus navigation, and the relative order
of the element for the purposes of sequential focus navigation. The name
"tab index" comes from the common use of the "tab" key to navigate through
the focusable elements. The term "tabbing" refers to moving forward
through the focusable elements that can be reached using sequential focus
navigation.
The tabindex
attribute, if specified, must have a value that is a valid integer.
If the attribute is specified, it must be parsed using the rules for parsing integers. The attribute's values have the following meanings:
The user agent should follow platform conventions to determine if the element is to be focusable and, if so, whether the element can be reached using sequential focus navigation, and if so, what its relative order should be.
The user agent must allow the element to be focused, but should not allow the element to be reached using sequential focus navigation.
The user agent must allow the element to be focused, should allow the element to be reached using sequential focus navigation, and should follow platform conventions to determine the element's relative order.
The user agent must allow the element to be focused, should allow the element to be reached using sequential focus navigation, and should place the element in the sequential focus navigation order so that it is:
tabindex attribute has been omitted or
whose value, when parsed, returns an error,
tabindex attribute has a value equal to or
less than zero,
tabindex attribute has a value greater than
zero but less than the value of the tabindex attribute on the element,
tabindex attribute has a value equal to the
value of the tabindex attribute on the element but that
is earlier in the document in tree order than
the element,
tabindex attribute has a value equal to the
value of the tabindex attribute on the element but that
is later in the document in tree order than
the element, and
tabindex attribute has a value greater than
the value of the tabindex attribute on the element.
An element is focusable if the tabindex attribute's
definition above defines the element to be focusable and the
element is being
rendered.
When an element is focused, the element matches the CSS
:focus pseudo-class and key events are dispatched on that
element in response to keyboard input.
The tabIndex DOM
attribute must reflect the value of the tabindex content
attribute. If the attribute is not present, or parsing its value returns
an error, then the DOM attribute must return 0 for elements that are
focusable and −1 for elements that are not focusable.
Every browsing context has a selection. The selection can be empty, and the selection can have more than one range (a disjointed selection). The user should be able to change the selection. User agents are not required to let the user select more than one range, and may collapse multiple ranges in the selection to a single range when the user interacts with the selection. (But, of course, the user agent may let the user create selections with multiple ranges.)
This one selection must be shared by all the content of the browsing context (though not by nested browsing contexts), including any editing hosts in the document. (Editing hosts that are not inside a document cannot have a selection.)
If the selection is empty (collapsed, so that it has only one segment and that segment's start and end points are the same) then the selection's position should equal the caret position. When the selection is not empty, this specification does not define the caret position; user agents should follow platform conventions in deciding whether the caret is at the start of the selection, the end of the selection, or somewhere else.
On some platforms (such as those using Wordstar editing conventions), the caret position is totally independent of the start and end of the selection, even when the selection is empty. On such platforms, user agents may ignore the requirement that the cursor position be linked to the position of the selection altogether.
Mostly for historical reasons, in addition to the browsing context's selection, each textarea and
input element has an independent selection. These are the
text field
selections.
User agents may selectively ignore attempts to use the API to adjust the selection made after the user has modified the selection. For example, if the user has just selected part of a word, the user agent could ignore attempts to use the API call to immediately unselect the selection altogether, but could allow attempts to change the selection to select the entire word.
User agents may also allow the user to create selections that are not exposed to the API.
The datagrid and
select elements also have selections, indicating which items
have been picked by the user. These are not discussed in this section.
This specification does not specify how selections are
presented to the user. The Selectors specification, in conjunction with
CSS, can be used to style text selections using the ::selection pseudo-element. [SELECTORS] [CSS21]
The getSelection() method on the
Window interface must return the
Selection object representing the selection of that Window object's browsing
context.
For historical reasons, the getSelection() method
on the HTMLDocument interface
must return the same Selection
object.
[Stringifies] interface Selection {
readonly attribute Node anchorNode;
readonly attribute long anchorOffset;
readonly attribute Node focusNode;
readonly attribute long focusOffset;
readonly attribute boolean isCollapsed;
void collapse(in Node parentNode, in long offset);
void collapseToStart();
void collapseToEnd();
void selectAllChildren(in Node parentNode);
void deleteFromDocument();
readonly attribute long rangeCount;
Range getRangeAt(in long index);
void addRange(in Range range);
void removeRange(in Range range);
void removeAllRanges();
};
The Selection interface is
represents a list of Range objects. The first item in the
list has index 0, and the last item has index count-1,
where count is the number of ranges in the list. [DOM2RANGE]
All of the members of the Selection interface are defined in terms of
operations on the Range objects represented by this object.
These operations can raise exceptions, as defined for the
Range interface; this can therefore result in the members of
the Selection interface raising
exceptions as well, in addition to any explicitly called out below.
The anchorNode attribute
must return the value returned by the startContainer
attribute of the last Range object in the list, or null if
the list is empty.
The anchorOffset attribute
must return the value returned by the startOffset
attribute of the last Range object in the list, or 0 if the
list is empty.
The focusNode attribute must
return the value returned by the endContainer
attribute of the last Range object in the list, or null if
the list is empty.
The focusOffset attribute
must return the value returned by the endOffset
attribute of the last Range object in the list, or 0 if the
list is empty.
The isCollapsed attribute
must return true if there are zero ranges, or if there is exactly one
range and its collapsed attribute is itself true.
Otherwise it must return false.
The collapse(parentNode, offset) method
must raise a WRONG_DOCUMENT_ERR DOM exception if parentNode's ownerDocument is not the
HTMLDocument object with which
the Selection object is associated.
Otherwise it is, and the method must remove all the ranges in the Selection list, then create a new
Range object, add it to the list, and invoke its setStart() and setEnd() methods with
the parentNode and offset values
as their arguments.
The collapseToStart()
method must raise an INVALID_STATE_ERR DOM exception if there
are no ranges in the list. Otherwise, it must invoke the collapse()
method with the startContainer and startOffset values of the first Range object
in the list as the arguments.
The collapseToEnd()
method must raise an INVALID_STATE_ERR DOM exception if there
are no ranges in the list. Otherwise, it must invoke the collapse()
method with the endContainer and endOffset values of the last Range object in
the list as the arguments.
The selectAllChildren(parentNode) method must invoke the collapse()
method with the parentNode value as the first argument
and 0 as the second argument, and must then invoke the selectNodeContents() method on the first (and only) range
in the list with the parentNode value as the argument.
The deleteFromDocument()
method must invoke the deleteContents() method on
each range in the list, if any, from first to last.
The rangeCount attribute
must return the number of ranges in the list.
The getRangeAt(index) method must return the indexth range in the list. If index is
less than zero or greater or equal to the value returned by the rangeCount
attribute, then the method must raise an INDEX_SIZE_ERR DOM
exception.
The addRange(range) method must add the given range Range object to the list of selections, at the end
(so the newly added range is the new last range). Duplicates are not
prevented; a range may be added more than once in which case it appears in
the list more than once, which (for example) will cause stringification to
return the range's text twice.
The removeRange(range) method must remove the first occurrence
of range in the list of ranges, if it appears at all.
The removeAllRanges()
method must remove all the ranges from the list of ranges, such that the
rangeCount attribute returns 0 after the
removeAllRanges() method is invoked
(and until a new range is added to the list, either through this interface
or via user interaction).
Objects implementing this interface must stringify to a concatenation of the
results of invoking the toString() method of the
Range object on each of the ranges of the selection, in the
order they appear in the list (first to last).
In the following document fragment, the emphasised parts indicate the selection.
<p>The cute girl likes the <cite>Oxford English Dictionary</cite>.</p>
If a script invoked window.getSelection().toString(), the return value would
be "the Oxford English".
Selection interface has no relation to the DataGridSelection 界面。
When we define HTMLTextAreaElement and HTMLInputElement we will have to add the IDL given below to both of their IDLs.
The input and textarea elements define four
members in their DOM interfaces for handling their text selection:
void select();
attribute unsigned long selectionStart;
attribute unsigned long selectionEnd;
void setSelectionRange(in unsigned long start, in unsigned long end);
These methods and attributes expose and control the selection of
input and textarea text fields.
The select() method must
cause the contents of the text field to be fully selected.
The selectionStart
attribute must, on getting, return the offset (in logical order) to the
character that immediately follows the start of the selection. If there is
no selection, then it must return the offset (in logical order) to the
character that immediately follows the text entry cursor.
On setting, it must act as if the setSelectionRange() method had been
called, with the new value as the first argument, and the current value of
the selectionEnd attribute as the second
argument, unless the current value of the selectionEnd is less than the new value,
in which case the second argument must also be the new value.
The selectionEnd
attribute must, on getting, return the offset (in logical order) to the
character that immediately follows the end of the selection. If there is
no selection, then it must return the offset (in logical order) to the
character that immediately follows the text entry cursor.
On setting, it must act as if the setSelectionRange() method had been
called, with the current value of the selectionStart attribute as the first
argument, and new value as the second argument.
The setSelectionRange(start, end) method must
set the selection of the text field to the sequence of characters starting
with the character at the startth position (in logical
order) and ending with the character at the (end-1)th position. Arguments greater than the length
of the value in the text field must be treated as pointing at the end of
the text field. If end is less than or equal to start then the start of the selection and the end of the
selection must both be placed immediately before the character with offset
end. In UAs where there is no concept of an empty
selection, this must set the cursor to be just before the character with
offset end.
To obtain the currently selected text, the following JavaScript suffices:
var selectionText = control.value.substring(control.selectionStart, control.selectionEnd);
...where control is the input or
textarea element.
Characters with no visible rendering, such as U+200D ZERO WIDTH JOINER, still count as characters. Thus, for instance, the selection can include just an invisible character, and the text insertion cursor can be placed to one side or another of such a character.
When these methods and attributes are used with input
elements that are not displaying simple text fields, they must raise an
INVALID_STATE_ERR exception.
contenteditable 属性The contenteditable attribute is
a common attribute. User agents must support this attribute on all HTML elements.
The contenteditable attribute is an enumerated attribute whose keywords are the empty
string, true, and false. The
empty string and the true keyword map to the
true state. The false keyword maps to the
false state. In addition, there is a third state, the
inherit state, which is the missing value default (and
the invalid value default).
If an HTML element
has a contenteditable attribute set to the
true state, or it has its contenteditable attribute set to the
inherit state and if its nearest ancestor HTML element with the contenteditable attribute set to a
state other than the inherit state has its attribute set to the true
state, or if it and its ancestors all have their contenteditable attribute set to the
inherit state but the Document has designMode
enabled, then the UA must treat the element as editable (as described below).
Otherwise, either the HTML element has a contenteditable attribute set to the
false state, or its contenteditable attribute is set to
the inherit state and its nearest ancestor HTML element with the contenteditable attribute set to a
state other than the inherit state has its attribute set to the false
state, or all its ancestors have their contenteditable attribute set to the
inherit state and the Document itself has designMode
disabled; either way, the element is not editable.
The contentEditable DOM
attribute, on getting, must return the string "true"
if the content attribute is set to the true state, false" if the content attribute is set to the false state,
and "inherit" otherwise. On setting, if the new
value is an ASCII case-insensitive match for the
string "inherit" then the content attribute must be
removed, if the new value is an ASCII
case-insensitive match for the string "true"
then the content attribute must be set to the string "true", if the new value is an ASCII
case-insensitive match for the string "false"
then the content attribute must be set to the string "false", and otherwise the attribute setter must raise a
SYNTAX_ERR exception.
The isContentEditable DOM
attribute, on getting, must return true if the element is editable, and false otherwise.
If an element is editable and its parent element is not, or if an element is editable and it has no parent element, then the element is an editing host. Editable elements can be nested. User agents must make editing hosts focusable (which typically means they enter the tab order). An editing host can contain non-editable sections, these are handled as described below. An editing host can contain non-editable sections that contain further editing hosts.
When an editing host has focus, it must have a caret position that specifies where the current editing position is. It may also have a selection.
How the caret and selection are represented depends entirely on the UA.
利用者が編集ホストと対話している間に利用者が実行することを利用者エージェントが認めるべきである作用がいくつかあります。 すべての作用について正確にどのように誘発するのかを定義しているわけではありませんが、 定義していない場合には、実装者に対する指針として、鍵の束縛の案を提示します。
利用者エージェントは、利用者が編集ホスト中の任意の位置
(入れ子になった編集可能要素の中を含みます。)
に脱字記号を移動させることを認めなければなりません。これは、
各種の鍵識別子についての keydown 事象の既定作用として、および mousedown 事象の既定作用として誘発することができます。
利用者エージェントは、利用者が編集ホスト中の選択を変更することを認めなければなりません
(入れ子になった編集可能要素の中を含みます)。
利用者エージェントは、編集可能要素と非編集可能要素を選択がまたぐことを
(例えば、非編集可能子孫がそれぞれ原子的に選択可能としながら、その中の文章を選択できないようにすることで)
拒んでも構いません。これは、各種の鍵識別子についての keydown 事象の既定作用として、および mousedown 事象の既定作用として誘発することができます。
この作用は、 textInput 事象の既定作用として誘発しなければならず、
他の命令によって誘発しても構いません。
これにより、利用者エージェントは指定された文章 (textInput 事象の場合には事象オブジェクトの
data 属性で与えられるもの) を脱字記号の位置に挿入することにならなければなりません。
利用者エージェントは、脱字記号が語句付け内容の認められていない場所に位置付けられている場合
(例えば空の ol 要素の内側の場合)、
脱字記号の位置に直接文章を挿入してはなりません。このような場合、
動作は利用者エージェント依存ですが、利用者エージェントは、
文章の挿入の要求に対して、要求以前の DOM よりも適合性の低い DOM を生成してはなりません。
利用者エージェントは、利用者に、段落以外の内容だけを含む要素に新しい段落を挿入することを認めるべきです。
UAs should offer a way for the user to request that the current
paragraph be broken at the caret, e.g. as the default action of a keydown event whose identifier is the "Enter"
key and that has no modifiers set.
The exact behavior is UA-dependent, but user agents must not, in response to a request to break a paragraph, generate a DOM that is less conformant than the DOM prior to the request.
UAs should offer a way for the user to request an explicit line break
at the caret position without breaking the paragraph, e.g. as the
default action of a keydown event whose
identifier is the "Enter" key and that has a shift modifier set. Line
separators are typically found within a poem verse or an address. To
insert a line break, the user agent must insert a br element.
If the caret is positioned somewhere where phrasing content is not allowed (e.g. in an empty
ol element), then the user agent must not
insert the br element directly at the
caret position. In such cases the behavior is UA-dependent, but user
agents must not, in response to a request to insert a line separator,
generate a DOM that is less conformant than the DOM prior to the
request.
UAs should offer a way for the user to delete text and elements,
including non-editable descendants, e.g. as the default action of keydown events whose identifiers are "U+0008"
or "U+007F".
Five edge cases in particular need to be considered carefully when implementing this feature: backspacing at the start of an element, backspacing when the caret is immediately after an element, forward-deleting at the end of an element, forward-deleting when the caret is immediately before an element, and deleting a selection whose start and end points do not share a common parent node.
In any case, the exact behavior is UA-dependent, but user agents must not, in response to a request to delete text or an element, generate a DOM that is less conformant than the DOM prior to the request.
UAs should offer the user the ability to mark text and paragraphs with semantics that HTML can express.
UAs should similarly offer a way for the user to insert empty semantic elements to subsequently fill by entering text manually.
UAs should also offer a way to remove those semantics from marked up text, and to remove empty semantic element that have been inserted.
In response to a request from a user to mark text up in italics, user
agents should use the i element to
represent the semantic. The em element
should be used only if the user agent is sure that the user means to
indicate stress emphasis.
In response to a request from a user to mark text up in bold, user
agents should use the b element to
represent the semantic. The strong
element should be used only if the user agent is sure that the user
means to indicate importance.
The exact behavior is UA-dependent, but user agents must not, in response to a request to wrap semantics around some text or to insert or remove a semantic element, generate a DOM that is less conformant than the DOM prior to the request.
UAs should offer a way for the user to move images and other non-editable parts around the content within an editing host. This may be done using the drag and drop mechanism. User agents must not, in response to a request to move non-editable elements nested inside editing hosts, generate a DOM that is less conformant than the DOM prior to the request.
When an editable form control is edited, the
changes must be reflected in both its current value and its
default value. For input elements this means updating the
defaultValue DOM attribute as
well as the value DOM attribute; for
select elements it means updating the option
elements' defaultSelected
DOM attribute as well as the selected DOM attribute; for
textarea elements this means updating the defaultValue DOM attribute as
well as the value DOM attribute.
(Updating the default* DOM attributes causes
content attributes to be updated as well.)
User agents may perform several commands per user request; for example if the user selects a block of text and hits Enter, the UA might interpret that as a request to delete the content of the selection followed by a request to break the paragraph at that position.
Documents have a designMode, which can be
either enabled or disabled.
The designMode DOM attribute on the
Document object takes two values, "on"
and "off". When it is set, the new value must be
compared in an ASCII case-insensitive manner to these
two values. If it matches the "on" value, then designMode
must be enabled, and if it matches the "off" value,
then designMode must be disabled. Other values
must be ignored.
When designMode is enabled, the DOM attribute
must return the value "on", and when it is disabled,
it must return the value "off".
The last state set must persist until the document is destroyed or the
state is changed. Initially, documents must have their designMode
disabled.
Enabling designMode causes scripts in general to be
disabled and the document to become editable.
This section defines an event-based drag-and-drop mechanism.
This specification does not define exactly what a drag-and-drop operation actually is.
On a visual medium with a pointing device, a drag operation could be the
default action of a mousedown event
that is followed by a series of mousemove events, and the drop could be
triggered by the mouse being released.
On media without a pointing device, the user would probably have to explicitly indicate his intention to perform a drag-and-drop operation, stating what he wishes to drag and what he wishes to drop, respectively.
However it is implemented, drag-and-drop operations must have a starting point (e.g. where the mouse was clicked, or the start of the selection or element that was selected for the drag), may have any number of intermediate steps (elements that the mouse moves over during a drag, or elements that the user picks as possible drop points as he cycles through possibilities), and must either have an end point (the element above which the mouse button was released, or the element that was finally selected), or be canceled. The end point must be the last element selected as a possible drop point before the drop occurs (so if the operation is not canceled, there must be at least one element in the middle step).
この節は規定の一部ではありません。
It's also currently non-existent.
DragEvent and DataTransfer interfacesdrag-and-drop processing model involves several events. They all use the DragEvent 界面。
interface DragEvent : UIEvent {
readonly attribute DataTransfer dataTransfer;
void initDragEvent(in DOMString typeArg, in boolean canBubbleArg, in boolean cancelableArg, in AbstractView viewArg, in long detailArg, in DataTransfer dataTransferArg);
void initDragEventNS(in DOMString namespaceURIArg, in DOMString typeArg, in boolean canBubbleArg, in boolean cancelableArg, in AbstractView viewArg, in long detailArg, in DataTransfer dataTransferArg);
};
We should have modifier key information in here too (shift/ctrl, etc), like with mouse events and like with the context menu event.
initDragEvent()
メソッドと initMessageEventNS()
メソッドは、 DOM3 事象界面の似たような名前のメソッドと同じような方法で事象を初期化しなければなりません。
[DOM3EVENTS]
The dataTransfer attribute
of the DragEvent interface
represents the context information for the event.
interface DataTransfer {
attribute DOMString dropEffect;
attribute DOMString effectAllowed;
readonly attribute DOMStringList types;
void clearData(in DOMString format);
void setData(in DOMString format, in DOMString data);
DOMString getData(in DOMString format);
void setDragImage(in Element image, in long x, in long y);
void addElement(in Element element);
};
DataTransfer objects can
conceptually contain various kinds of data.
When a DataTransfer object is
created, it must be initialized as follows:
DataTransfer object must
initially contain no data, no elements, and have no associated image.
DataTransfer object's
effectAllowed attribute must be set to
"uninitialized".
dropEffect attribute must be set to "none".
The dropEffect attribute
controls the drag-and-drop feedback that the user is given during a
drag-and-drop operation.
The attribute must ignore any attempts to set it to a value other than
none, copy, link, and move. On getting, the
attribute must return the last of those four values that it was set to.
The effectAllowed
attribute is used in the drag-and-drop processing model to initialise the
dropEffect attribute during the dragenter and dragover events.
The attribute must ignore any attempts to set it to a value other than
none, copy, copyLink, copyMove, link, linkMove, move, all, and uninitialized. On getting, the attribute must return the
last of those values that it was set to.
DataTransfer objects can hold
pieces of data, each associated with a unique format. Formats are
generally given by MIME types, with some values special-cased for legacy
reasons.
The clearData(format) method must clear the DataTransfer object of any data
associated with the given format. If format is the value "Text", then it
must be treated as "text/plain". If the format is "URL", then it must be
treated as "text/uri-list".
The setData(format, data) method must
add data to the data stored in the DataTransfer object, labeled as being of
the type format. This must replace any previous data
that had been set for that format. If format is the
value "Text", then it must be treated as "text/plain". If the format is "URL", then it must be treated as "text/uri-list".
The getData(format) method must return the data that is
associated with the type format, if any, and must
return the empty string otherwise. If format is the
value "Text", then it must be treated as "text/plain". If the format is "URL", then the data associated with the "text/uri-list" format must be parsed as appropriate for
text/uri-list data, and the first URL from the list
must be returned. If there is no data with that format, or if there is but
it has no URLs, then the method must return the empty string. [RFC2483]
The types
attribute must return a live DOMStringList that contains the
list of formats that are stored in the DataTransfer object.
The setDragImage(element, x, y) method sets which element to use to generate the drag feedback. The element argument can be any Element; if it is
an img element, then the user agent should
use the element's image (at its intrinsic size) to generate the feedback,
otherwise the user agent should base the feedback on the given element
(but the exact mechanism for doing so is not specified).
The addElement(element) method is an alternative way of
specifying how the user agent is to render
the drag feedback. It adds an element to the DataTransfer object.
The following events are involved in the drag-and-drop model. Whenever
the processing model described below causes one of these events to be
fired, the event fired must use the DragEvent interface defined above, must have
the bubbling and cancelable behaviors given in the table below, and must
have the context information set up as described after the table, with the
view attribute set to the view with
which the user interacted to trigger the drag-and-drop event, and the
detail attribute set to zero.
| Event Name | Target | Bubbles? | Cancelable? | dataTransfer
| effectAllowed
| dropEffect
| Default Action |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
dragstart
| Source node | ✓ Bubbles | ✓ Cancelable | Contains source node unless a selection is being dragged, in which case it is empty | uninitialized
| none
| Initiate the drag-and-drop operation |
drag
| Source node | ✓ Bubbles | ✓ Cancelable | Empty | Same as last event | none
| Continue the drag-and-drop operation |
dragenter
| Immediate user selection or the body element | ✓ Bubbles | ✓ Cancelable | Empty | Same as last event | Based on
effectAllowed value
| Reject immediate user selection as potential target element |
dragleave
| Previous target element | ✓ Bubbles | — | Empty | Same as last event | none
| None |
dragover
| Current target element | ✓ Bubbles | ✓ Cancelable | Empty | Same as last event | Based on
effectAllowed value
| Reset the current drag operation to "none" |
drop
| Current target element | ✓ Bubbles | ✓ Cancelable | getData() returns data set in dragstart event
| Same as last event | Current drag operation | Varies |
dragend
| Source node | ✓ Bubbles | — | Empty | Same as last event | Current drag operation | Varies |
The dataTransfer object's contents are empty
except for dragstart events and drop events, for which the
contents are set as described in the processing model, below.
The effectAllowed attribute must be set to
"uninitialized" for dragstart events, and to whatever value the
field had after the last drag-and-drop event was fired for all other
events (only counting events fired by the user agent for the purposes of
the drag-and-drop model described below).
The dropEffect attribute must be set to "none" for dragstart, drag, and dragleave events (except when stated
otherwise in the algorithms given in the sections below), to the value
corresponding to the current drag operation for
drop and dragend events, and to a
value based on the effectAllowed attribute's value and to
the drag-and-drop source, as given by the following table, for the
remaining events (dragenter and dragover):
effectAllowed
| dropEffect
|
|---|---|
none
| none
|
copy, copyLink, copyMove, all
| copy
|
link, linkMove
| link
|
move
| move
|
uninitialized when what is being dragged is a
selection from a text field
| move
|
uninitialized when what is being dragged is a
selection
| copy
|
uninitialized when what is being dragged is an
a element with an href
attribute
| link
|
| Any other case | copy
|
When the user attempts to begin a drag operation, the user agent must
first determine what is being dragged. If the drag operation was invoked
on a selection, then it is the selection that is being dragged. Otherwise,
it is the first element, going up the ancestor chain, starting at the node
that the user tried to drag, that has the DOM attribute draggable set to
true. If there is no such element, then nothing is being dragged, the
drag-and-drop operation is never started, and the user agent must not
continue with this algorithm.
img elements and a elements with an href attribute have their draggable attribute
set to true by default.
If the user agent determines that something can be dragged, a dragstart event must
then be fired.
If it is a selection that is being dragged, then this event must be fired on the node that the user started the drag on (typically the text node that the user originally clicked). If the user did not specify a particular node, for example if the user just told the user agent to begin a drag of "the selection", then the event must be fired on the deepest node that is a common ancestor of all parts of the selection.
We should look into how browsers do other types (e.g. Firefox apparently also adds text/html for internal drag and drop of a selection).
If it is not a selection that is being dragged, then the event must be fired on the element that is being dragged.
The node on which the event is fired is the source node. Multiple events are fired on this node during the course of the drag-and-drop operation.
If it is a selection that is being dragged, the dataTransfer member of the event must be
created with no nodes. Otherwise, it must be created containing just the
source node. Script can use the addElement() method to add further elements
to the list of what is being dragged.
If it is a selection that is being dragged, the dataTransfer member of the event must have
the text of the selection added to it as the data associated with the
text/plain format. Otherwise, if it is an img element being dragged, then the value of the
element's src DOM
attribute must be added, associated with the text/uri-list format. Otherwise, if it is an a element being dragged, then the value of the
element's href DOM
attribute must be added, associated with the text/uri-list format. Otherwise, no data is added to the
object by the user agent.
If the event is canceled, then the drag-and-drop operation must not occur; the user agent must not continue with this algorithm.
If it is not canceled, then the drag-and-drop operation must be initiated.
Since events with no event handlers registered are, almost by definition, never canceled, drag-and-drop is always available to the user if the author does not specifically prevent it.
The drag-and-drop feedback must be generated from the first of the following sources that is available:
setDragImage() method of the dataTransfer object of the dragstart event, if
the method was called. In visual media, if this is used, the x and y arguments that were passed to
that method should be used as hints for where to put the cursor relative
to the resulting image. The values are expressed as distances in CSS
pixels from the left side and from the top side of the image
respectively. [CSS21]dataTransfer object, both before the
event was fired, and during the handling of the event using the addElement() method, if any such elements
were indeed added.
The user agent must take a note of the data that was placed in the dataTransfer object. This data will be
made available again when the drop event is fired.
From this point until the end of the drag-and-drop operation, device input events (e.g. mouse and keyboard events) must be suppressed. In addition, the user agent must track all DOM changes made during the drag-and-drop operation, and add them to its undo history as one atomic operation once the drag-and-drop operation has ended.
During the drag operation, the element directly indicated by the user as the drop target is called the immediate user selection. (Only elements can be selected by the user; other nodes must not be made available as drop targets.) However, the immediate user selection is not necessarily the current target element, which is the element currently selected for the drop part of the drag-and-drop operation. The immediate user selection changes as the user selects different elements (either by pointing at them with a pointing device, or by selecting them in some other way). The current target element changes when the immediate user selection changes, based on the results of event handlers in the document, as described below.
Both the current target element and the immediate user selection can be null, which means no target element is selected. They can also both be elements in other (DOM-based) documents, or other (non-Web) programs altogether. (For example, a user could drag text to a word-processor.) The current target element is initially null.
In addition, there is also a current drag operation, which can take on the values "none", "copy", "link", and "move". Initially it has the value "none". It is updated by the user agent as described in the steps below.
User agents must, every 350ms (±200ms), perform the following steps in sequence. (If the user agent is still performing the previous iteration of the sequence when the next iteration becomes due, the user agent must not execute the overdue iteration, effectively "skipping missed frames" of the drag-and-drop operation.)
First, the user agent must fire a drag event at the source
node. If this event is canceled, the user agent must set the current drag operation to none (no drag operation).
Next, if the drag
event was not canceled and the user has not ended the drag-and-drop
operation, the user agent must check the state of the drag-and-drop
operation, as follows:
First, if the user is indicating a different immediate user selection than during the last iteration (or if this is the first iteration), and if this immediate user selection is not the same as the current target element, then the current target element must be updated, as follows:
If the new immediate user selection is null, or is in a non-DOM document or application, then set the current target element to the same value.
Otherwise, the user agent must fire a dragenter
event at the immediate user selection.
If the event is canceled, then the current target element must be set to the immediate user selection.
Otherwise, if the current target element
is not the body element, the user agent
must fire a dragenter event at the body element, and the current target element must be set to the body element, regardless of whether that
event was canceled or not. (If the body
element is null, then the current target
element would be set to null too in this case, it wouldn't be
set to the Document object.)
If the previous step caused the current target
element to change, and if the previous target element was not null
or a part of a non-DOM document, the user agent must fire a dragleave event
at the previous target element.
If the current target element is a DOM
element, the user agent must fire a dragover event at this current target element.
If the dragover event is not canceled, the current drag operation must be reset to "none".
Otherwise, the current drag operation must
be set based on the values the effectAllowed and dropEffect attributes of the dataTransfer object had after the
event was handled, as per the following table:
effectAllowed
| dropEffect
| Drag operation |
|---|---|---|
uninitialized, copy,
copyLink, copyMove, or
all
| copy
| "copy" |
uninitialized, link,
copyLink, linkMove, or
all
| link
| "link" |
uninitialized, move,
copyMove, linkMove, or
all
| move
| "move" |
| Any other case | "none" | |
Then, regardless of whether the dragover event was canceled or not, the
drag feedback (e.g. the mouse cursor) must be updated to match the current drag operation, as follows:
| Drag operation | Feedback |
|---|---|
| "copy" | Data will be copied if dropped here. |
| "link" | Data will be linked if dropped here. |
| "move" | Data will be moved if dropped here. |
| "none" | No operation allowed, dropping here will cancel the drag-and-drop operation. |
Otherwise, if the current target element is not a DOM element, the user agent must use platform-specific mechanisms to determine what drag operation is being performed (none, copy, link, or move). This sets the current drag operation.
Otherwise, if the user ended the drag-and-drop operation (e.g. by
releasing the mouse button in a mouse-driven drag-and-drop interface),
or if the drag event
was canceled, then this will be the last iteration. The user agent must
execute the following steps, then stop looping.
If the current drag operation is none (no
drag operation), or, if the user ended the drag-and-drop operation by
canceling it (e.g. by hitting the Escape key), or if the current target element is null, then the drag
operation failed. If the current target
element is a DOM element, the user agent must fire a dragleave event
at it; otherwise, if it is not null, it must use platform-specific
conventions for drag cancellation.
Otherwise, the drag operation was as success. If the current target element is a DOM element, the user
agent must fire a drop event at it; otherwise, it must use
platform-specific conventions for indicating a drop.
When the target is a DOM element, the dropEffect attribute of the event's
dataTransfer object must be given the
value representing the current drag operation
(copy, link, or move), and the object must be set up so that the getData()
method will return the data that was added during the dragstart event.
If the event is canceled, the current drag
operation must be set to the value of the dropEffect attribute of the event's
dataTransfer object as it stood after
the event was handled.
Otherwise, the event is not canceled, and the user agent must perform the event's default action, which depends on the exact target as follows:
textarea, or an input element
with type="text")
text/plain format, if any, into the text field in a
manner consistent with platform-specific conventions (e.g. inserting
it at the current mouse cursor position, or inserting it at the end
of the field).
Finally, the user agent must fire a dragend event at the source node, with the dropEffect attribute of the event's
dataTransfer object being set to the
value corresponding to the current drag
operation.
The current drag operation can
change during the processing of the drop event, if one was fired.
The event is not cancelable. After the event has been handled, the user agent must act as follows:
textarea, or an input element
with type="text"), and a drop event was fired in
the previous step, and the current drag
operation is "move", and the source of the drag-and-drop
operation is a selection in the DOM
textarea, or an input element
with type="text"), and a drop event was fired in
the previous step, and the current drag
operation is "move", and the source of the drag-and-drop
operation is a selection in a text field
The model described above is independent of which Document
object the nodes involved are from; the events must be fired as described
above and the rest of the processing model must be followed as described
above, irrespective of how many documents are involved in the operation.
If the drag is initiated in another application, the source node is not a DOM node, and the user agent must
use platform-specific conventions instead when the requirements above
involve the source node. User agents in this situation must act as if the
dragged data had been added to the DataTransfer object when the drag
started, even though no dragstart event was actually fired; user
agents must similarly use platform-specific conventions when deciding on
what drag feedback to use.
If a drag is started in a document but ends in another application, then the user agent must instead replace the parts of the processing model relating to handling the target according to platform-specific conventions.
In any case, scripts running in the context of the document must not be able to distinguish the case of a drag-and-drop operation being started or ended in another application from the case of a drag-and-drop operation being started or ended in another document from another domain.
draggable 属性All elements may have the draggable content attribute set. The draggable attribute
is an enumerated attribute. It has three states.
The first state is true and it has the keyword true. The second state is false and it has the
keyword false. The third state is auto; it
has no keywords but it is the missing value default.
The draggable
DOM attribute, whose value depends on the content attribute's in the way
described below, controls whether or not the element is draggable.
Generally, only text selections are draggable, but elements whose draggable DOM
attribute is true become draggable as well.
If an element's draggable content attribute has the state
true, the draggable DOM attribute must return true.
Otherwise, if the element's draggable content attribute has the state
false, the draggable DOM attribute must return false.
Otherwise, the element's draggable content attribute has the state
auto. If the element is an img
element, or, if the element is an a element
with an href
content attribute, the draggable DOM attribute must return true.
Otherwise, the draggable DOM must return false.
If the draggable DOM attribute is set to the value
false, the draggable content attribute must be set to
the literal value false. If the draggable DOM
attribute is set to the value true, the draggable content attribute must be set to
the literal value true.
Copy-and-paste is a form of drag-and-drop: the "copy" part is equivalent to dragging content to another application (the "clipboard"), and the "paste" part is equivalent to dragging content from another application.
Select-and-paste (a model used by mouse operations in the X Window System) is equivalent to a drag-and-drop operation where the source is the selection.
When the user invokes a copy operation, the user agent must act as if the user had invoked a drag on the current selection. If the drag-and-drop operation initiates, then the user agent must act as if the user had indicated (as the immediate user selection) a hypothetical application representing the clipboard. Then, the user agent must act as if the user had ended the drag-and-drop operation without canceling it. If the drag-and-drop operation didn't get canceled, the user agent should then follow the relevant platform-specific conventions for copy operations (e.g. updating the clipboard).
When the user invokes a cut operation, the user agent must act as if the user had invoked a copy operation (see the previous section), followed, if the copy was completed successfully, by a selection delete operation.
When the user invokes a clipboard paste operation, the user agent must act as if the user had invoked a drag on a hypothetical application representing the clipboard, setting the data associated with the drag as the content on the clipboard (in whatever formats are available).
Then, the user agent must act as if the user had indicated (as the immediate user selection) the element with the keyboard focus, and then ended the drag-and-drop operation without canceling it.
When the user invokes a selection paste operation, the user agent must act as if the user had invoked a drag on the current selection, then indicated (as the immediate user selection) the element with the keyboard focus, and then ended the drag-and-drop operation without canceling it.
User agents must not make the data added to the DataTransfer object during the dragstart event
available to scripts until the drop event, because otherwise, if a user were to
drag sensitive information from one document to a second document,
crossing a hostile third document in the process, the hostile document
could intercept the data.
For the same reason, user agents must consider a drop to be successful
only if the user specifically ended the drag operation — if any
scripts end the drag operation, it must be considered unsuccessful
(canceled) and the drop
event must not be fired.
User agents should take care to not start drag-and-drop operations in response to script actions. For example, in a mouse-and-window environment, if a script moves a window while the user has his mouse button depressed, the UA would not consider that to start a drag. This is important because otherwise UAs could cause data to be dragged from sensitive sources and dropped into hostile documents without the user's consent.
There has got to be a better way of doing this, surely.
The user agent must associate an undo
transaction history with each HTMLDocument object.
The undo transaction history is a list of entries. The entries are of two type: DOM changes and undo objects.
Each DOM changes entry in the undo transaction history consists of batches of one or more of the following:
Element node.
Node.HTMLDocument object
(parentNode, childNodes).
Undo object entries consist of objects representing state that scripts running in the document are managing. For example, a Web mail application could use an undo object to keep track of the fact that a user has moved an e-mail to a particular folder, so that the user can undo the action and have the e-mail return to its former location.
Broadly speaking, DOM changes entries are handled by the UA in response to user edits of form controls and editing hosts on the page, and undo object entries are handled by script in response to higher-level user actions (such as interactions with server-side state, or in the implementation of a drawing tool).
UndoManager 界面This API sucks. Seriously. It's a terrible API. Really bad. I hate it. Here are the requirements:
To manage undo object entries in the undo transaction history, the UndoManager interface can be used:
interface UndoManager {
unsigned long add(in DOMObject data, in DOMString title);
[XXX] void remove(in unsigned long index);
void clearUndo();
void clearRedo();
[IndexGetter] DOMObject item(in unsigned long index);
readonly attribute unsigned long length;
readonly attribute unsigned long position;
};
The undoManager attribute of the
Window interface must return the object
implementing the UndoManager
interface for that Window object's
associated HTMLDocument object.
UndoManager objects represent
their document's undo transaction history.
Only undo object entries are visible with this
API, but this does not mean that DOM changes
entries are absent from the undo transaction
history.
The length attribute must
return the number of undo object entries in the
undo transaction history.
The item(n) method must return the nth undo object entry in the undo transaction history.
The undo transaction history has a current position. This is the position between two entries in the undo transaction history's list where the previous entry represents what needs to happen if the user invokes the "undo" command (the "undo" side, lower numbers), and the next entry represents what needs to happen if the user invokes the "redo" command (the "redo" side, higher numbers).
The position attribute must
return the index of the undo object entry
nearest to the undo position, on the "redo" side.
If there are no undo object entries on the
"redo" side, then the attribute must return the same as the length
attribute. If there are no undo object entries
on the "undo" side of the undo position, the position
attribute returns zero.
Since the undo transaction
history contains both undo object entries
and DOM changes entries, but the position
attribute only returns indices relative to undo
object entries, it is possible for several "undo" or "redo" actions to
be performed without the value of the position
attribute changing.
The add(data, title) method's
behavior depends on the current state. Normally, it must insert the data object passed as an argument into the undo transaction history immediately before
the undo position, optionally remembering the
given title to use in the UI. If the method is called
during an undo operation,
however, the object must instead be added immediately after the
undo position.
If the method is called and there is neither an undo operation in progress nor a redo operation in progress then
any entries in the undo transaction
history after the undo position must be
removed (as if clearRedo() had been called).
We could fire events when someone adds something to the undo history -- one event per undo object entry before the position (or after, during redo addition), allowing the script to decide if that entry should remain or not. Or something. Would make it potentially easier to expire server-held state when the server limitations come into play.
The remove(index) method must remove the undo object entry with the specified index. If the index is less than zero or greater than or
equal to length then the method must raise an
INDEX_SIZE_ERR exception. DOM
changes entries are unaffected by this method.
The clearUndo() method must
remove all entries in the undo transaction
history before the undo position, be they DOM changes entries or undo
object entries.
The clearRedo() method must
remove all entries in the undo transaction
history after the undo position, be they DOM changes entries or undo
object entries.
Another idea is to have a way for scripts to say "startBatchingDOMChangesForUndo()" and after that the changes to the DOM go in as if the user had done them.
When the user invokes an undo operation, or when the execCommand() method is called with the
undo command, the
user agent must perform an undo operation.
If the undo position is at the start of the undo transaction history, then the user agent must do nothing.
If the entry immediately before the undo position is a DOM changes entry, then the user agent must remove that DOM changes entry, reverse the DOM changes that were listed in that entry, and, if the changes were reversed with no problems, add a new DOM changes entry (consisting of the opposite of those DOM changes) to the undo transaction history on the other side of the undo position.
If the DOM changes cannot be undone (e.g. because the DOM state is no longer consistent with the changes represented in the entry), then the user agent must simply remove the DOM changes entry, without doing anything else.
If the entry immediately before the undo
position is an undo object entry, then the
user agent must first remove that undo object
entry from the undo transaction history,
and then must fire an undo event on the Document object,
using the undo object entry's associated undo
object as the event's data.
Any calls to add() while the event is being handled will be
used to populate the redo history, and will then be used if the user
invokes the "redo" command to undo his undo.
When the user invokes a redo operation, or when the execCommand() method is called with the
redo command, the
user agent must perform a redo operation.
This is mostly the opposite of an undo operation, but the full definition is included here for completeness.
If the undo position is at the end of the undo transaction history, then the user agent must do nothing.
If the entry immediately after the undo position is a DOM changes entry, then the user agent must remove that DOM changes entry, reverse the DOM changes that were listed in that entry, and, if the changes were reversed with no problems, add a new DOM changes entry (consisting of the opposite of those DOM changes) to the undo transaction history on the other side of the undo position.
If the DOM changes cannot be redone (e.g. because the DOM state is no longer consistent with the changes represented in the entry), then the user agent must simply remove the DOM changes entry, without doing anything else.
If the entry immediately after the undo position
is an undo object entry, then the user agent
must first remove that undo object entry from
the undo transaction history, and then
must fire a redo event
on the Document object, using the undo
object entry's associated undo object as the event's data.
UndoManagerEvent interface and the
undo and redo eventsinterface UndoManagerEvent : Event {
readonly attribute DOMObject data;
void initUndoManagerEvent(in DOMString typeArg, in boolean canBubbleArg, in boolean cancelableArg, in DOMObject dataArg);
void initUndoManagerEventNS(in DOMString namespaceURIArg, in DOMString typeArg, in boolean canBubbleArg, in boolean cancelableArg, in DOMObject dataArg);
};
The initUndoManagerEvent()
and initUndoManagerEventNS()
methods must initialise the event in a manner analogous to the
similarly-named methods in the DOM3 Events interfaces. [DOM3EVENTS]
The data attribute
represents the undo object for the event.
The undo and redo events do not bubble,
cannot be canceled, and have no default action. When the user agent fires
one of these events it must use the UndoManagerEvent interface, with the
data
field containing the relevant undo object.
How user agents present the above conceptual model to the user is not defined. The undo interface could be a filtered view of the undo transaction history, it could manipulate the undo transaction history in ways not described above, and so forth. For example, it is possible to design a UA that appears to have separate undo transaction histories for each form control; similarly, it is possible to design systems where the user has access to more undo information than is present in the official (as described above) undo transaction history (such as providing a tree-based approach to document state). Such UI models should be based upon the single undo transaction history described in this section, however, such that to a script there is no detectable difference.
The execCommand(commandId, showUI, value) method on the HTMLDocument interface allows scripts to
perform actions on the current selection or at the current caret position.
Generally, these commands would be used to implement editor UI, for
example having a "delete" button on a toolbar.
There are three variants to this method, with one, two, and three arguments respectively. The showUI and value parameters, even if specified, are ignored unless otherwise stated.
When execCommand() is invoked, the user agent
must follow the following steps:
A document is ready for editing host commands if it has a selection that is entirely within an editing host, or if it has no selection but its caret is inside an editing host.
The queryCommandEnabled(commandId) method, when invoked, must return
true if the condition listed below under "Enabled When" for the given commandId is true, and false otherwise.
The queryCommandIndeterm(commandId) method, when invoked, must return
true if the condition listed below under "Indeterminate When" for the
given commandId is true, and false otherwise.
The queryCommandState(commandId) method, when invoked, must return
the value expressed below under "State" for the given commandId.
The queryCommandSupported(commandId) method, when invoked, must return
true if the given commandId is in the list below, and
false otherwise.
The queryCommandValue(commandId) method, when invoked, must return
the value expressed below under "Value" for the given commandId.
The possible values for commandId, and their corresponding meanings, are as follows. These values must be compared to the argument in an ASCII case-insensitive manner.
bold
b element (or, again, unwrapped, or have
that semantic inserted or removed, as defined by the UA).
b element. False otherwise.
true" if the
expression given for the "State" above is true, the string "false" otherwise.
createLink
a element (or, again, unwrapped, or have
that semantic inserted or removed, as defined by the UA). If the user
agent creates an a element or modifies an
existing a element, then if the showUI argument is present and has the value false, then
the value of the value argument must be used as the
URL of the link. Otherwise, the user should be
prompted for the URL of the link.
false".
delete
false".
formatBlock
Action: The user agent must run the following steps:
If the value argument wasn't specified, abort these steps without doing anything.
If the value argument has a leading U+003C LESS-THAN SIGN character ('<') and a trailing U+003E GREATER-THAN SIGN character ('>'), then remove the first and last characters from value.
If value is (now) an ASCII
case-insensitive match for the tag name of an element defined by
this specification that is defined to be a prose element
but not a phrasing element, then, for every position in
the selection, take the furthest flow
content ancestor element of that position that contains only phrasing content, and, if that element is editable, and has a content model that allows it
to contain prose content other than phrasing content, and has a parent element whose
content model allows that parent to contain any prose
content, rename the element (as if the Element.renameNode() method had been used) to value, using the HTML namespace.
If there is no selection, then, where in the description above refers to the selection, the user agent must act as if the selection was an empty range (with just one position) at the caret position.
false".
forwardDelete
false".
insertImage
img element (or, again, unwrapped, or
have that semantic inserted or removed, as defined by the UA). If the
user agent creates an img element or
modifies an existing img element, then if
the showUI argument is present and has the value
false, then the value of the value argument must be
used as the URL of the image. Otherwise, the user
should be prompted for the URL of the image.
false".
insertHTML
Action: The user agent must run the following steps:
If the document is an XML document, then throw an
INVALID_ACCESS_ERR exception and abort these steps.
If the value argument wasn't specified, abort these steps without doing anything.
If there is a selection, act as if the user had requested that the selection be deleted.
Invoke the HTML fragment parsing
algorithm with an arbitrary orphan body element as the context element and with the value argument as input.
Insert the nodes returned by the previous step into the document at the location of the caret.
false".
insertLineBreak
false".
insertOrderedList
ol
element (or unwrapped, or, if there is no selection, have that semantic
inserted or removed — the exact behavior is UA-defined).
false".
insertUnorderedList
ul
element (or unwrapped, or, if there is no selection, have that semantic
inserted or removed — the exact behavior is UA-defined).
false".
insertParagraph
false".
insertText
false".
italic
i element (or, again, unwrapped, or have
that semantic inserted or removed, as defined by the UA).
i element. False otherwise.
true" if the
expression given for the "State" above is true, the string "false" otherwise.
redo
false".
selectAll
false".
subscript
sub element (or, again, unwrapped, or
have that semantic inserted or removed, as defined by the UA).
sub element. False otherwise.
true" if the
expression given for the "State" above is true, the string "false" otherwise.
superscript
sup
element (or unwrapped, or, if there is no selection, have that semantic
inserted or removed — the exact behavior is UA-defined).
sup element. False otherwise.
true" if the
expression given for the "State" above is true, the string "false" otherwise.
undo
false".
unlink
a elements that have href attributes and that are partially or
completely included in the current selection.
a element that has an href attribute.
false".
unselect
false".
vendorID-customCommandID
vendorID-customCommandID so as to prevent clashes between
extensions from different vendors and future additions to this
specification.
false".
鯖送信事象、Web ソケット、文書間メッセージ交換、通信路メッセージ交換のメッセージはmessage 事象を使います。
次の界面はこの事象のために定義されています。
interface MessageEvent : Event {
readonly attribute DOMString data;
readonly attribute DOMString origin;
readonly attribute DOMString lastEventId;
readonly attribute Window source;
readonly attribute MessagePort messagePort;
void initMessageEvent(in DOMString typeArg, in boolean canBubbleArg, in boolean cancelableArg, in DOMString dataArg, in DOMString originArg, in DOMString lastEventIdArg, in Window sourceArg, in MessagePort messagePortArg);
void initMessageEventNS(in DOMString namespaceURI, in DOMString typeArg, in boolean canBubbleArg, in boolean cancelableArg, in DOMString dataArg, in DOMString originArg, in DOMString lastEventIdArg, in Window sourceArg, in MessagePort messagePortArg);
};
initMessageEvent()
メソッドと initMessageEventNS()
メソッドは、 DOM3 事象界面の似たような名前のメソッドと同じような方法で事象を初期化しなければなりません。
[DOM3EVENTS]
data
属性は送信されたメッセージを表します。
origin
属性は、 鯖送信事象と文書間メッセージ交換において、メッセージを送信した文書の起源
(普通は当該文書の scheme と hostname と port で、 path や素片識別子は含みません。)
を表します。
lastEventId
属性は、鯖送信事象において、
事象源の最終事象識別子文字列を表します。
source 属性は、
文書間メッセージ交換において、
メッセージが送られて来た元の
Window を表します。
messagePort
属性は、文書間メッセージ交換と通信路メッセージ交換において、
送信された MessagePort があれば、
それを表します。
特に規定がない場合、利用者エージェントが以後の節で説明する算法の中で
message
事象を作成して発送する時に、 lastEventId 属性は空文字列でなければならず、
origin 属性は空文字列でなければならず、
source
属性は null でなければならず、 messagePort
属性は null でなければなりません。
Tasks in server-sent events and Web Sockets use their own task sources, but the task source for the tasks in cross-document messaging and channel messaging is the posted message task source.
この節は、鯖が事象を待ち受けている文書の中に DOM
事象を発送できるようにする仕組みを説明します。
eventsource
要素はこの仕組みに対する単純な界面を提供しています。
RemoteEventTarget 界面EventTarget 界面を実装するオブジェクトは、 RemoteEventTarget
界面も実装しなければなりません。
interface RemoteEventTarget {
void addEventSource(in DOMString src);
void removeEventSource(in DOMString src);
};
addEventSource(src)
メソッドが呼び出された時、利用者エージェントは
src
に指定された URL
を解決し、
それが成功した場合、得られた絶対 URL をそのオブジェクトの事象源のリストに追加しなければなりません。
同じ URL を何度も登録することができます。
URL の解決に失敗した場合は、利用者エージェントは SYNTAX_ERR
例外を発生させなければなりません。
removeEventSource(src)
メソッドが呼び出された時、利用者エージェントは
src に指定された URL を解決し、
それが成功した場合、得られた絶対 URL をそのオブジェクトの事象源のリストからさ駆除しなければなりません。
同じ URI が複数回登録されている場合、
removeEventSource()
メソッドを呼び出す時に削除するのはその URI
の1つの実現値だけを削除しなければなりません。
URL の解決に失敗した場合は、利用者エージェントは何もしません。
Each object implementing the EventTarget and RemoteEventTarget interfaces has a
list of event
sources that are registered for that object.
When a new absolute URL is added to this list, the user agent should queue a task to run the following steps with the new absolute URL:
If the entry for the new absolute URL has been removed from the list, then abort these steps.
Fetch the resource identified by that absolute URL.
As data is received, the tasks queued by the networking task source to handle the data must consist of following the rules given in the following sections.
When an event source is removed from the list of event sources for an object, if that resource is still being fetched, then the relevant connection must be closed.
Since connections established to remote servers for such resources are expected to be long-lived, UAs should ensure that appropriate buffering is used. In particular, while line buffering may be safe if lines are defined to end with a single U+000A LINE FEED character, block buffering or line buffering with different expected line endings can cause delays in event dispatch.
Each event source in the list must have associated with it the following:
In general, the semantics of the transport protocol specified by the URLs for the event sources must be followed, including HTTP caching rules.
For HTTP connections, the Accept header may be
included; if included, it must contain only formats of event framing that
are supported by the user agent (one of which must be
text/event-stream, as described below).
Other formats of event framing may also be supported in addition to
text/event-stream, but this specification does not define how
they are to be parsed or processed.
Such formats could include systems like SMS-push; for example
servers could use Accept headers and HTTP redirects
to an SMS-push mechanism as a kind of protocol negotiation to reduce
network load in GSM environments.
User agents should use the Cache-Control: no-cache header
in requests to bypass any caches for requests of event sources.
If the event source's last event ID string is not the empty string, then
a Last-Event-ID HTTP header must be included with
the request, whose value is the value of the event source's last event ID
string.
For connections to domains other than the document's domain, the semantics of the Access-Control HTTP header must be followed. [ACCESSCONTROL]
HTTP 200 OK responses with a Content-Type
header specifying the type text/event-stream that are either
from the document's domain or explicitly allowed by
the Access-Control HTTP headers must be processed line by line as described below.
For the purposes of such successfully opened event streams only, user agents should ignore HTTP cache headers, and instead assume that the resource indicates that it does not wish to be cached.
If such a resource completes loading (i.e. the entire HTTP response body is received or the connection itself closes), the user agent should request the event source resource again after a delay equal to the reconnection time of the event source.
HTTP 200 OK responses that have a Content-Type other than
text/event-stream (or some other supported type), and HTTP
responses whose Access-Control headers indicate that the resource are not
to be used, must be ignored and must prevent the user agent from
refetching the resource for that event source.
HTTP 201 Created, 202 Accepted, 203 Non-Authoritative Information, and 206 Partial Content responses must be treated like HTTP 200 OK responses for the purposes of reopening event source resources. They are, however, likely to indicate an error has occurred somewhere and may cause the user agent to emit a warning.
HTTP 204 No Content, and 205 Reset Content responses must be treated as if they were 200 OK responses with the right MIME type but no content, and should therefore cause the user agent to refetch the resource after a delay equal to the reconnection time of the event source.
HTTP 300 Multiple Choices responses should be handled automatically if possible (treating the responses as if they were 302 Found responses pointing to the appropriate resource), and otherwise must be treated as HTTP 404 responses.
HTTP 301 Moved Permanently responses must cause the user agent to reconnect using the new server specified URL instead of the previously specified URL for all subsequent requests for this event source. (It doesn't affect other event sources with the same URL unless they also receive 301 responses, and it doesn't affect future sessions, e.g. if the page is reloaded.)
HTTP 302 Found, 303 See Other, and 307 Temporary Redirect responses must cause the user agent to connect to the new server-specified URL, but if the user agent needs to again request the resource at a later point, it must return to the previously specified URL for this event source.
HTTP 304 Not Modified responses should be handled like HTTP 200 OK responses, with the content coming from the user agent cache. A new request should then be made after a delay equal to the reconnection time of the event source.
HTTP 305 Use Proxy, HTTP 401 Unauthorized, and 407 Proxy Authentication Required should be treated transparently as for any other subresource.
Any other HTTP response code not listed here should cause the user agent to stop trying to process this event source.
DNS errors must be considered fatal, and cause the user agent to not open any connection for that event source.
For non-HTTP protocols, UAs should act in equivalent ways.
This event stream format's MIME type is text/event-stream.
The event stream format is (in pseudo-BNF):
<stream> ::= <bom>? <event>*
<event> ::= [ <comment> | <field> ]* <newline>
<comment> ::= <colon> <any-char>* <newline>
<field> ::= <name-char>+ [ <colon> <space>? <any-char>* ]? <newline>
# characters:
<bom> ::= a single U+FEFF BYTE ORDER MARK character
<space> ::= a single U+0020 SPACE character (' ')
<newline> ::= a U+000D CARRIAGE RETURN character
followed by a U+000A LINE FEED character
| a single U+000D CARRIAGE RETURN character
| a single U+000A LINE FEED character
| the end of the file
<colon> ::= a single U+003A COLON character (':')
<name-char> ::= a single Unicode character other than
U+003A COLON, U+000D CARRIAGE RETURN and U+000A LINE FEED
<any-char> ::= a single Unicode character other than
U+000D CARRIAGE RETURN and U+000A LINE FEED
Event streams in this format must always be encoded as UTF-8.
Lines must be separated by either a U+000D CARRIAGE RETURN U+000A LINE FEED (CRLF) character pair, a single U+000A LINE FEED (LF) character, or a single U+000D CARRIAGE RETURN (CR) character.
Bytes or sequences of bytes that are not valid UTF-8 sequences must be interpreted as the U+FFFD REPLACEMENT CHARACTER.
One leading U+FEFF BYTE ORDER MARK character must be ignored if any are present.
The stream must then be parsed by reading everything line by line, with a U+000D CARRIAGE RETURN U+000A LINE FEED (CRLF) character pair, a single U+000A LINE FEED (LF) character, a single U+000D CARRIAGE RETURN (CR) character, and the end of the file being the four ways in which a line can end.
When a stream is parsed, a data buffer and an event name buffer must be associated with it. They must be initialized to the empty string
Lines must be processed, in the order they are received, as follows:
Dispatch the event, as defined below.
Ignore the line.
Collect the characters on the line before the first U+003A COLON character (':'), and let field be that string.
Collect the characters on the line after the first U+003A COLON character (':'), and let value be that string. If value starts with a single U+0020 SPACE character, remove it from value.
Process the field using the steps described below, using field as the field name and value as the field value.
Process the field using the steps described below, using the whole line as the field name, and the empty string as the field value.
Once the end of the file is reached, the user agent must dispatch the event one final time, as defined below.
The steps to process the field given a field name and a field value depend on the field name, as given in the following list. Field names must be compared literally, with no case folding performed.
Set the event name buffer the to field value.
If the data buffer is not the empty string, then append a single U+000A LINE FEED character to the data buffer. Append the field value to the data buffer.
Set the event stream's last event ID to the field value.
If the field value consists of only characters in the range U+0030 DIGIT ZERO ('0') U+0039 DIGIT NINE ('9'), then interpret the field value as an integer in base ten, and set the event stream's reconnection time to that integer. Otherwise, ignore the field.
The field is ignored.
When the user agent is required to dispatch the event, then the user agent must act as follows:
If the data buffer is an empty string, set the data buffer and the event name buffer to the empty string and abort these steps.
If the event name buffer is not the empty string but is also not a valid NCName, set the data buffer and the event name buffer to the empty string and abort these steps.
Otherwise, create an event that uses the MessageEvent interface, with the event
name message,
which does not bubble, is cancelable, and has no default action. The
data
attribute must be set to the value of the data
buffer, the origin attribute must be set to the Unicode
serialization of the origin of the event
stream's URL, and the lastEventId attribute must be set to the
last event ID string of the event source.
If the event name buffer has a value other than the empty string, change the type of the newly created event to equal the value of the event name buffer.
Set the data buffer and the event name buffer to the empty string.
Queue a task to dispatch the newly created event
at the RemoteEventTarget
object to which the event stream is registered. The task source for this task is the remote event task
source.
If an event doesn't have an "id" field, but an earlier event
did set the event source's last event ID string, then the
event's lastEventId field will be set to the value
of whatever the last seen "id" field was.
The following event stream, once followed by a blank line:
data: YHOO data: -2 data: 10
...would cause an event message with the interface MessageEvent to be dispatched on the
eventsource element, whose data attribute
would contain the string YHOO\n-2\n10 (where \n
represents a newline).
This could be used as follows:
<eventsource src="http://stocks.example.com/ticker.php"
onmessage="var data = event.data.split('\n'); updateStocks(data[0], data[1], data[2]);">
...where updateStocks() is a function defined as:
function updateStocks(symbol, delta, value) { ... }
...or some such.
The following stream contains four blocks. The first block has just a
comment, and will fire nothing. The second block has two fields with
names "data" and "id" respectively; an event will be fired for this
block, with the data "first event", and will then set the last event ID
to "1" so that if the connection died between this block and the next,
the server would be sent a Last-Event-ID header
with the value "1". The third block fires an event with data "second
event", and also has an "id" field, this time with no value, which resets
the last event ID to the empty string (meaning no Last-Event-ID header will now be sent in the event of a
reconnection being attempted). Finally the last block just fires an event
with the data "third event". Note that the last block doesn't have to end
with a blank line, the end of the stream is enough to trigger the
dispatch of the last event.
: test stream data: first event id: 1 data: second event id data: third event
The following stream fires just one event:
data data data data:
The first and last blocks do nothing, since they do not contain any actual data (the data buffer remains at the empty string, and so nothing gets dispatched). The middle block fires an event with the data set to a single newline character.
The following stream fires two identical events:
data:test data: test
This is because the space after the colon is ignored if present.
Legacy proxy servers are known to, in certain cases, drop HTTP connections after a short timeout. To protect against such proxy servers, authors can include a comment line (one starting with a ':' character) every 15 seconds or so.
Authors wishing to relate event source connections to each other or to
specific documents previously served might find that relying on IP
addresses doesn't work, as individual clients can have multiple IP
addresses (due to having multiple proxy servers) and individual IP
addresses can have multiple clients (due to sharing a proxy server). It is
better to include a unique identifier in the document when it is served
and then pass that identifier as part of the URL in the src attribute of
the eventsource element.
Implementations that support HTTP's per-server connection limitation
might run into trouble when opening multiple pages from a site if each
page has an eventsource to the
same domain. Authors can avoid this using the relatively complex mechanism
of using unique domain names per connection, or by allowing the user to
enable or disable the eventsource
functionality on a per-page basis.
To enable Web applications to maintain bidirectional communications with
their originating server, this specification introduces the WebSocket interface.
This interface does not allow for raw access to the underlying network. For example, this interface could not be used to implement an IRC client without proxying messages through a custom server.
この節は規定の一部ではありません。
An introduction to the client-side and server-side of using the direct connection APIs.
WebSocket 界面
[Constructor(in DOMString url)]
interface WebSocket {
readonly attribute DOMString URL;
// ready state
const unsigned short CONNECTING = 0;
const unsigned short OPEN = 1;
const unsigned short CLOSED = 2;
readonly attribute int readyState;
// networking
attribute EventListener onopen;
attribute EventListener onmessage;
attribute EventListener onclosed;
void postMessage(in DOMString data);
void disconnect();
};
WebSocket objects must also
implement the EventTarget interface. [DOM3EVENTS]
The WebSocket(url) constructor takes one argument, url, which specifies the URL to which to
connect. When a WebSocket object is
created, the UA must parse this
argument and verify that the URL parses without failure and has a <scheme> component whose
value is either "ws" or "wss",
when compared in an ASCII case-insensitive manner. If
it does, it has, and it is, then the user agent must asynchronously establish a Web Socket connection to url. Otherwise, the constructor must raise a
SYNTAX_ERR exception.
The URL
attribute must return the value that was passed to the constructor.
The readyState attribute
represents the state of the connection. It can have the following values:
CONNECTING (数値 0)OPEN (数値 1)CLOSED (数値 2)When the object is created its readyState must be set to CONNECTING (0).
The postMessage(data) method transmits data using the
connection. If the connection is not established (readyState is not OPEN), it must raise
an INVALID_STATE_ERR exception. If the connection is
established, then the user agent must send data using the Web Socket.
The disconnect() method must
close the Web Socket connection or connection
attempt, if any. If the connection is already closed, it must do nothing.
Closing the connection causes a close event to be fired and the readyState attribute's value to change, as
described below.
The open
event is fired when the Web Socket connection is
established.
The close
event is fired when the connection is closed (whether by the author,
calling the disconnect() method, or by the server, or by
a network error).
No information regarding why the connection was closed is passed to the application in this version of this specification.
The message
event is fired when when data is received for a connection.
The following are the event handler DOM attributes
that must be supported by objects implementing the WebSocket interface:
onopen
Must be invoked whenever an open event is targeted at or bubbles through
the WebSocket object.
onmessage
message 事象が当該 WebSocket オブジェクトを対象としているか、泡立って当該オブジェクトを通過する時に、
呼び出されなければなりません。
onclosed
Must be invoked whenever an closed event is targeted at or
bubbles through the WebSocket
object.
The task source for all tasks queued by algorithms in this section and its subsections is the Web Socket task source.
This section only applies to user agents.
When the user agent is to establish a Web Socket connection to url, it must run the following steps, in the background (without blocking scripts or anything like that):
If the <scheme>
component of the resulting absolute URL is
"ws", set secure to false;
otherwise, the <scheme>
component is "wss", set secure
to true.
Let host be the value of the <host> component in the resulting absolute URL.
If the resulting absolute URL has a <port> component, then let port be that component's value; otherwise, if secure is false, let port be 81, otherwise let port be 815.
Let resource name be the value of the <path> component (which might be empty) in the resulting absolute URL.
If resource name is the empty string, set it to a single character U+002F SOLIDUS (/).
If the resulting absolute URL has a <query> component, then append a single 003F QUESTION MARK (?) character to resource name, followed by the value of the <query> component.
If the user agent is configured to use a proxy to connect to port port, then connect to that proxy and ask it to open a TCP/IP connection to the host given by host and the port given by port.
For example, if the user agent uses an HTTP proxy, then if it was to try to connect to port 80 on server example.com, it might send the following lines to the proxy server:
CONNECT example.com HTTP/1.1
If there was a password, the connection might look like:
CONNECT example.com HTTP/1.1 Proxy-authorization: Basic ZWRuYW1vZGU6bm9jYXBlcyE=
Otherwise, if the user agent is not configured to use a proxy, then open a TCP/IP connection to the host given by host and the port given by port.
If the connection could not be opened, then fail the Web Socket connection and abort these steps.
If secure is true, perform a TLS handshake over the connection. If this fails (e.g. the server's certificate could not be verified), then fail the Web Socket connection and abort these steps. Otherwise, all further communication on this channel must run through the encrypted tunnel. [RFC2246]
Send the following bytes to the remote side (the server):
47 45 54 20
Send the resource name value, encoded as US-ASCII.
Send the following bytes:
20 48 54 54 50 2f 31 2e 31 0d 0a 55 70 67 72 61 64 65 3a 20 57 65 62 53 6f 63 6b 65 74 0d 0a 43 6f 6e 6e 65 63 74 69 6f 6e 3a 20 55 70 67 72 61 64 65 0d 0a
The string "GET ", the path, " HTTP/1.1", CRLF, the string "Upgrade: WebSocket", CRLF, and the string "Connection: Upgrade", CRLF.
Send the following bytes:
48 6f 73 74 3a 20
Send the host value, encoded as US-ASCII, if it represents a host name (and not an IP address).
Send the following bytes:
0d 0a
The string "Host: ", the host, and CRLF.
Send the following bytes:
4f 72 69 67 69 6e 3a 20
Send the ASCII serialization of the origin of
the script that invoked the WebSocket() constructor.
Send the following bytes:
0d 0a
The string "Origin: ", the origin, and CRLF.
If the client has any authentication information or cookies that would
be relevant to a resource with a URL that has a
scheme of http if secure is
false and https if secure is
true and is otherwise identical to url, then HTTP
headers that would be appropriate for that information should be sent at
this point. [RFC2616] [RFC2109] [RFC2965]
Each header must be on a line of its own (each ending with a CR LF sequence). For the purposes of this step, each header must not be split into multiple lines (despite HTTP otherwise allowing this with continuation lines).
For example, if the server had a username and password that applied to that URL, it could send:
Authorization: Basic d2FsbGU6ZXZl
Send the following bytes:
0d 0a
Just a CRLF (a blank line).
Read the first 85 bytes from the server. If the connection closes before 85 bytes are received, or if the first 85 bytes aren't exactly equal to the following bytes, then fail the Web Socket connection and abort these steps.
48 54 54 50 2f 31 2e 31 20 31 30 31 20 57 65 62 20 53 6f 63 6b 65 74 20 50 72 6f 74 6f 63 6f 6c 20 48 61 6e 64 73 68 61 6b 65 0d 0a 55 70 67 72 61 64 65 3a 20 57 65 62 53 6f 63 6b 65 74 0d 0a 43 6f 6e 6e 65 63 74 69 6f 6e 3a 20 55 70 67 72 61 64 65 0d 0a
The string "HTTP/1.1 101 Web Socket Protocol Handshake", CRLF, the string "Upgrade: WebSocket", CRLF, the string "Connection: Upgrade", CRLF.
What if the response is a 401 asking for credentials?
Let headers be a list of name-value pairs, initially empty.
Header: Let name and value be empty byte arrays.
Read a byte from the server.
If the connection closes before this byte is received, then fail the Web Socket connection and abort these steps.
Otherwise, handle the byte as described in the appropriate entry below:
This reads a header name, terminated by a colon, converting upper-case ASCII letters to lowercase, and aborting if a stray CR or LF is found.
Read a byte from the server.
If the connection closes before this byte is received, then fail the Web Socket connection and abort these steps.
Otherwise, handle the byte as described in the appropriate entry below:
This skips past a space character after the colon, if necessary.
Read a byte from the server.
If the connection closes before this byte is received, then fail the Web Socket connection and abort these steps.
Otherwise, handle the byte as described in the appropriate entry below:
This reads a header value, terminated by a CRLF.
Read a byte from the server.
If the connection closes before this byte is received, or if the byte is not a 0x0a byte (ASCII LF), then fail the Web Socket connection and abort these steps.
This skips past the LF byte of the CRLF after the header.
Append an entry to the headers list that has the name given by the string obtained by interpreting the name byte array as a UTF-8 byte stream and the value given by the string obtained by interpreting the value byte array as a UTF-8 byte stream.
Return to the header step above.
Headers processing: If there is not exactly one entry in the
headers list whose name is "websocket-origin", or if there is not exactly one entry
in the headers list whose name is "websocket-location", or if there are any entries in the
headers list whose names are the empty string, then
fail the Web Socket connection and abort these
steps.
Handle each entry in the headers list as follows:
websocket-origin"
WebSocket()
constructor, then fail the Web Socket
connection and abort these steps.
websocket-location"
set-cookie" or "set-cookie2" or another cookie-related header name
http if secure is false and
https if secure is true and
is otherwise identical to url. [RFC2109] [RFC2965]
Change the readyState attribute's value to OPEN (1).
Queue a task to fire a simple
event named open at the WebSocket object.
The Web Socket connection is established. Now the user agent must send and receive to and from the connection as described in the next section.
To fail the Web Socket connection, the user agent must close the Web Socket connection, and may report the problem to the user (which would be especially useful for developers). However, user agents must not convey the failure information to the script in a way distinguishable from the Web Socket being closed normally.
Once a Web Socket connection is established, the user agent must run through the following state machine for the bytes sent by the server.
Try to read a byte from the server. Let frame type be that byte.
If no byte could be read because the Web Socket connection is closed, then abort.
Handle the frame type byte as follows:
Run these steps. If at any point during these steps a read is attempted but fails because the Web Socket connection is closed, then abort.
Let length be zero.
Length: Read a byte, let b be that byte.
Let bv be integer corresponding to the low 7 bits of b (the value you would get by anding b with 0x7f).
Multiply length by 128, add bv to that result, and store the final result in length.
If the high-order bit of b is set (i.e. if b anded with 0x80 returns 0x80), then return to the step above labeled length.
Read length bytes.
Discard the read bytes.
Run these steps. If at any point during these steps a read is attempted but fails because the Web Socket connection is closed, then abort.
Let raw data be an empty byte array.
Data: Read a byte, let b be that byte.
If b is not 0xff, then append b to raw data and return to the previous step (labeled data).
Interpret raw data as a UTF-8 string, and store that string in data.
If frame type is 0x00, create an event that
uses the MessageEvent
interface, with the event name message, which does not bubble, is
cancelable, has no default action, and whose data
attribute is set to data, and queue a task to dispatch it at the WebSocket object. Otherwise, discard
the data.
Return to the first step to read the next byte.
If the user agent is faced with content that is too large to be handled appropriately, then it must fail the Web Socket connection.
Once a Web Socket connection is established, the user agent must use the following steps to send data using the Web Socket:
Send a 0x00 byte to the server.
Encode data using UTF-8 and send the resulting byte stream to the server.
Send a 0xff byte to the server.
People often request the ability to send binary blobs over this API; also, once the other postMessage() methods support it, we should look into allowing name/value pairs, arrays, and numbers using postMessage() instead of just strings and binary data.
This section only applies to servers.
This section describes the minimal requirements for a server-side implementation of Web Sockets.
Listen on a port for TCP/IP. Upon receiving a connection request, open a connection and send the following bytes back to the client:
48 54 54 50 2f 31 2e 31 20 31 30 31 20 57 65 62 20 53 6f 63 6b 65 74 20 50 72 6f 74 6f 63 6f 6c 20 48 61 6e 64 73 68 61 6b 65 0d 0a 55 70 67 72 61 64 65 3a 20 57 65 62 53 6f 63 6b 65 74 0d 0a 43 6f 6e 6e 65 63 74 69 6f 6e 3a 20 55 70 67 72 61 64 65 0d 0a
Send the string "WebSocket-Origin" followed by a
U+003A COLON (":") followed by the ASCII serialization of the origin from
which the server is willing to accept connections, followed by a CRLF pair
(0x0d 0x0a).
For instance:
WebSocket-Origin: http://example.com
Send the string "WebSocket-Location" followed by a
U+003A COLON (":") followed by the URL of the Web
Socket script, followed by a CRLF pair (0x0d 0x0a).
For instance:
WebSocket-Location: ws://example.com:80/demo
Send another CRLF pair (0x0d 0x0a).
Read (and discard) data from the client until four bytes 0x0d 0x0a 0x0d 0x0a are read.
If the connection isn't dropped at this point, go to the data framing section.
The previous section ignores the data that is transmitted by the client during the handshake.
The data sent by the client consists of a number of fields separated by CR LF pairs (bytes 0x0d 0x0a).
The first field consists of three tokens separated by space characters
(byte 0x20). The middle token is the path being opened. If the server
supports multiple paths, then the server should echo the value of this
field in the initial handshake, as part of the URL
given on the WebSocket-Location line (after the
appropriate scheme and host).
The remaining fields consist of name-value pairs, with the name part separated from the value part by a colon and a space (bytes 0x3a 0x20). Of these, several are interesting:
The value gives the hostname that the client intended to use when opening the Web Socket. It would be of interest in particular to virtual hosting environments, where one server might serve multiple hosts, and might therefore want to return different data.
The right host has to be output as part of the URL
given on the WebSocket-Location line of the
handshake described above, to verify that the server knows that it is
really representing that host.
The value gives the scheme, hostname, and port (if it's not the default port for the given scheme) of the page that asked the client to open the Web Socket. It would be interesting if the server's operator had deals with operators of other sites, since the server could then decide how to respond (or indeed, whether to respond) based on which site was requesting a connection.
If the server supports connections from more than one origin, then the
server should echo the value of this field in the initial handshake, on
the WebSocket-Origin line.
Other fields can be used, such as "Cookie" or
"Authorization", for authentication purposes.
This section only describes how to handle content that this specification allows user agents to send (text). It doesn't handle any arbitrary content in the same way that the requirements on user agents defined earlier handle any content including possible future extensions to the protocols.
The server should run through the following steps to process the bytes sent by the client:
Read a byte from the client. Assuming everything is going according to plan, it will be a 0x00 byte. Behaviour for the server is undefined if the byte is not 0x00.
Let raw data be an empty byte array.
Data: Read a byte, let b be that byte.
If b is not 0xff, then append b to raw data and return to the previous step (labeled data).
Interpret raw data as a UTF-8 string, and apply whatever server-specific processing should occur for the resulting string.
Return to the first step to read the next byte.
The server should run through the followin steps to send strings to the client:
Send a 0x00 byte to the client to indicate the start of a string.
Encode data using UTF-8 and send the resulting byte stream to the client.
Send a 0xff byte to the client to indicate the end of the message.
To close the Web Socket connection, either the user agent or the server closes the TCP/IP connection. There is no closing handshake. Whether the user agent or the server closes the connection, it is said that the Web Socket connection is closed.
Servers may close the Web Socket connection whenever desired.
User agents should not close the Web Socket connection arbitrarily.
When the Web Socket connection
is closed, the readyState attribute's value must be
changed to CLOSED (2), and the user agent must queue a task to fire a simple
event named close at the WebSocket object.
Web browsers, for security and privacy reasons, prevent documents in different domains from affecting each other; that is, cross-site scripting is disallowed.
While this is an important security feature, it prevents pages from different domains from communicating even when those pages are not hostile. This section introduces a messaging system that allows documents to communicate with each other regardless of their source domain, in a way designed to not enable cross-site scripting attacks.
この節は規定の一部ではありません。
For example, if document A contains an iframe element that contains document B, and
script in document A calls postMessage() on the Window object of document B, then a message
event will be fired on that object, marked as originating from the
Window of document A. The script in
document A might look like:
var o = document.getElementsByTagName('iframe')[0];
o.contentWindow.postMessage('Hello world', 'http://b.example.org/');
To register an event handler for incoming events, the script would use
addEventListener() (or similar mechanisms). For
example, the script in document B might look like:
window.addEventListener('message', receiver, false);
function receiver(e) {
if (e.origin == 'http://example.com') {
if (e.data == 'Hello world') {
e.source.postMessage('Hello', e.origin);
} else {
alert(e.data);
}
}
}
This script first checks the domain is the expected domain, and then looks at the message, which it either displays to the user, or responds to by sending a message back to the document which sent the message in the first place.
Use of this API requires extra care to protect users from hostile entities abusing a site for their own purposes.
Authors should check the origin attribute to ensure that messages are
only accepted from domains that they expect to receive messages from.
Otherwise, bugs in the author's message handling code could be exploited
by hostile sites.
Authors should not use the wildcard keyword ("*") in the targetOrigin argument in messages that contain any confidential information, as otherwise there is no way to guarantee that the message is only delivered to the recipient to which it was intended.
The integrity of this API is based on the inability for scripts of one
origin to post arbitrary events (using dispatchEvent() or otherwise) to objects in other origins
(those that are not the same).
Implementors are urged to take extra care in the implementation of this feature. It allows authors to transmit information from one domain to another domain, which is normally disallowed for security reasons. It also requires that UAs be careful to allow access to certain properties but not others.
When a script invokes the postMessage(message, targetOrigin)
method (with only two arguments) on a Window object, the user agent must follow these
steps:
If the value of the targetOrigin argument is not a
single U+002A ASTERISK character ("*"), and parsing it as a URL fails,
then throw a SYNTAX_ERR exception and abort the overall set
of steps.
Return from the postMessage() method, but asynchronously
continue running these steps.
If the targetOrigin argument has a value other
than a single literal U+002A ASTERISK character ("*"), and the active document of the browsing
context of the Window object on
which the method was invoked does not have the same origin as targetOrigin,
then abort these steps silently.
Create an event that uses the MessageEvent interface, with the event
name message,
which does not bubble, is cancelable, and has no default action. The
data
attribute must be set to the value passed as the message argument to the postMessage() method, the origin
attribute must be set to the Unicode serialization of the origin of the script that invoked the method, and
the source attribute must be set to the Window object of the default view of the browsing
context for which the Document object with which the
script is associated is the active
document.
Queue a task to dispatch the event created in the
previous step at the Window object on
which the method was invoked. The task source
for this task is the posted message task source.
When a script invokes the postMessage(message, messagePort, targetOrigin) method (with three arguments) on
a Window object, the user agent must
follow these steps:
If the value of the targetOrigin argument is not a
single U+002A ASTERISK character ("*"), and parsing it as a URL fails,
then throw a SYNTAX_ERR exception and abort the overall set
of steps.
If the messagePort argument is null, then act as if the method had just been called with two arguments, message and targetOrigin.
Try to obtain a new port by cloning the messagePort
argument with the Window object on
which the method was invoked as the owner of the clone. If this returns
an exception, then throw that exception and abort these steps.
Return from the postMessage() method, but asynchronously
continue running these steps.
If the targetOrigin argument has a value other
than a single literal U+002A ASTERISK character ("*"), and the active document of the browsing
context of the Window object on
which the method was invoked does not have the same origin as targetOrigin,
then abort these steps silently.
Create an event that uses the MessageEvent interface, with the event
name message,
which does not bubble, is cancelable, and has no default action. The
data
attribute must be set to the value passed as the message argument to the postMessage() method, the origin
attribute must be set to the Unicode serialization of the origin of the script that invoked the method, and
the source attribute must be set to the Window object of the default view of the browsing
context for which the Document object with which the
script is associated is the active
document.
Let the messagePort attribute of the event be the
new port.
Queue a task to dispatch the event created in the
previous step at the Window object on
which the method was invoked. The task source
for this task is the posted message task source.
These steps, with the exception of the second and third steps and the penultimate step, are identical to those in the previous section.
People often request the ability to send name/value pairs, arrays, and numbers using postMessage() instead of just strings.
この節は規定の一部ではありません。
An introduction to the channel and port APIs.
[Constructor]
interface MessageChannel {
readonly attribute MessagePort port1;
readonly attribute MessagePort port2;
};
When the MessageChannel() constructor
is called, it must run the following algorithm:
Create a new MessagePort object
owned by the script execution context, and let
port1 be that object.
Create a new MessagePort object
owned by the script execution context, and let
port2 be that object.
Entangle the port1 and port2 objects.
Instantiate a new MessageChannel object, and let channel be that object.
Let the port1 attribute of the channel object be port1.
Let the port2 attribute of the channel object be port2.
Return channel.
The port1 and
port2 attributes
must return the values they were assigned when the MessageChannel object was created.
Each channel has two message ports. Data sent through one port is received by the other port, and vice versa.
interface MessagePort {
readonly attribute boolean active;
boolean postMessage(in DOMString message);
boolean postMessage(in DOMString message, in MessagePort messagePort);
MessagePort startConversation(in DOMString message);
void start();
void close();
// event handler attributes
attribute EventListener onmessage;
attribute EventListener onunload;
};
Objects implementing the MessagePort interface must also implement
the EventTarget interface.
Each MessagePort object can be
entangled with another (a symmetric relationship). Each MessagePort object also has a port message queue, initial empty. A port message queue can be open or closed, and is
initially closed.
When the user agent is to create a new
MessagePort object owned by a script
execution context object owner, it must
instantiate a new MessagePort
object, and let its owner be owner.
When the user agent is to entangle two MessagePort objects, it must run the
following steps:
If one of the ports is already entangled, then unentangle it and the port that it was entangled with.
If those two previously entangled ports were the two ports
of a MessageChannel object,
then that MessageChannel
object no longer represents an actual channel: the two ports in that
object are no longer entangled.
Associate the two ports to be entangled, so that they form the two
parts of a new channel. (There is no MessageChannel object that represents
this channel.)
When the user agent is to clone a port original port, with the clone being owned by owner, it must run the following steps, which return either
a new MessagePort object or an
exception for the caller to raise:
If the original port is not entangled without
another port, then return an INVALID_STATE_ERR exception
and abort all these steps.
Let the remote port be the port with which the original port is entangled.
Create a new MessagePort object
owned by owner, and let new port
be that object.
Move all the events in the port message queue of original port to the port message queue of new port, if any, leaving the new port's port message queue in its initial closed state.
Entangle the remote port and new port objects. The original port object will be unentangled by this process.
Return new port. It is the clone.
The active attribute must
return true if the port is entangled, and false otherwise.
The postMessage() method,
when called on a port source port, must cause the user
agent to run the following steps:
Let message be the method's first argument.
Let data port be the method's second argument, if any.
If the source port is not entangled with another port, then return false and abort these steps.
Let target port be the port with which source port is entangled.
Create an event that uses the MessageEvent interface, with the name
message, which
does not bubble, is cancelable, and has no default action.
Let the data attribute of the event have the value of
message, the method's first argument.
If the method was called with a second argument data port and that argument isn't null, then run the following substeps:
If the data port is the source
port or the target port, then throw an
INVALID_ACCESS_ERR exception and abort all these steps.
Try to obtain a new data port by cloning the data port with the owner of the target port as the owner of the clone. If this returns an exception, then throw that exception and abort these steps.
Let the messagePort attribute of the event be
the new data port.
Return true from the method, but continue with these steps.
Add the event to the port message queue of target port.
People often request the ability to send name/value pairs, arrays, and numbers using postMessage() instead of just strings.
The startConversation(message) method is a convenience method that
simplifies create a new MessageChannel and invoking postMessage() with one of the new ports.
When invoked on a port source port, it must run the
following steps:
Let message be the method's first argument.
If the source port is not entangled with another port, then return null and abort these steps.
Let target port be the port with which source port is entangled.
Create an event that uses the MessageEvent interface, with the name
message, which
does not bubble, is cancelable, and has no default action.
Let the data attribute of the event have the value of
message, the method's first argument.
Create a new MessagePort object
owned by the script execution context, and let
port1 be that object.
Create a new MessagePort object
owned by the owner of the target port, and let port2 be that object.
Entangle the port1 and port2 objects.
Let the messagePort attribute of the event be
port2.
Return port1 from the method, but continue with these steps.
Add the event to the port message queue of target port.
The start() method must open
its port's port message queue, if it is not
already open.
When a port's port message queue is open,
contains an event, and its owner is available, the user agent must queue a
task in the event loop to dispatch the first
event in the queue on the MessagePort object, and remove the event
from the queue. The task source for this task is the posted
message task source.
A MessagePort's owner is available if the MessagePort is owned by an object other
than a Window object, or if it is owned
by a Window object and the
Document that was the active document
in that browsing context when the MessagePort was created is fully active. If that Document is discarded
before the port's owner becomes available, then the events are lost.
The close() method, when called
on a port local port that is entangled with another
port, must cause the user agents to run the following steps:
2つのポートをほどきます。
Queue a task to fire a simple
event called unload at the port on
which the method was called.
Queue a task to fire a simple
event called unload at the other
port.
The task source for the two tasks above is the posted message task source.
If the method is called on a port that is not entangled, then the method must do nothing.
The following are the event handler DOM attributes
that must be supported by objects implementing the MessagePort interface:
onmessage
message 事象が当該 MessagePort オブジェクトを対象としているか、泡立って当該オブジェクトを通過する時に、
呼び出されなければなりません。
The first time a MessagePort
object's onmessage attribute is set, the port's port message queue must be opened, as if the
start()
method had been called.
onunload
Must be invoked whenever an unload
event is targeted at or bubbles through the MessagePort object.
When a Document is discarded, if there are any MessagePort objects that:
Document, and
Document was the active document of that browsing
context, and
Document was the active document of
that browsing context,
...then the user agent must run the following steps for each such port:
Let surviving port be the port with which the
MessagePort object in question
is entangled.
2つのポートをほどきます。
Queue a task to fire a simple
event called unload at surviving port. The task
source for this task is the
posted message task source.
User agents must act as if MessagePort objects have a strong
reference to their entangled MessagePort object.
Thus, a message port can be received, given an event listener, and then forgotten, and so long as that event listener could receive a message, the channel will be maintained.
Of course, if this was to occur on both sides of the channel, then both ports would be garbage collected, since they would not be reachable from live code, despite having a strong reference to each other.
この節は文書、著述ツール、マーク付け生成器にのみ適用されます。 特に、適合性検査器には適用されません。 適合性検査器は次の節 (「HTML 文書の構文解析」) で与えられる要件を用いなければなりません。
文書は、次に示す部分により、次の順序で構成されなければなりません。
html 要素の形で。前述の各種の内容は、次の数個の節で説明します。
加えて、文字符号化宣言をどう直列化するかについても、 それに関する節で説明した通り、いくつかの制限があります。
根 html 要素の前の間隔文字や、
html 要素のはじめで head 要素の前の間隔文字は、
文書が構文解析される時に除去されます。根 html 要素の後の間隔文字は、
body 要素の終わりにあったものとして構文解析されます。
従って、根要素の近辺の間隔文字は往復しません。
DOCTYPE の後、
根要素の前の注釈がある場合はその後、
html 要素の開始タグの後
(省略しない場合)、
html 要素中で
head 要素の前に注釈がある場合にはその後には、
改行を挿入することをおすすめします。
HTML 構文中の多くの文字列 (例えば要素や属性の名前) は大文字と小文字を区別しませんが、 区別しないのは範囲 U+0041 ~ U+005A (LATIN CAPITAL LETTER A ~ LATIN CAPITAL LETTER Z) と 範囲 U+0061 ~ U+007A (LATIN SMALL LETTER A ~ LATIN SMALL LETTER Z) の文字についてのみです。便宜上、この節ではこれを単に「大文字・小文字を区別しない」と呼びます。
DOCTYPE はほとんど無意味ですが、 必須の頭部です。
DOCTYPE は遺物的な理由で必須です。 省略すると、ブラウザはいくつかの仕様書と非互換な異なるレンダリング・モードを使おうとします。 DOCTYPE を文書に含めることによってブラウザに関係する仕様書に従うよう最善の努力を試みさせるようにします。
DOCTYPE は、次の文字により次の順序で構成されなければなりません。
<) 文字。!) 文字。>) 文字。つまり、大文字または小文字の <!DOCTYPE HTML> です。
要素には5種類あります。 空隙要素、 CDATA 要素、 RCDATA 要素、外来要素、通常要素です。
base, command, eventsource, link, meta,
hr, br,
img, embed, param,
area, col, input, source
style, scripttitle, textarea
Tags are used to delimit the start and end of elements in the markup. CDATA, RCDATA, and normal elements have a start tag to indicate where they begin, and an end tag to indicate where they end. The start and end tags of certain normal elements can be omitted, as described later. Those that cannot be omitted must not be omitted. Void elements only have a start tag; end tags must not be specified for void elements. Foreign elements must either have a start tag and an end tag, or a start tag that is marked as self-closing, in which case they must not have an end tag.
The contents of the element must be placed between just after the start tag (which might be implied, in certain cases) and just before the end tag (which again, might be implied in certain cases). The exact allowed contents of each individual element depends on the content model of that element, as described earlier in this specification. Elements must not contain content that their content model disallows. In addition to the restrictions placed on the contents by those content models, however, the five types of elements have additional syntactic requirements.
Void elements can't have any contents (since there's no end tag, no content can be put between the start tag and the end tag).
CDATA elements can have text, though it has restrictions described below.
RCDATA elements can have text and character references, but the text must not contain an ambiguous ampersand. There are also further restrictions described below.
Foreign elements whose start tag is marked as self-closing can't have
any contents (since, again, as there's no end tag, no content can be put
between the start tag and the end tag). Foreign elements whose start tag
is not marked as self-closing can have text, character references, CDATA sections, other elements, and comments, but the text must not contain the
character U+003C LESS-THAN SIGN (<) or an ambiguous
ampersand.
Normal elements can have text, character references, other elements, and comments, but the text must
not contain the character U+003C LESS-THAN SIGN (<) or an
ambiguous
ampersand. Some normal elements also have yet more restrictions on what content
they are allowed to hold, beyond the restrictions imposed by the content
model and those described in this paragraph. Those restrictions are
described below.
Tags contain a tag name,
giving the element's name. HTML elements all have names that only use
characters in the range U+0030 DIGIT ZERO .. U+0039 DIGIT NINE, U+0061
LATIN SMALL LETTER A .. U+007A LATIN SMALL LETTER Z, U+0041 LATIN CAPITAL
LETTER A .. U+005A LATIN CAPITAL LETTER Z, and U+002D HYPHEN-MINUS
(-). In the HTML syntax, tag names may be written with any
mix of lower- and uppercase letters that, when converted to all-lowercase,
matches the element's tag name; tag names are case-insensitive.
Start tags must have the following format:
<).
/) character. This character has no
effect on void elements, but on foreign elements it marks the start tag
as self-closing.
>) character.
End tags must have the following format:
<).
/).
>) character.
Attributes for an element are expressed inside the element's start tag.
Attributes have a name and a value. Attribute names must consist of one or more characters other than the space characters, U+0000 NULL, U+0022 QUOTATION MARK ("), U+0027 APOSTROPHE ('), U+003E GREATER-THAN SIGN (>), U+002F SOLIDUS (/), and U+003D EQUALS SIGN (=) characters, the control characters, and any characters that are not defined by Unicode. In the HTML syntax, attribute names may be written with any mix of lower- and uppercase letters that, when converted to all-lowercase, matches the attribute's name; attribute names are case-insensitive.
Attribute values are a mixture of text and character references, except with the additional restriction that the text cannot contain an ambiguous ampersand.
Attributes can be specified in four different ways:
Just the attribute name.
In the following example, the disabled attribute is given with the
empty attribute syntax:
<input disabled>
If an attribute using the empty attribute syntax is to be followed by another attribute, then there must be a space character separating the two.
The attribute
name, followed by zero or more space characters, followed by a single U+003D EQUALS SIGN
character, followed by zero or more space characters, followed by the attribute value, which, in addition to
the requirements given above for attribute values, must not contain any
literal space characters, a
U+0022 QUOTATION MARK (") characters, U+0027
APOSTROPHE (') characters, U+003D EQUALS SIGN
(=) characters, or U+003E GREATER-THAN SIGN
(>) characters.
In the following example, the value attribute is given with the
unquoted attribute value syntax:
<input value=yes>
If an attribute using the unquoted attribute syntax is to be followed
by another attribute or by one of the optional U+002F SOLIDUS
(/) characters allowed in step 6 of the start tag syntax above, then there must be
a space character separating the two.
The attribute
name, followed by zero or more space characters, followed by a single U+003D EQUALS SIGN
character, followed by zero or more space characters, followed by a single U+0027 APOSTROPHE
(') character, followed by the attribute value, which, in addition to
the requirements given above for attribute values, must not contain any
literal U+0027 APOSTROPHE (') characters, and finally
followed by a second single U+0027 APOSTROPHE (')
character.
In the following example, the type
attribute is given with the single-quoted attribute value syntax:
<input type='checkbox'>
If an attribute using the single-quoted attribute syntax is to be followed by another attribute, then there must be a space character separating the two.
The attribute
name, followed by zero or more space characters, followed by a single U+003D EQUALS SIGN
character, followed by zero or more space characters, followed by a single U+0022 QUOTATION
MARK (") character, followed by the attribute value, which, in addition to
the requirements given above for attribute values, must not contain any
literal U+0022 QUOTATION MARK (") characters, and finally
followed by a second single U+0022 QUOTATION MARK (")
character.
In the following example, the name
attribute is given with the double-quoted attribute value syntax:
<input name="be evil">
If an attribute using the double-quoted attribute syntax is to be followed by another attribute, then there must be a space character separating the two.
Certain tags can be omitted.
An html element's start tag may be omitted if the first thing
inside the html element is not a comment.
An html element's end tag may be omitted if the html element is not immediately followed by a comment and the element
contains a body element that is either
not empty or whose start tag has not
been omitted.
A head element's start tag may be omitted if the first thing
inside the head element is an element.
A head element's end tag may be omitted if the head element is not immediately followed by a space character or a comment.
A body element's start tag may be omitted if the first thing
inside the body element is not a space character or a comment, except if the first thing inside the
body element is a script or style element.
A body element's end tag may be omitted if the body element is not immediately followed by a comment and the element is
either not empty or its start tag has
not been omitted.
A li element's end tag may be omitted if the li element is immediately followed by another
li element or if there is no more content
in the parent element.
A dt element's end tag may be omitted if the dt element is immediately followed by another
dt element or a dd element.
A dd element's end tag may be omitted if the dd element is immediately followed by another
dd element or a dt element, or if there is no more content in the
parent element.
A p element's end tag may be omitted if the p element is immediately followed by an address, article, aside, blockquote, datagrid, dialog, dir, div, dl,
fieldset, footer,
form, h1, h2, h3, h4, h5, h6, header,
hr, menu,
nav, ol,
p, pre,
section, table, or ul,
element, or if there is no more content in the parent element and the
parent element is not an a element.
An rt element's end tag may be omitted if the rt element is immediately followed by an rt or rp element, or
if there is no more content in the parent element.
An rp element's end tag may be omitted if the rp element is immediately followed by an rt or rp element, or
if there is no more content in the parent element.
An optgroup element's end
tag may be omitted if the optgroup element is
immediately followed by another optgroup element, or if there
is no more content in the parent element.
An option element's end
tag may be omitted if the option element is
immediately followed by another option element, or if there
is no more content in the parent element.
A colgroup element's start tag may be omitted if the first thing
inside the colgroup element is a
col element, and if the element is not
immediately preceded by another colgroup element whose end tag has been omitted.
A colgroup element's end tag may be omitted if the colgroup element is not immediately followed
by a space character or a comment.
A thead element's end tag may be omitted if the thead element is immediately followed by a
tbody or tfoot element.
A tbody element's start tag may be omitted if the first thing
inside the tbody element is a tr element, and if the element is not immediately
preceded by a tbody, thead, or tfoot element whose end tag has been omitted.
A tbody element's end tag may be omitted if the tbody element is immediately followed by a
tbody or tfoot element, or if there is no more content in
the parent element.
A tfoot element's end tag may be omitted if the tfoot element is immediately followed by a
tbody element, or if there is no more
content in the parent element.
A tr element's end tag may be omitted if the tr element is immediately followed by another
tr element, or if there is no more content
in the parent element.
A td element's end tag may be omitted if the td element is immediately followed by a td or th element, or
if there is no more content in the parent element.
A th element's end tag may be omitted if the th element is immediately followed by a td or th element, or
if there is no more content in the parent element.
However, a start tag must never be omitted if it has any attributes.
For historical reasons, certain elements have extra restrictions beyond even the restrictions given by their content model.
An optgroup element must not contain optgroup
elements, even though these elements are technically allowed to be nested
according to the content models described in this specification. (If an
optgroup element is put inside another in the markup, it will
in fact imply an optgroup end tag before it.)
A table element must not contain
tr elements, even though these elements are
technically allowed inside table
elements according to the content models described in this specification.
(If a tr element is put inside a table in the markup, it will in fact imply a
tbody start tag before it.)
A single U+000A LINE FEED (LF) character may be placed immediately after
the start tag of pre and textarea elements. This does
not affect the processing of the element. The otherwise optional U+000A
LINE FEED (LF) character must be included if the element's
contents start with that character (because otherwise the leading newline
in the contents would be treated like the optional newline, and ignored).
The text in CDATA and RCDATA elements must not contain any occurrences
of the string "</" (U+003C LESS-THAN SIGN, U+002F
SOLIDUS) followed by characters that case-insensitively match the tag name
of the element followed by one of U+0009 CHARACTER TABULATION, U+000A LINE
FEED (LF), U+000C FORM FEED (FF), U+0020 SPACE, U+003E GREATER-THAN SIGN
(>), or U+002F SOLIDUS (/), unless that string is part of an escaping text span.
An escaping text span is a span of text that starts with an escaping text span start that is not itself in an escaping text span, and ends at the next escaping text span end. There cannot be any character references inside an escaping text span.
An escaping text span
start is a part of text that
consists of the four character sequence "<!--"
(U+003C LESS-THAN SIGN, U+0021 EXCLAMATION MARK, U+002D HYPHEN-MINUS,
U+002D HYPHEN-MINUS).
An escaping text span
end is a part of text that
consists of the three character sequence "-->"
(U+002D HYPHEN-MINUS, U+002D HYPHEN-MINUS, U+003E GREATER-THAN SIGN) whose
U+003E GREATER-THAN SIGN (>).
An escaping text span start may share its U+002D HYPHEN-MINUS characters with its corresponding escaping text span end.
The text in CDATA and RCDATA elements must not have an escaping text span start that is not followed by an escaping text span end.
Text is allowed inside elements, attributes, and comments. Text must consist of Unicode characters. Text must not contain U+0000 characters. Text must not contain permanently undefined Unicode characters. Text must not contain control characters other than space characters. Extra constraints are placed on what is and what is not allowed in text based on where the text is to be put, as described in the other sections.
Newlines in HTML may be represented either as U+000D CARRIAGE RETURN (CR) characters, U+000A LINE FEED (LF) characters, or pairs of U+000D CARRIAGE RETURN (CR), U+000A LINE FEED (LF) characters in that order.
In certain cases described in other sections, text may be mixed with character references. These can be used to escape characters that couldn't otherwise legally be included in text.
Character references must start with a U+0026 AMPERSAND
(&). Following this, there are three possible kinds of
character references:
;) character.
#) character, followed by one or more digits in the range
U+0030 DIGIT ZERO .. U+0039 DIGIT NINE, representing a base-ten integer
that itself is a Unicode code point that is not U+0000, U+000D, in the
range U+0080 .. U+009F, or in the range 0xD800 .. 0xDFFF (surrogates).
The digits must then be followed by a U+003B SEMICOLON character (;).
#) character, which must be followed by either a U+0078
LATIN SMALL LETTER X or a U+0058 LATIN CAPITAL LETTER X character, which
must then be followed by one or more digits in the range U+0030 DIGIT
ZERO .. U+0039 DIGIT NINE, U+0061 LATIN SMALL LETTER A .. U+0066 LATIN
SMALL LETTER F, and U+0041 LATIN CAPITAL LETTER A .. U+0046 LATIN CAPITAL
LETTER F, representing a base-sixteen integer that itself is a Unicode
code point that is not U+0000, U+000D, in the range U+0080 .. U+009F, or
in the range 0xD800 .. 0xDFFF (surrogates). The digits must then be
followed by a U+003B SEMICOLON character (;).
An ambiguous
ampersand is a U+0026 AMPERSAND (&) character that
is followed by some text other than
a space character, a U+003C LESS-THAN SIGN character
('<'), or another U+0026 AMPERSAND (&) character.
CDATA sections must start with
the character sequence U+003C LESS-THAN SIGN, U+0021 EXCLAMATION MARK,
U+005B LEFT SQUARE BRACKET, U+0043 LATIN CAPITAL LETTER C, U+0044 LATIN
CAPITAL LETTER D, U+0041 LATIN CAPITAL LETTER A, U+0054 LATIN CAPITAL
LETTER T, U+0041 LATIN CAPITAL LETTER A, U+005B LEFT SQUARE BRACKET (<![CDATA[). Following this sequence, the CDATA section
may have text, with the additional
restriction that the text must not contain the three character sequence
U+005D RIGHT SQUARE BRACKET, U+005D RIGHT SQUARE BRACKET, U+003E
GREATER-THAN SIGN (]]>). Finally, the CDATA section
must be ended by the three character sequence U+005D RIGHT SQUARE BRACKET,
U+005D RIGHT SQUARE BRACKET, U+003E GREATER-THAN SIGN (]]>).
Comments must start with
the four character sequence U+003C LESS-THAN SIGN, U+0021 EXCLAMATION
MARK, U+002D HYPHEN-MINUS, U+002D HYPHEN-MINUS (<!--). Following this sequence, the comment may have text, with the additional restriction
that the text must not start with a single U+003E GREATER-THAN SIGN
('>') character, nor start with a U+002D HYPHEN-MINUS (-) character followed by a U+003E GREATER-THAN SIGN
('>') character, nor contain two consecutive U+002D HYPHEN-MINUS (-) characters, nor end with a U+002D HYPHEN-MINUS (-) character. Finally, the comment must be ended by the
three character sequence U+002D HYPHEN-MINUS, U+002D HYPHEN-MINUS, U+003E
GREATER-THAN SIGN (-->).
この節は利用者エージェント、データ・マイニング・ツール、 適合性検査器のみに適用されます。
XML 文書 (や XHTML 文書)
を構文解析して DOM 木を得るための規則は XML や XML 名前空間の仕様書で扱われており、
この仕様書の適用範囲外です。 [XML] HTML 文書については、利用者エージェントは、 DOM
木を生成するためにこの節で説明する構文解析規則を使用しなければなりません。
また、この規則はHTML 構文解析器と呼ばれるものを定義します。 HTML5 の HTML 形式は SGML や XML によく似ていますが、
独自の構文解析規則を持つ別の言語です。 以前のいくつかの版の HTML (特に HTML2 から HTML4 まで) は SGML
に基づき、 SGML の構文解析規則を用いていました。しかし、 HTML
文書用に真の SGML 構文解析を実装していたウェブ・ブラウザは (あったとしても)
皆無に近い数でした。 HTML を厳密に SGML 応用として扱う唯一の利用者エージェントは歴史的に妥当性検証器だけでした。
その結果、妥当性検査器は文書がある形式であることを要求し、
一方で広く実用されている Web ブラウザはそれとは異なる形式を相互運用可能な形で実装するという混乱が生じ、
生産性を大きく低下させています。
ですので、この版の HTML は非 SGML ベースに回帰します。 文書準備の過程で SGML ツールを使いたいと考える著者には、
XML ツールと HTML5 の XML 直列化を用いることをお勧めします。 この仕様書は、構文的に正しいか否かに関わらず HTML
文書を構文解析する規則を定義します。構文解析算法中のいくつかの箇所は構文解析誤りであるとしています。
構文解析誤りの処理は明確に定義します。利用者エージェントは、
そのような問題に遭遇したときに後述のように動作するか、または後述の規則を適用することを望まないような誤りにはじめて遭遇した箇所で処理を停止しなければなりません。 適合性検査器は、文書中に1つ以上の構文解析誤り条件が存在する場合、利用者に最低1つの構文解析誤り条件を報告しなければならず、
文書に誤りが存在しない場合、構文解析誤り条件を報告してはなりません。
適合性検査器は、文書中に複数の構文解析誤り条件が存在する場合、
複数の構文解析誤り条件を報告して構いません。
適合性検査器は構文解析誤りから回復することを要求されません。 構文解析誤りは、 HTML の構文の誤りに過ぎません。
適合性検査器は、構文解析誤りの検査に加え、
文書がこの仕様書で説明されている他の適合性要件に従っているかも検査することになります。 The input to the HTML parsing process consists of a stream of Unicode
characters, which is passed through a tokenization stage (lexical analysis) followed
by a tree construction stage (semantic
analysis). The output is a Implementations that do not support
scripting do not have to actually create a DOM In the common case, the data handled by the tokenization stage comes
from the network, but it can also come from script, e.g. using the There is only one set of state for the tokeniser stage
and the tree construction stage, but the tree construction stage is
reentrant, meaning that while the tree construction stage is handling one
token, the tokeniser might be resumed, causing further tokens to be
emitted and processed before the first token's processing is complete.
In the following example, the tree construction stage will be called
upon to handle a "p" start tag token while handling the "script" start
tag token: The stream of Unicode characters that consists the input to the
tokenization stage will be initially seen by the user agent as a stream of
bytes (typically coming over the network or from the local file system).
The bytes encode the actual characters according to a particular
character encoding, which the user agent must use to decode the
bytes into characters.
For XML documents, the algorithm user agents must use to
determine the character encoding is given by the XML specification. This
section does not apply to XML documents. [XML]
In some cases, it might be impractical to unambiguously determine the
encoding before parsing the document. Because of this, this specification
provides for a two-pass mechanism with an optional pre-scan.
Implementations are allowed, as described below, to apply a simplified
parsing algorithm to whatever bytes they have available before beginning
to parse the document. Then, the real parser is started, using a tentative
encoding derived from this pre-parse and other out-of-band metadata. If,
while the document is being loaded, the user agent discovers an encoding
declaration that conflicts with this information, then the parser can get
reinvoked to perform a parse of the document with the real encoding.
User agents must use the following algorithm (the
encoding sniffing algorithm) to determine the
character encoding to use when decoding a document in the first pass. This
algorithm takes as input any out-of-band metadata available to the user
agent (e.g. the Content-Type
metadata of the document) and all the bytes available so far, and
returns an encoding and a confidence. The confidence is
either tentative or certain. The encoding used, and whether
the confidence in that encoding is tentative or confident,
is used during the parsing to
determine whether to change the encoding.
If the transport layer specifies an encoding, return that encoding
with the confidence certain, and
abort these steps.
The user agent may wait for more bytes of the resource to be
available, either in this step or at any later step in this algorithm.
For instance, a user agent might wait 500ms or 512 bytes, whichever came
first. In general preparsing the source to find the encoding improves
performance, as it reduces the need to throw away the data structures
used when parsing upon finding the encoding information. However, if the
user agent delays too long to obtain data to determine the encoding,
then the cost of the delay could outweigh any performance improvements
from the preparse.
For each of the rows in the following table, starting with the first
one and going down, if there are as many or more bytes available than
the number of bytes in the first column, and the first bytes of the file
match the bytes given in the first column, then return the encoding
given in the cell in the second column of that row, with the confidence
certain, and abort these steps: This step looks for Unicode Byte Order Marks (BOMs).
Otherwise, the user agent will have to search for explicit character
encoding information in the file itself. This should proceed as follows:
Let position be a pointer to a byte in the input
stream, initially pointing at the first byte. If at any point during
these substeps the user agent either runs out of bytes or decides that
scanning further bytes would not be efficient, then skip to the next
step of the overall character encoding detection algorithm. User agents
may decide that scanning any bytes is not efficient, in which
case these substeps are entirely skipped. Now, repeat the following "two" steps until the algorithm aborts
(either because user agent aborts, as described above, or because a
character encoding is found): If position points to: Advance the position pointer so that it points
at the first 0x3E byte which is preceded by two 0x2D bytes (i.e. at
the end of an ASCII '-->' sequence) and comes after the 0x3C byte
that was found. (The two 0x2D bytes can be the same as the those in
the '<!--' sequence.) Advance the position pointer so that it
points at the next 0x09, 0x0A, 0x0C, 0x0D, 0x20, or 0x2F byte (the
one in sequence of characters matched above).
Get
an attribute and its value. If no attribute was sniffed, then
skip this inner set of steps, and jump to the second step in the
overall "two step" algorithm.
If the attribute's name is neither " If the attribute's name is " Otherwise, the attribute's name is " If charset is a UTF-16 encoding, change it
to UTF-8.
If charset is a supported character
encoding, then return the given encoding, with confidence tentative,
and abort all these steps.
Otherwise, return to step 2 in these inner steps.
Advance the position pointer so that it
points at the next 0x09 (ASCII TAB), 0x0A (ASCII LF), 0x0C (ASCII
FF), 0x0D (ASCII CR), 0x20 (ASCII space), or 0x3E (ASCII '>')
byte.
Repeatedly get an attribute
until no further attributes can be found, then jump to the second
step in the overall "two step" algorithm.
Advance the position pointer so that it points
at the first 0x3E byte (ASCII '>') that comes after the 0x3C byte
that was found. Do nothing with that byte. When the above "two step" algorithm says to get an attribute, it
means doing this: If the byte at position is one of 0x09 (ASCII
TAB), 0x0A (ASCII LF), 0x0C (ASCII FF), 0x0D (ASCII CR), 0x20 (ASCII
space), or 0x2F (ASCII '/') then advance position
to the next byte and redo this substep.
If the byte at position is 0x3E (ASCII '>'),
then abort the "get an attribute" algorithm. There isn't one.
Otherwise, the byte at position is the start of
the attribute name. Let attribute name and attribute value be the empty string.
Attribute name: Process the byte at position as follows: Advance position to the next byte and return to
the previous step.
Spaces. If the byte at position is one
of 0x09 (ASCII TAB), 0x0A (ASCII LF), 0x0C (ASCII FF), 0x0D (ASCII
CR), or 0x20 (ASCII space) then advance position
to the next byte, then, repeat this step.
If the byte at position is not 0x3D
(ASCII '='), abort the "get an attribute" algorithm. The attribute's
name is the value of attribute name, its value is
the empty string.
Advance position past the 0x3D (ASCII '=') byte.
Value. If the byte at position is one
of 0x09 (ASCII TAB), 0x0A (ASCII LF), 0x0C (ASCII FF), 0x0D (ASCII
CR), or 0x20 (ASCII space) then advance position
to the next byte, then, repeat this step.
Process the byte at position as follows: Process the byte at position as follows: Advance position to the next byte and return to
the previous step.
For the sake of interoperability, user agents should not use a
pre-scan algorithm that returns different results than the one described
above. (But, if you do, please at least let us know, so that we can
improve this algorithm and benefit everyone...) If the user agent has information on the likely encoding for this
page, e.g. based on the encoding of the page when it was last visited,
then return that encoding, with the confidence tentative, and
abort these steps.
The user agent may attempt to autodetect the character encoding from
applying frequency analysis or other algorithms to the data stream. If
autodetection succeeds in determining a character encoding, then return
that encoding, with the confidence tentative, and
abort these steps. [UNIVCHARDET]
Otherwise, return an implementation-defined or user-specified default
character encoding, with the confidence tentative. In
non-legacy environments, the more comprehensive The document's character encoding must
immediately be set to the value returned from this algorithm, at the same
time as the user agent uses the returned value to select the decoder to
use for the input stream.
User agents must at a minimum support the UTF-8 and Windows-1252
encodings, but may support more.
It is not unusual for Web browsers to support dozens if not
upwards of a hundred distinct character encodings.
User agents must support the preferred MIME name of every character
encoding they support that has a preferred MIME name, and should support
all the IANA-registered aliases. [IANACHARSET]
When comparing a string specifying a character encoding with the name or
alias of a character encoding to determine if they are equal, user agents
must ignore all characters in the ranges U+0009 to U+000D, U+0020 to
U+002F, U+003A to U+0040, U+005B to U+0060, and U+007B to U+007E (all
whitespace and punctuation characters in ASCII) in both names, and then
perform the comparison in an ASCII case-insensitive
manner.
For instance, "GB_2312-80" and "g.b.2312(80)" are
considered equivalent names.
When a user agent would otherwise use an encoding given in the first
column of the following table, it must instead use the encoding given in
the cell in the second column of the same row. Any bytes that are treated
differently due to this encoding aliasing must be considered parse errors.
The requirement to treat certain encodings as other encodings
according to the table above is a willful violation of the W3C Character
Model specification. [CHARMOD]
User agents must not support the CESU-8, UTF-7, BOCU-1 and SCSU
encodings. [CESU8] [UTF7]
[BOCU1] [SCSU]
Support for UTF-32 is not recommended. This encoding is rarely used, and
frequently misimplemented.
This specification does not make any attempt to support
UTF-32 in its algorithms; support and use of UTF-32 can thus lead to
unexpected behavior in implementations of this specification.
Given an encoding, the bytes in the input stream must be converted to
Unicode characters for the tokeniser, as described by the rules for that
encoding, except that the leading U+FEFF BYTE ORDER MARK character, if
any, must not be stripped by the encoding layer (it is stripped by the
rule below). Bytes or sequences of bytes in the original byte stream that could not
be converted to Unicode characters must be converted to U+FFFD REPLACEMENT
CHARACTER code points.
Bytes or sequences of bytes in the original byte stream that
did not conform to the encoding specification (e.g. invalid UTF-8 byte
sequences in a UTF-8 input stream) are errors that conformance checkers
are expected to report.
One leading U+FEFF BYTE ORDER MARK character must be ignored if any are
present.
All U+0000 NULL characters in the input must be replaced by U+FFFD
REPLACEMENT CHARACTERs. Any occurrences of such characters is a parse error.
Any occurrences of any characters in the ranges U+0001 to U+0008,
U+000E to U+001F,
U+007F to U+009F,
U+D800 to U+DFFF , U+FDD0 to U+FDDF, and
characters U+FFFE, U+FFFF, U+1FFFE, U+1FFFF, U+2FFFE, U+2FFFF, U+3FFFE,
U+3FFFF, U+4FFFE, U+4FFFF, U+5FFFE, U+5FFFF, U+6FFFE, U+6FFFF, U+7FFFE,
U+7FFFF, U+8FFFE, U+8FFFF, U+9FFFE, U+9FFFF, U+AFFFE, U+AFFFF, U+BFFFE,
U+BFFFF, U+CFFFE, U+CFFFF, U+DFFFE, U+DFFFF, U+EFFFE, U+EFFFF, U+FFFFE,
U+FFFFF, U+10FFFE, and U+10FFFF are parse errors. (These are all control characters or permanently
undefined Unicode characters.)
U+000D CARRIAGE RETURN (CR) characters, and U+000A LINE FEED (LF)
characters, are treated specially. Any CR characters that are followed by
LF characters must be removed, and any CR characters not followed by LF
characters must be converted to LF characters. Thus, newlines in HTML DOMs
are represented by LF characters, and there are never any CR characters in
the input to the tokenization stage.
The next input character is the first character
in the input stream that has not yet been consumed.
Initially, the next input character is
the first character in the input.
The insertion point is the position (just before
a character or just before the end of the input stream) where content
inserted using The "EOF" character in the tables below is a conceptual character
representing the end of the input stream. If the
parser is a script-created parser, then the
end of the input stream is reached when an explicit "EOF" character (inserted by the When the parser requires the user agent to change the
encoding, it must run the following steps. This might happen if the
encoding sniffing algorithm described above
failed to find an encoding, or if it found an encoding that was not the
actual encoding of the file.
Initially the insertion mode is "initial". It can change to "before html", "before head", "in head", "in head
noscript", "after
head", "in
body", "in
table", "in
caption", "in column group", "in table body", "in row", "in cell", "in select", "in select in table", "in foreign content", "after body", "in frameset",
"after
frameset", "after after body", and "after after frameset" during the course of
the parsing, as described in the tree
construction stage. The insertion mode affects how tokens are
processed and whether CDATA sections are supported.
Seven of these modes, namely "in head", "in body", "in table", "in table body", "in row", "in cell", and "in select", are special, in that the other modes defer to them
at various times. When the algorithm below says that the user agent is to
do something "using the rules for the m insertion mode", where m is one of
these modes, the user agent must use the rules described under the m insertion mode's section, but must leave the
insertion mode unchanged unless the rules in m themselves switch the insertion mode to a
new value.
挿入モードが "in foreign content"
に切り替えられる時には、二次挿入モードも設定されます。
この二次モードは、 "in foreign content"
モードの規則の中で HTML (つまり、異言語でない) 内容を取り扱う際に使用します。 後述の段階が利用者エージェントに挿入モードを適切に再設定することを要求する場合、
利用者エージェントは次の段階に従わなければならないことを意味しています。 Initially the stack of open elements is empty. The
stack grows downwards; the topmost node on the stack is the first one
added to the stack, and the bottommost node of the stack is the most
recently added node in the stack (notwithstanding when the stack is
manipulated in a random access fashion as part of the handling for misnested tags).
The "before
html" insertion mode creates the In the fragment case, the stack
of open elements is initialized to contain an The The current node is the bottommost node in this
stack.
The current table is the last Elements in the stack fall into the following categories:
The following HTML elements have varying levels of special parsing
rules: The following HTML elements introduce new scopes for various parts of the
parsing: The following HTML elements are those that end up in the list of active formatting elements: All other elements found while parsing an HTML document.
Still need to add these new elements to the lists:
The stack of open elements is said to have an element in scope
when the following algorithm terminates in a match state:
Initialise node to be the current node (the bottommost node of the stack).
If node is the target node, terminate in a match
state.
Otherwise, if node is one of the following
elements, terminate in a failure state: Otherwise, set node to the previous entry in the
stack of open elements and return to step 2. (This
will never fail, since the loop will always terminate in the previous
step if the top of the stack — an The stack of open elements is said to have an element in
table scope when the following algorithm terminates in a
match state:
Initialise node to be the current node (the bottommost node of the stack).
If node is the target node, terminate in a match
state.
Otherwise, if node is one of the following
elements, terminate in a failure state: Otherwise, set node to the previous entry in the
stack of open elements and return to step 2. (This
will never fail, since the loop will always terminate in the previous
step if the top of the stack — an Nothing happens if at any time any of the elements in the stack of open elements are moved to a new location in,
or removed from, the In some cases (namely, when closing
misnested formatting elements), the stack is manipulated in a
random-access fashion.
Initially the list of active formatting elements
is empty. It is used to handle mis-nested formatting element tags.
The list contains elements in the formatting
category, and scope markers. The scope markers are inserted when entering
When the steps below require the UA to reconstruct
the active formatting elements, the UA must perform the following
steps:
This has the effect of reopening all the formatting elements that were
opened in the current body, cell, or caption (whichever is youngest) that
haven't been explicitly closed.
The way this specification is written, the list of active formatting elements always consists of
elements in chronological order with the least recently added element
first and the most recently added element last (except for while steps 8
to 11 of the above algorithm are being executed, of course).
When the steps below require the UA to clear the list of
active formatting elements up to the last marker, the UA must
perform the following steps:
Initially the Once a The The scripting flag is set to "enabled" if the
Implementations must act as if they used the following state machine to
tokenise HTML. The state machine must start in the data state. Most states consume a single
character, which may have various side-effects, and either switches the
state machine to a new state to reconsume the same character, or
switches it to a new state (to consume the next character), or repeats the
same state (to consume the next character). Some states have more
complicated behavior and can consume several characters before switching
to another state.
The exact behavior of certain states depends on a content model flag that is set after certain tokens are
emitted. The flag has several states: PCDATA, RCDATA, CDATA, and PLAINTEXT.
Initially it must be in the PCDATA state. In the RCDATA and CDATA states,
a further escape flag is used to control the behavior
of the tokeniser. It is either true or false, and initially must be set to
the false state. The insertion mode and the stack of open elements also affects tokenization.
字句化期の出力は、 DOCTYPE、開始タグ、終了タグ、注釈、文字、ファイル末のいずれかの字句の零個以上の系列です。
DOCTYPE 字句は名前、公開識別子、システム識別子、奇癖強制旗を持ちます。
When a DOCTYPE token is
created, its name, public identifier, and system identifier must be marked
as missing (which is a distinct state from the empty string), and the
force-quirks flag must be set to off (its other state is
on). Start and end tag tokens have a tag name, a self-closing
flag, and a list of attributes, each of which has a name and a value.
When a start or end tag token is created, its self-closing flag
must be unset (its other state is that it be set), and its attributes list
must be empty. Comment and character tokens have data. When a token is emitted, it must immediately be handled by the tree construction stage. The tree
construction stage can affect the state of the content
model flag, and can insert additional characters into the stream. (For
example, the When a start tag token is emitted with its self-closing flag set,
if the flag is not acknowledged when it is processed by the tree construction
stage, that is a parse error.
When an end tag token is emitted, the content model
flag must be switched to the PCDATA state.
When an end tag token is emitted with attributes, that is a parse error.
When an end tag token is emitted with its self-closing flag set,
that is a parse error.
Before each step of the tokeniser, the user agent may check to see if
either one of the scripts in the list of scripts that
will execute as soon as possible or the first script in the list of scripts that will execute asynchronously, has
completed loading. If one has, then it must be executed and
removed from its list.
The tokeniser state machine consists of the states defined in the
following subsections. 次入力文字を消費: If the content model flag is set to either the
RCDATA state or the CDATA state, and the escape
flag is false, and there are at least three characters before this
one in the input stream, and the last four characters in the input
stream, including this one, are U+003C LESS-THAN SIGN, U+0021
EXCLAMATION MARK, U+002D HYPHEN-MINUS, and U+002D HYPHEN-MINUS
("<!--"), then set the escape flag to true. In any case, emit the input character as a character token. Stay in
the data state. If the content model flag is set to either the
RCDATA state or the CDATA state, and the escape
flag is true, and the last three characters in the input stream
including this one are U+002D HYPHEN-MINUS, U+002D HYPHEN-MINUS, U+003E
GREATER-THAN SIGN ("-->"), set the escape flag
to false. In any case, emit the input character as a character token. Stay in
the data state. (This cannot happen if the content model
flag is set to the CDATA state.)
Attempt to consume a character reference, with no
additional allowed character.
If nothing is returned, emit a U+0026 AMPERSAND character token.
Otherwise, emit the character token that was returned.
Finally, switch to the data state.
The behavior of this state depends on the content
model flag.
Consume the next input character. If it is a
U+002F SOLIDUS (/) character, switch to the close tag
open state. Otherwise, emit a U+003C LESS-THAN SIGN character token
and reconsume the current input character in the data state. 次入力文字を消費: If the content model flag is set to the RCDATA
or CDATA states but no start tag token has ever been emitted by this
instance of the tokeniser (fragment case), or, if
the content model flag is set to the RCDATA or
CDATA states and the next few characters do not match the tag name of the
last start tag token emitted (compared in an ASCII case
insensitive manner), or if they do but they are not immediately
followed by one of the following characters:
...then emit a U+003C LESS-THAN SIGN character token, a U+002F SOLIDUS
character token, and switch to the data state
to process the next input character.
Otherwise, if the content model flag is set to
the PCDATA state, or if the next few characters do match that tag
name, consume the next input character:
次入力文字を消費: 次入力文字を消費: 次入力文字を消費: When the user agent leaves the attribute name state (and before emitting
the tag token, if appropriate), the complete attribute's name must be
compared to the other attributes on the same token; if there is already an
attribute on the token with the exact same name, then this is a parse error and the new attribute must be dropped,
along with the value that gets associated with it (if any).
次入力文字を消費: 次入力文字を消費: 次入力文字を消費: 次入力文字を消費: 次入力文字を消費: Attempt to consume a character reference.
If nothing is returned, append a U+0026 AMPERSAND character to the
current attribute's value.
Otherwise, append the returned character token to the current
attribute's value.
Finally, switch back to the attribute value state that you were in when
were switched into this state.
次入力文字を消費: 次入力文字を消費: (This can only happen if the content model
flag is set to the PCDATA state.)
Consume every character up to and including the first U+003E
GREATER-THAN SIGN character (>) or the end of the file (EOF), whichever
comes first. Emit a comment token whose data is the concatenation of all
the characters starting from and including the character that caused the
state machine to switch into the bogus comment state, up to and including
the character immediately before the last consumed character (i.e. up to
the character just before the U+003E or EOF character). (If the comment
was started by the end of the file (EOF), the token is empty.)
Switch to the data state.
If the end of the file was reached, reconsume the EOF character.
(This can only happen if the content model
flag is set to the PCDATA state.)
If the next two characters are both U+002D HYPHEN-MINUS (-) characters,
consume those two characters, create a comment token whose data is the
empty string, and switch to the comment start
state.
Otherwise, if the next seven characters are an ASCII
case-insensitive match for the word "DOCTYPE", then consume those
characters and switch to the DOCTYPE state.
Otherwise, if the insertion mode is "in foreign content" and the
current node is not an element in the HTML namespace and the next seven characters
are an ASCII case-sensitive match for the string "[CDATA["
(the five uppercase letters "CDATA" with a U+005B LEFT SQUARE BRACKET
character before and after), then consume those characters and switch to
the CDATA section state (which is unrelated to the
content model flag's CDATA state).
Otherwise, this is a parse error. Switch to the bogus comment state. The next character that is
consumed, if any, is the first character that will be in the comment.
次入力文字を消費: 次入力文字を消費: 次入力文字を消費: 次入力文字を消費: 次入力文字を消費: 次入力文字を消費: 次入力文字を消費: First, consume the next input character:
次入力文字を消費: If the next six characters are an ASCII
case-insensitive match for the word "PUBLIC", then consume those
characters and switch to the before DOCTYPE public
identifier state. Otherwise, if the next six characters are an ASCII
case-insensitive match for the word "SYSTEM", then consume those
characters and switch to the before DOCTYPE system
identifier state. Otherwise, this is the parse error. Set the
DOCTYPE token's force-quirks flag to on. Switch to the bogus DOCTYPE state. 次入力文字を消費: 次入力文字を消費: 次入力文字を消費: 次入力文字を消費: 次入力文字を消費: 次入力文字を消費: 次入力文字を消費: 次入力文字を消費: 次入力文字を消費: (This can only happen if the content model
flag is set to the PCDATA state, and is unrelated to the content model flag's CDATA state.)
Consume every character up to the next occurrence of the three character
sequence U+005D RIGHT SQUARE BRACKET U+005D RIGHT SQUARE BRACKET U+003E
GREATER-THAN SIGN ( Switch to the data state.
If the end of the file was reached, reconsume the EOF character.
This section defines how to consume a character
reference. This definition is used when parsing character references
in text
and in attributes.
The behavior depends on the identity of the next character (the one
immediately after the U+0026 AMPERSAND character):
U+0023 NUMBER SIGN を消費します。 動作は更に U+0023 NUMBER
SIGN の次の文字によって決まります。 X を消費します。 次の段階に従いますが、文字の範囲 U+0030
DIGIT ZERO ~ U+0039 DIGIT NINE、U+0061 LATIN SMALL LETTER A
~ U+0066 LATIN SMALL LETTER F、 U+0041 LATIN CAPITAL
LETTER A ~ U+0046 LATIN CAPITAL LETTER F (つまり
0-9、A-F、a-f) を使います。 数を解釈する折には、十六進数として解釈します。 次の段階に従いますが、文字の範囲 U+0030
DIGIT ZERO ~ U+0039 DIGIT NINE (つまり 0-9 だけ) を使います。 数を解釈する折には、十進数として解釈します。 前述の文字の範囲に一致する文字を、一致するだけすべて消費します。 範囲に一致する文字がない場合は、文字を消費しません
(更に、 U+0023 NUMBER SIGN 文字と、必要であれば X 文字をも消費しなかったこととします)。
これは構文解析誤りです。何も返しません。 そうでない場合、次の文字が U+003B SEMICOLON
であれば、これも消費します。そうでない場合は、構文解析誤りです。 1文字以上が一致した場合は、それらすべてによる文字列を数 (十六進数または十進数の適切な方)
として解釈します。 その数が次の表の最初の列の数のいずれかである場合は、
構文解析誤りです。
その数が最初の列に現れる行を探し、
その行の2つ目の列に示された Unicode 文字の文字字句を返します。 それ以外の場合、数が範囲 0x0000 ~ 0x0008、
0x000E、 0x001F、 0x007F
~ 0x009F、
0xD800 ~
0xDFFF 、0xFDD0 ~ 0xFDDF
のいずれかにあるか、
0xFFFE、0xFFFF、0x1FFFE、0x1FFFF、0x2FFFE、0x2FFFF、0x3FFFE、0x3FFFF、
0x4FFFE、0x4FFFF、0x5FFFE、0x5FFFF、0x6FFFE、0x6FFFF、 0x7FFFE、0x7FFFF、
0x8FFFE、0x8FFFF、0x9FFFE、0x9FFFF、0xAFFFE、0xAFFFF、0xBFFFE、0xBFFFF、
0xCFFFE、0xCFFFF、0xDFFFE、0xDFFFF、0xEFFFE、0xEFFFF、0xFFFFE、0xFFFFF、
0x10FFFE、0x10FFFF のいずれかであるか、
0x10FFFF より大きい場合、構文解析誤りです。
代わりに U+FFFD
REPLACEMENT CHARACTER 文字の文字字句を返します。 それ以外の場合、符号位置がその数である Unicode 文字の文字字句を返します。 名前付き文字参照の表の最初の列にある識別子のいずれかと一致するような、
可能な最大数の文字を消費します。 If no match can be made, then this is a parse
error. No characters are consumed, and nothing is returned. If the last character matched is not a U+003B SEMICOLON ( If the character reference is being consumed as part of an
attribute, and the last character matched is not a U+003B SEMICOLON
( Otherwise, return a character token for the character corresponding to
the character reference name (as given by the second column of the named character references table). If the markup contains The input to the tree construction stage is a sequence of tokens from
the tokenization stage. The tree construction
stage is associated with a DOM This specification does not define when an interactive user agent has to
render the As each token is emitted from the tokeniser, the user agent must process
the token according to the rules given in the section corresponding to the
current insertion mode.
When the steps below require the UA to insert a
character into a node, if that node has a child immediately before
where the character is to be inserted, and that child is a
DOM mutation events must not fire for changes
caused by the UA parsing the document. (Conceptually, the parser is not
mutating the DOM, it is constructing it.) This includes the parsing of any
content inserted using Not all of the tag names mentioned below are conformant tag
names in this specification; many are included to handle legacy content.
They still form part of the algorithm that implementations are required to
implement to claim conformance.
The algorithm described below places no limit on the depth of
the DOM tree generated, or on the length of tag names, attribute names,
attribute values, text nodes, etc. While implementors are encouraged to
avoid arbitrary limits, it is recognized that practical concerns will likely force user
agents to impose nesting depths.
When the steps below require the UA to create an element for a token in a particular
namespace, the UA must create a node implementing the interface
appropriate for the element type corresponding to the tag name of the
token in the given namespace (as given in the specification that defines
that element, e.g. for an The interface appropriate for an element in the HTML namespace that is not defined in this
specification is When the steps below require the UA to insert an HTML
element for a token, the UA must first create an
element for the token in the HTML
namespace, and then append this node to the current node, and push it onto the stack of open elements so that it is the new current node.
The steps below may also require that the UA insert an HTML element in a
particular place, in which case the UA must follow the same steps except
that it must insert or append the new node in the location specified
instead of appending it to the current node. (This
happens in particular during the parsing of tables with invalid content.)
When the steps below require the UA to insert a foreign
element for a token, the UA must first create an
element for the token in the given namespace, and then append this
node to the current node, and push it onto the stack of open elements so that it is the new current node. If the newly created element has an
When the steps below require the user agent to adjust
foreign attributes for a token, then, if any of the attributes on
the token match the strings given in the first column of the following
table, let the attribute be a namespaced attribute, with the prefix being
the string given in the corresponding cell in the second column, the local
name being the string given in the corresponding cell in the third column,
and the namespace being the namespace given in the corresponding cell in
the fourth column. (This fixes the use of namespaced attributes, in
particular The generic CDATA element parsing algorithm and
the generic RCDATA element parsing algorithm
consist of the following steps. These algorithms are always invoked in
response to a start tag token.
Append the new element to the current node.
If the algorithm that was invoked is the generic
CDATA element parsing algorithm, switch the tokeniser's content model flag to the CDATA state; otherwise
the algorithm invoked was the generic RCDATA element
parsing algorithm, switch the tokeniser's content model flag to the RCDATA state.
Then, collect all the character tokens that the tokeniser returns
until it returns a token that is not a character token, or until it
stops tokenizing.
If this process resulted in a collection of character tokens, append a
single The tokeniser's content model flag will have
switched back to the PCDATA state.
If the next token is an end tag token with the same tag name as the
start tag token, ignore it. Otherwise, it's an end-of-file token, and
this is a parse error.
When the steps below require the UA to generate implied
end tags, then, while the current node is a
If a step requires the UA to generate implied end tags but lists an
element to exclude from the process, then the UA must perform the above
steps as if that element was not in the above list.
Foster parenting happens when content is misnested in tables.
When a node node is to be foster parented, the node node must be inserted into the foster
parent element, and the current table must
be marked as tainted. (Once the current table has been tainted, whitespace characters are inserted into the
foster parent element instead of the current node.)
The foster parent element is the parent element of
the last If the foster parent element is the parent
element of the last 挿入モードが "initial" の時、
字句は次のように取り扱わなければなりません。 Ignore the token. Append a If the DOCTYPE token's Append a Then, if the DOCTYPE token matches one of the
conditions in the following list, then set the document to quirks mode: Otherwise, if the DOCTYPE token matches one of the conditions in the
following list, then set the document to limited
quirks mode: The name, system identifier, and public identifier strings must be
compared to the values given in the lists above in an ASCII case-insensitive manner. A system identifier
whose value is the empty string is not considered missing for the
purposes of the conditions above. Then, switch the insertion mode to "before html". Set the document to quirks mode. Switch the insertion mode to "before html", then reprocess the
current token. 挿入モードが "before html" の時、
字句は次のように取り扱わなければなりません。 Parse error. Ignore the token. Append a Ignore the token. Create an element for the token in the HTML namespace. Append it to the
If the token has an attribute "manifest", then resolve the value of that
attribute to an absolute URL, and if that is
successful, run the application cache selection
algorithm with the resulting absolute URL.
Otherwise, if there is no such attribute or resolving it fails, run the
application cache selection
algorithm with no manifest. Switch the insertion mode to "before head". Create an Run the application cache selection
algorithm with no manifest. Switch the insertion mode to "before head", then reprocess the
current token. Should probably make end tags be ignored, so that
"</head><!-- --><html>" puts the comment before the root node
(or should we?) The root element can end up being removed from the 挿入モードが "before head" の時、
字句は次のように取り扱わなければなりません。 Ignore the token. Append a Parse error. Ignore the token. Process the token using the rules for the "in body"
insertion mode. 当該字句について HTML
要素を挿入します。 挿入モードを "in head" に切り替えます。 タグ名 "head" で属性のない開始タグ字句を見たかのように作用した後、
現在の字句を再処理します。 Parse error. Ignore the token. タグ名 "head" で属性のない開始タグ字句を見たかのように作用した後、
現在の字句を再処理します。 この結果空の 挿入モードが "in head" の時、
字句は次のように取り扱わなければなりません。 Append a Parse error. Ignore the token. Process the token using the rules for the "in body"
insertion mode. Insert an HTML element for the token.
Immediately pop the current node off the stack of open elements. Acknowledge the token's self-closing flag, if it is
set. Insert an HTML element for the token.
Immediately pop the current node off the stack of open elements. Acknowledge the token's self-closing flag, if it is
set. If the element has a Otherwise, if the element has a Follow the generic RCDATA element parsing
algorithm. Follow the generic CDATA element parsing
algorithm. 当該字句について HTML
要素を挿入します。 Switch the insertion mode to "in head noscript". Create an element for the token in the HTML namespace. Mark the element as being "parser-inserted". This ensures that, if the
script is external, any Switch the tokeniser's content model flag to
the CDATA state. Then, collect all the character tokens that the tokeniser returns
until it returns a token that is not a character token, or until it
stops tokenizing. If this process resulted in a collection of character tokens, append a
single The tokeniser's content model flag will have
switched back to the PCDATA state. If the next token is not an end tag token with the tag name "script",
then this is a parse error; mark the If the parser was originally created for the HTML fragment parsing algorithm, then mark
the Marking the Let the old insertion point have the same value as
the current insertion point. Let the insertion point be just before the next input character. Append the new element to the current node. Special processing occurs when
a Let the insertion point have the value of the
old insertion point. (In other words, restore the insertion point to the value it had before the
previous paragraph. This value might be the "undefined" value.) At this stage, if there is a pending
external script, then: Abort the processing of any nested invocations of the tokeniser,
yielding control back to the caller. (Tokenization will resume when
the caller returns to the "outer" tree construction stage.)
Follow these steps: Let the script be the pending external
script. There is no longer a pending external
script.
Pause until the script has completed loading.
Let the insertion point be just before
the next input character.
Let the insertion point be undefined
again.
If there is once again a pending external script,
then repeat these steps from step 1.
Pop the current node (which will be the
Switch the insertion mode to "after head". Act as described in the "anything else" entry below. Parse error. Ignore the token. Act as if an end tag token with the tag name "head" had been seen, and
reprocess the current token. In certain UAs, some
elements don't trigger the "in body" mode straight away, but instead
get put into the head. Do we want to copy that? 挿入モードが "in head noscript" の時、
字句は次のように取り扱わなければなりません。 Parse error. Ignore the token. Process the token using the rules for the "in body"
insertion mode. Pop the current node (which will be a 挿入モードを "in head" に切り替えます。 Process the token using the rules for the "in head"
insertion mode. Act as described in the "anything else" entry below. Parse error. Ignore the token. Parse error. Act as if an end tag with the tag
name "noscript" had been seen and reprocess the current token. 挿入モードが "after head" の時、
字句は次のように取り扱わなければなりません。 Append a Parse error. Ignore the token. Process the token using the rules for the "in body"
insertion mode. 当該字句について HTML
要素を挿入します。 Switch the insertion mode to "in body". 当該字句について HTML
要素を挿入します。 Switch the insertion mode to "in frameset". Push the node pointed to by the Process the token using the rules for the "in head"
insertion mode. Pop the current node (which will be the node
pointed to by the Parse error. Ignore the token. Act as if a start tag token with the tag name "body" and no attributes
had been seen, and then reprocess the current token. 挿入モードが "in body" の時、
字句は次のように取り扱わなければなりません。 活性書式付け要素を再構築できれば、します。 Insert the token's
character into the current node. Append a Parse error. Ignore the token. Parse error. For each attribute on the token,
check to see if the attribute is already present on the top element of
the stack of open elements. If it is not, add the
attribute and its corresponding value to that element. Process the token using the rules for the "in head"
insertion mode. If the second element on the stack of open
elements is not a Otherwise, for each attribute on the token, check to see if the
attribute is already present on the If there is a node in the stack of open elements
that is not either a If the stack of open elements does not have a Otherwise, if there is a node in the stack of open
elements that is not either a Switch the insertion mode to "after body". Otherwise, ignore
the token. Act as if an end tag with tag name "body" had been seen, then, if that
token wasn't ignored, reprocess the current token. The fake end tag token here can only be ignored in the fragment case. If the stack of open elements has a 当該字句について HTML
要素を挿入します。 If the stack of open elements has a 当該字句について HTML
要素を挿入します。 If the next token is a U+000A LINE FEED (LF) character token, then
ignore that token and move on to the next one. (Newlines at the start of
If the それ以外の場合: If the stack of open elements has a Insert an HTML element for the token, and set
the 次の算法を実行します: Initialise node to be the current node (the bottommost node of the stack).
If node is an If node is not in the formatting category, and is not in the phrasing category, and is not an Otherwise, set node to the previous entry in the
stack of open elements and return to step 2.
If the stack of open elements has a Finally, insert an HTML element for the
token. 次の算法を実行します: Initialise node to be the current node (the bottommost node of the stack).
If node is a If node is not in the formatting category, and is not in the phrasing category, and is not an Otherwise, set node to the previous entry in the
stack of open elements and return to step 2.
If the stack of open elements has a Finally, insert an HTML element for the
token. If the stack of open elements has a 当該字句について HTML
要素を挿入します。 Switch the content model flag to the PLAINTEXT
state. Once a start tag with the tag name "plaintext" has been
seen, that will be the last token ever seen other than character tokens
(and the end-of-file token), because there is no way to switch the content model flag out of the PLAINTEXT state. If the stack of open elements does not have an element in
scope with the same tag name as that of the token, then this is a parse error; ignore the token. Otherwise, run these steps: If the current node is not an element with
the same tag name as that of the token, then this is a parse error.
Pop elements from the stack of open elements
until an element with the same tag name as the token has been popped
from the stack.
Set the If the stack of open elements does not have an element in
scope with the same tag name as that of the token, then this is a parse error; ignore the token. Otherwise, run these steps: If the current node is not an element with
the same tag name as that of the token, then this is a parse error.
Pop elements from the stack of open elements
until an element with the same tag name as the token has been popped
from the stack.
If the stack of open elements does not have an element in
scope with the same tag name as that of the token, then this is a parse error; act as if a start tag with the tag name
Otherwise, run these steps: Generate implied end tags, except for
elements with the same tag name as the token.
If the current node is not an element with
the same tag name as that of the token, then this is a parse error.
Pop elements from the stack of open elements
until an element with the same tag name as the token has been popped
from the stack.
If the stack of open elements does not have an element in
scope with the same tag name as that of the token, then this is a parse error; ignore the token. Otherwise, run these steps: Generate implied end tags, except for
elements with the same tag name as the token.
If the current node is not an element with
the same tag name as that of the token, then this is a parse error.
Pop elements from the stack of open elements
until an element with the same tag name as the token has been popped
from the stack.
If the stack of open elements does not have an element in
scope whose tag name is one of "h1", "h2", "h3", "h4", "h5", or
"h6", then this is a parse error; ignore the
token. Otherwise, run these steps: If the current node is not an element with
the same tag name as that of the token, then this is a parse error.
Pop elements from the stack of open elements
until an element whose tag name is one of "h1", "h2", "h3", "h4",
"h5", or "h6" has been popped from the stack.
深呼吸をして、後述の「その他の終了タグ」の項で説明されているように作用します。 If the list of active formatting elements
contains an element whose tag name is "a" between the end of the list
and the last marker on the list (or the start of the list if there is no
marker on the list), then this is a parse error;
act as if an end tag with the tag name "a" had been seen, then remove
that element from the list of active formatting
elements and the stack of open elements if the
end tag didn't already remove it (it might not have if the element is
not in table
scope). 不適合ストリーム
活性書式付け要素を再構築できれば、します。 Insert an HTML element for the token. Add that
element to the list of active formatting
elements. 活性書式付け要素を再構築できれば、します。 Insert an HTML element for the token. Add that
element to the list of active formatting
elements. 活性書式付け要素を再構築できれば、します。 If the stack of open elements has a Insert an HTML element for the token. Add that
element to the list of active formatting
elements. Follow these steps: Let the formatting element be the last element
in the list of active formatting elements
that: If there is no such node, or, if that node is also in the stack of open elements but the element is not in scope, then
this is a parse error; ignore the token, and
abort these steps. Otherwise, if there is such a node, but that node is not in the stack of open elements, then this is a parse error; remove the element from the list, and
abort these steps. Otherwise, there is a formatting element and
that element is in the
stack and is in
scope. If the element is not the current
node, this is a parse error. In any case,
proceed with the algorithm as written in the following steps. Let the furthest block be the topmost node in
the stack of open elements that is lower in the
stack than the formatting element, and is not an
element in the phrasing or formatting categories. There might not be one.
If there is no furthest block, then the UA must
skip the subsequent steps and instead just pop all the nodes from the
bottom of the stack of open elements, from the current node up to and including the formatting element, and remove the formatting element from the list of
active formatting elements.
Let the common ancestor be the element
immediately above the formatting element in the stack of open elements.
If the furthest block has a parent node, then
remove the furthest block from its parent node.
Let a bookmark note the position of the formatting
element in the list of active formatting
elements relative to the elements on either side of it in the
list.
Let node and last node be
the furthest block. Follow these steps: If the common ancestor node is a Otherwise, append whatever last node ended up
being in the previous step to the common ancestor
node, first removing it from its previous parent node if any. Perform a shallow clone of the formatting
element.
Take all of the child nodes of the furthest
block and append them to the clone created in the last step.
Append that clone to the furthest block.
Remove the formatting element from the list of active formatting elements, and insert
the clone into the list of active formatting
elements at the position of the aforementioned bookmark.
Remove the formatting element from the stack of open elements, and insert the clone into
the stack of open elements immediately below the
position of the furthest block in that stack.
Jump back to step 1 in this series of steps.
The way these steps are defined, only elements in the formatting category ever get cloned by this
algorithm. Because of the way this algorithm causes elements to change
parents, it has been dubbed the "adoption agency algorithm" (in contrast
with other possibly algorithms for dealing with misnested content, which
included the "incest algorithm", the "secret affair algorithm", and the
"Heisenberg algorithm"). If the stack of open elements has a それ以外の場合: 活性書式付け要素を再構築できれば、します。 当該字句について HTML
要素を挿入します。 If the Insert a marker at the end of the list of active
formatting elements. 活性書式付け要素を再構築できれば、します。 当該字句について HTML
要素を挿入します。 Insert a marker at the end of the list of active
formatting elements. If the stack of open elements does not have an element in
scope with the same tag name as that of the token, then this is a parse error; ignore the token. Otherwise, run these steps: If the current node is not an element with
the same tag name as that of the token, then this is a parse error.
Pop elements from the stack of open elements
until an element with the same tag name as the token has been popped
from the stack.
活性書式付け要素を再構築できれば、します。 Follow the generic CDATA element parsing
algorithm. If the stack of open elements has a 当該字句について HTML
要素を挿入します。 Switch the insertion mode to "in table". 活性書式付け要素を再構築できれば、します。 Insert an HTML element for the token.
Immediately pop the current node off the stack of open elements. Acknowledge the token's self-closing flag, if it is
set. Insert an HTML element for the token.
Immediately pop the current node off the stack of open elements. Acknowledge the token's self-closing flag, if it is
set. If the stack of open elements has a Insert an HTML element for the token.
Immediately pop the current node off the stack of open elements. Acknowledge the token's self-closing flag, if it is
set. Parse error. Change the token's tag name to
"img" and reprocess it. (Don't ask.) 活性書式付け要素を再構築できれば、します。 Insert an HTML element for the token.
Immediately pop the current node off the stack of open elements. Acknowledge the token's self-closing flag, if it is
set. If the If the それ以外の場合: Acknowledge the token's self-closing flag, if it is
set. Act as if a start tag token with the tag name "form" had been seen. If the token has an attribute called "action", set the Act as if a start tag token with the tag name "hr" had been seen. Act as if a start tag token with the tag name "p" had been seen. Act as if a start tag token with the tag name "label" had been seen. Act as if a stream of character tokens had been seen (see below for
what they should say). Act as if a start tag token with the tag name "input" had been seen,
with all the attributes from the "isindex" token except "name",
"action", and "prompt". Set the Act as if a stream of character tokens had been seen (see below for
what they should say). Act as if an end tag token with the tag name "label" had been seen. Act as if an end tag token with the tag name "p" had been seen. Act as if a start tag token with the tag name "hr" had been seen. Act as if an end tag token with the tag name "form" had been seen. If the token has an attribute with the name "prompt", then the first
stream of characters must be the same string as given in that attribute,
and the second stream of characters must be empty. Otherwise, the two
streams of character tokens together should, together with the
Then need to specify that if the form submission
causes just a single form control, whose name is "isindex", to be
submitted, then we submit just the value part, not the "isindex=" part. Create an element for the token in the HTML namespace. Append the new element to
the current node. If the Switch the tokeniser's content model flag to
the RCDATA state. If the next token is a U+000A LINE FEED (LF) character token, then
ignore that token and move on to the next one. (Newlines at the start of
Then, collect all the character tokens that the tokeniser returns
until it returns a token that is not a character token, or until it
stops tokenizing. If this process resulted in a collection of character tokens, append a
single The tokeniser's content model flag will have
switched back to the PCDATA state. If the next token is an end tag token with the tag name "textarea",
ignore it. Otherwise, this is a parse error. Follow the generic CDATA element parsing
algorithm. 活性書式付け要素を再構築できれば、します。 当該字句について HTML
要素を挿入します。 If the If the insertion mode is one of in table", "in caption", "in column
group", "in table body", "in row", or "in cell", then switch the insertion mode to "in select
in table". Otherwise, switch the insertion mode to "in select". If the stack of open elements has a 当該字句について HTML
要素を挿入します。 Parse error. Act as if a start tag token with
the tag name "br" had been seen. Ignore the end tag token. 活性書式付け要素を再構築できれば、します。 Adjust foreign attributes for the token. (This
fixes the use of namespaced attributes, in particular XLink.) Insert a foreign element for the token, in the
MathML namespace. If the token has its self-closing flag set, pop the current node off the stack of open
elements and acknowledge the token's self-closing flag. Otherwise, let the secondary insertion mode
be the current insertion mode, and then switch the
insertion mode to "in foreign content". Parse error. Ignore the token. 活性書式付け要素を再構築できれば、します。 当該字句について HTML
要素を挿入します。 This element will be a phrasing
element. Run the following steps: Initialise node to be the current node (the bottommost node of the stack).
If node has the same tag name as the end tag
token, then: If the tag name of the end tag token does not match the tag name
of the current node, this is a parse error.
Pop all the nodes from the current node up
to node, including node,
then stop these steps.
Otherwise, if node is in neither the formatting category nor the phrasing category, then this is a parse error; ignore the token, and abort these
steps.
Set node to the previous entry in the stack of open elements.
手順 2 に戻ります。 挿入モードが "in table" の時、
字句は次のように取り扱わなければなりません。 If the current table is tainted, then act as described in the "anything
else" entry below. Otherwise, insert the
character into the current node. Append a Parse error. Ignore the token. Clear the stack back to a table context. (See
below.) Insert a marker at the end of the list of active
formatting elements. Insert an HTML element for the token, then
switch the insertion mode to "in caption". Clear the stack back to a table context. (See
below.) Insert an HTML element for the token, then
switch the insertion mode to "in column group". タグ名が "colgroup" の開始タグ字句を見たかのように動作してから、
現在字句を再処理します。 Clear the stack back to a table context. (See
below.) Insert an HTML element for the token, then
switch the insertion mode to "in table body". タグ名が "tbody" の開始タグ字句を見たかのように動作してから、
現在字句を再処理します。 Parse error. Act as if an end tag token with the
tag name "table" had been seen, then, if that token wasn't ignored,
reprocess the current token. The fake end tag token here can only be ignored in the fragment case. If the stack of open elements does not have an element
in table scope with the same tag name as the token, this is a parse error. Ignore the token. (fragment case) それ以外の場合: Pop elements from this stack until a Parse error. Ignore the token. If the current table is tainted then act as described in the "anything else"
entry below. Otherwise, process the token using the rules
for the "in
head" insertion mode. If the token does not have an attribute with the name "type", or if it
does, but that attribute's value is not an ASCII
case-insensitive match for the string "hidden", or, if the current table is tainted,
then: act as described in the "anything else" entry below. それ以外の場合: 当該字句について HTML
要素を挿入します。 If the Pop that If the current node is not the root It can only be the current node in
the fragment case. Parse error. Process the token using the rules for the "in body" insertion
mode, except that if the current node is
a When the steps above require the UA to clear the stack
back to a table context, it means that the UA must, while the current node is not a The current node being an 挿入モードが "in caption" の時、
字句は次のように取り扱わなければなりません。 If the stack of open elements does not have an element
in table scope with the same tag name as the token, this is a parse error. Ignore the token. (fragment case) それ以外の場合: Now, if the current node is not a Pop elements from this stack until a Clear the list of active formatting elements up to
the last marker. Switch the insertion mode to "in table". Parse error. Act as if an end tag with the tag
name "caption" had been seen, then, if that token wasn't ignored,
reprocess the current token. The fake end tag token here can only be ignored in the fragment case. Parse error. Ignore the token. Process the token using the rules for the "in body"
insertion mode. 挿入モードが "in column group" の時、
字句は次のように取り扱わなければなりません。 Append a Parse error. Ignore the token. Process the token using the rules for the "in body"
insertion mode. Insert an HTML element for the token.
Immediately pop the current node off the stack of open elements. Acknowledge the token's self-closing flag, if it is
set. If the current node is the root Otherwise, pop the current node (which will be
a Parse error. Ignore the token. If the current node is the root Otherwise, act as described in the "anything else" entry below. Act as if an end tag with the tag name "colgroup" had been seen, and
then, if that token wasn't ignored, reprocess the current token. The fake end tag token here can only be ignored in the fragment case. 挿入モードが "in table body" の時、
字句は次のように取り扱わなければなりません。 Clear the stack back to a table body context.
(See below.) Insert an HTML element for the token, then
switch the insertion mode to "in row". Parse error. Act as if a start tag with the tag
name "tr" had been seen, then reprocess the current token. If the stack of open elements does not have an element
in table scope with the same tag name as the token, this is a parse error. Ignore the token. それ以外の場合: Clear the stack back to a table body context.
(See below.) Pop the current node from the stack of open elements. Switch the insertion
mode to "in
table". If the stack of open elements does not have a
それ以外の場合: Clear the stack back to a table body context.
(See below.) Act as if an end tag with the same tag name as the current node ("tbody", "tfoot", or "thead") had
been seen, then reprocess the current token. Parse error. Ignore the token. Process the token using the rules for the "in table"
insertion mode. When the steps above require the UA to clear the stack
back to a table body context, it means that the UA must, while the
current node is not a The current node being an 挿入モードが "in row" の時、
字句は次のように取り扱わなければなりません。 Clear the stack back to a table row context.
(See below.) Insert an HTML element for the token, then
switch the insertion mode to "in cell". Insert a marker at the end of the list of active
formatting elements. If the stack of open elements does not have an element
in table scope with the same tag name as the token, this is a parse error. Ignore the token. (fragment case) それ以外の場合: Clear the stack back to a table row context.
(See below.) Pop the current node (which will be a Act as if an end tag with the tag name "tr" had been seen, then, if
that token wasn't ignored, reprocess the current token. The fake end tag token here can only be ignored in the fragment case. If the stack of open elements does not have an element
in table scope with the same tag name as the token, this is a parse error. Ignore the token. Otherwise, act as if an end tag with the tag name "tr" had been seen,
then reprocess the current token. Parse error. Ignore the token. Process the token using the rules for the "in table"
insertion mode. When the steps above require the UA to clear the stack
back to a table row context, it means that the UA must, while the current node is not a The current node being an 挿入モードが "in cell" の時、
字句は次のように取り扱わなければなりません。 If the stack of open elements does not have an element
in table scope with the same tag name as that of the token, then
this is a parse error and the token must be
ignored. それ以外の場合: Now, if the current node is not an element
with the same tag name as the token, then this is a parse error. Pop elements from this stack until an element with the same tag name
as the token has been popped from the stack. Clear the list of active formatting elements up to
the last marker. Switch the insertion mode to "in row". (The current node will be a If the stack of open elements does not
have a
Otherwise, close the cell (see below) and
reprocess the current token. Parse error. Ignore the token. If the stack of open elements does not have an element
in table scope with the same tag name as that of the token (which
can only happen for "tbody", "tfoot" and "thead", or, in the fragment case), then this is a parse error and the token must be ignored. Otherwise, close the cell (see below) and
reprocess the current token. Process the token using the rules for the "in body"
insertion mode. Where the steps above say to close the cell, they
mean to run the following algorithm:
If the stack of open elements has a Otherwise, the stack of open elements will have a
The stack of open elements cannot have
both a 挿入モードが "in select" の時、
字句は次のように取り扱わなければなりません。 Insert the token's
character into the current node. Append a Parse error. Ignore the token. Process the token using the rules for the "in body"
insertion mode. If the current node is an 当該字句について HTML
要素を挿入します。 If the current node is an If the current node is an
当該字句について HTML
要素を挿入します。 First, if the current node is an
If the current node is an
If the current node is an If the stack of open elements does not have an element
in table scope with the same tag name as the token, this is a parse error. Ignore the token. (fragment case) それ以外の場合: Pop elements from the stack of open elements
until a Parse error. Act as if the token had been an end
tag with the tag name "select" instead. Parse error. Act as if an end tag with the tag
name "select" had been seen, and reprocess the token. If the current node is not the root It can only be the current node in
the fragment case. Parse error. Ignore the token. 挿入モードが "in select in table" の時、
字句は次のように取り扱わなければなりません。 Parse error. Act as if an end tag with the tag
name "select" had been seen, and reprocess the token. If the stack of open elements has an element in table scope with the same tag
name as that of the token, then act as if an end tag with the tag name
"select" had been seen, and reprocess the token. Otherwise, ignore the
token. Process the token using the rules for the "in select"
insertion mode. 挿入モードが "in foreign content" の時、
字句は次のように取り扱わなければなりません。 Insert the token's
character into the current node. Append a Parse error. Ignore the token. Process the token using the rules for the secondary insertion mode. If, after doing so, the insertion mode is still "in foreign
content", but there is no element in scope that has a namespace
other than the HTML
namespace,
switch the insertion mode to the secondary insertion mode. Pop elements from the stack of open elements
until the current node is in the HTML namespace. Switch the insertion mode to the secondary insertion mode, and reprocess the
token. Adjust foreign attributes for the token. (This
fixes the use of namespaced attributes, in particular XLink in SVG.) Insert a foreign element for the token, in the
same namespace as the current node. If the token has its self-closing flag set, pop the current node off the stack of open
elements and acknowledge the token's self-closing flag. 挿入モードが "after body" の時、
字句は次のように取り扱わなければなりません。 Process the token using the rules for the "in body"
insertion mode. Append a Parse error. Ignore the token. Process the token using the rules for the "in body"
insertion mode. If the parser was originally created as part of the HTML fragment parsing algorithm, this is a parse error; ignore the token. (fragment case) Otherwise, switch the insertion mode to "after after
body". Parse error. Switch the insertion
mode to "in
body" and reprocess the token. 挿入モードが "in frameset" の時、
字句は次のように取り扱わなければなりません。 Append a Parse error. Ignore the token. Process the token using the rules for the "in body"
insertion mode. 当該字句について HTML
要素を挿入します。 If the current node is the root Otherwise, pop the current node from the stack of open elements. If the parser was not originally created as part of the HTML fragment parsing algorithm (fragment case), and the current
node is no longer a Insert an HTML element for the token.
Immediately pop the current node off the stack of open elements. Acknowledge the token's self-closing flag, if it is
set. Process the token using the rules for the "in head"
insertion mode. If the current node is not the root It can only be the current node in
the fragment case. Parse error. Ignore the token. 挿入モードが "after frameset" の時、
字句は次のように取り扱わなければなりません。 Append a Parse error. Ignore the token. Process the token using the rules for the "in body"
insertion mode. Switch the insertion mode to "after after frameset". Process the token using the rules for the "in head"
insertion mode. Parse error. Ignore the token. This doesn't handle UAs that don't support frames, or
that do support frames but want to show the NOFRAMES content. Supporting
the former is easy; supporting the latter is harder.
挿入モードが "after after body" の時、
字句は次のように取り扱わなければなりません。 Append a Process the token using the rules for the "in body"
insertion mode. Parse error. Switch the insertion
mode to "in
body" and reprocess the token. 挿入モードが "after after frameset" の時、
字句は次のように取り扱わなければなりません。 Append a Process the token using the rules for the "in body"
insertion mode. Process the token using the rules for the "in head"
insertion mode. Parse error. Ignore the token. Once the user agent stops
parsing the document, the user agent must follow the steps in this
section.
First, the current document readiness must be set
to "interactive".
Then, the rules for when a script completes
loading start applying (script execution is no longer managed by the
parser).
If any of the scripts in the list of scripts that
will execute as soon as possible have completed
loading, or if the list of scripts that will
execute asynchronously is not empty and the first script in that list
has completed loading, then the user agent must
act as if those scripts just completed loading, following the rules given
for that in the Then, if the list of scripts that will execute when
the document has finished parsing is not empty, and the first item in
this list has already completed loading, then the
user agent must act as if that script just finished loading.
By this point, there will be no scripts that have loaded but have not
yet been executed.
The user agent must then fire a simple event
called Once everything that delays
the load event has completed, the user agent must set the current document readiness to "complete", and then fire a delaying the load event for things like image loads
allows for intranet port scans (even without javascript!). Should we
really encode that into the spec? When an application uses an HTML parser in
conjunction with an XML pipeline, it is possible that the constructed DOM
is not compatible with the XML tool chain in certain subtle ways. For
example, an XML toolchain might not be able to represent attributes with
the name If the XML API being used doesn't support DOCTYPEs, tools may drop
DOCTYPEs altogether.
If the XML API doesn't support attributes in no namespace that are named
" The tool may annotate the output with any namespace declarations
required for proper operation.
If the XML API being used restricts the allowable characters in the
local names of elements and attributes, then the tool may map all element
and attribute local names that the API wouldn't support to a set of names
that are allowed, by replacing any character that isn't supported
with the uppercase letter U and the five digits of the character's Unicode
codepoint when expressed in hexadecimal, using digits 0-9 and capital
letters A-F as the symbols, in increasing numeric order.
For example, the element name As another example, consider the attribute
The resulting names from this conversion conveniently can't
clash with any attribute generated by the HTML
parser, since those are all either lowercase or those listed in the adjust foreign attributes algorithm's table.
If the XML API restricts comments from having two consecutive U+002D
HYPHEN-MINUS characters (--), the tool may insert a single U+0020 SPACE
character between any such offending characters.
If the XML API restricts comments from ending in a U+002D HYPHEN-MINUS
character (-), the tool may insert a single U+0020 SPACE character at the
end of such comments.
If the XML API restricts allowed characters in character data, the tool
may replace any U+000C FORM FEED (FF) character with a U+0020 SPACE
character, and any other literal non-XML character with a U+FFFD
REPLACEMENT CHARACTER.
If the tool has no way to convey out-of-band information, then the tool
may drop the following information:
The mutatiosn allowed by this section apply after
the HTML parser's rules have been applied. For
example, a The HTML namespace is:
The MathML namespace is:
The SVG namespace is:
The XLink namespace is:
The XML namespace is:
The XMLNS namespace is:
The following steps form the HTML fragment
serialization algorithm. The algorithm takes as input a DOM
This algorithm serializes the children of the node
being serialized, not the node itself.
Let s be a string, and initialise it to the empty
string.
For each child node of the node, in tree order, run the following steps:
Let current node be the child node being
processed.
Append the appropriate string from the following list to s: Append a U+003C LESS-THAN SIGN ( For each attribute that the element has, append a U+0020 SPACE
character, the attribute's name (which, for attributes set by the HTML parser or by While the exact order of attributes is UA-defined, and may depend
on factors such as the order that the attributes were given in the
original markup, the sort order must be stable, such that
consecutive invocations of this algorithm serialize an element's
attributes in the same order. Append a U+003E GREATER-THAN SIGN ( If current node is an If current node is a Append the value of running the HTML
fragment serialization algorithm on the current
node element (thus recursing into this algorithm for that
element), followed by a U+003C LESS-THAN SIGN ( If one of the ancestors of current node is a
Otherwise, append the value of current node's
Append the literal string Append the literal string Append the literal string Other node types (e.g. The result of the algorithm is the string s.
Escaping a string (for the purposes of the
algorithm above) consists of replacing any occurrences of the " Entity reference nodes are assumed to be expanded by the user agent,
and are therefore not covered in the algorithm above.
It is possible that the output of this algorithm, if parsed
with an HTML parser, will not return the original
tree structure. For instance, if a The following steps form the HTML fragment
parsing algorithm. The algorithm takes as input a DOM
Parts marked fragment case in
algorithms in the parser section are parts that only occur if the parser
was created for the purposes of this algorithm. The algorithms have been
annotated with such markings for informational purposes only; such
markings have no normative weight. If it is possible for a condition
described as a fragment case to occur even when
the parser wasn't created for the purposes of handling this algorithm,
then that is an error in the specification.
Create a new Create a new HTML parser, and associate it with
the just created Set the HTML parser's tokenization stage's content model flag according to the context element, as follows: Let root be a new Append the element root to the
Set up the parser's stack of open elements so
that it contains just the single element root. Reset
the parser's insertion mode appropriately. The parser will reference the context
element as part of that algorithm. Set the parser's Place into the input stream for the HTML parser just created the input. Start the parser and let it run until it has consumed all the
characters just inserted into the input stream. Return all the child nodes of root, preserving the
document order. This table lists the character reference names that are supported by
HTML, and the code points to which they refer. It is referenced by the
previous sections.
This section will probably include details on how to
render DATAGRID (including its
pseudo-elements), drag-and-drop, etc, in a visual medium, in
concert with CSS. Terms that need to be defined include: sizing of embedded content
CSS UAs in visual media must, when scrolling a page to a fragment
identifier, align the top of the viewport with the target element's top
border edge. must define letting the user "obtain a
physical form (or a representation of a physical form)" of a
document (printing) and what this means for the UA, in particular creating
a new view for the print media.
Must define that in CSS, tag and attribute names in HTML
documents, and class names in quirks mode documents, are case-insensitive,
as well as saying which attribute values must be compared
case-insensitively.
This section is wrong. mediaMode will end up on Window,
I think. All views implement Window.
Any object implement the The Some user agents may support multiple media, in which case there will
exist multiple objects implementing the UAs should use the command's Icon as the default generic icon provided
by the user agent when the 'icon' property computes to 'auto' on an
element that either defines a command or refers to one using the Need to define the content attributes in terms of CSS or
something.
Otherwise, define how the element works, if
supported.
この節は規定の一部ではありません。 この仕様書では、
クライアント側マーク付け言語が適当な水準ではないため、
あるいはこの言語と統合できる別の言語に機能が存在するため、
取り扱わない機能があります。この章ではとてもよくある要求のいくつかに触れます。 HTML アプリケーションの局所化した版を作成したいという場合、
ファイルを鯖で前処理した上で、 HTTP 内容折衝を使って適当な言語で供給するのが最も良い解決策です。 ベクトル画像の XHTML 文書への埋め込みは SVG の範囲です。 3次元画像の XHTML 文書への埋め込みは X3D や、 X3D に基づく名前空間に対応した技術の範囲です。 This section is expected to be moved to its own
specification in due course. It needs a lot of work to actually make it
into a semi-decent spec.
The The Alternatively, Need to define language values.
The The この節は規定の一部ではありません。 List of elements
List of attributes
List of interfaces
List of events
この章は将来の仕様案で執筆します。 Aankhen, Aaron Boodman, Aaron Leventhal, Adam Barth, Adam Roben, Addison Phillips, Adele Peterson, Adrian Sutton, Agustín Fernández, Alastair Campbell, Alexey Feldgendler, Anders Carlsson, Andrew Gove, Andrew Sidwell, Anne van Kesteren, Anthony Hickson, Anthony Ricaud, Antti Koivisto, Arphen Lin, Asbjørn Ulsberg, Ashley Sheridan, Aurelien Levy, Ben Boyle, Ben Godfrey, Ben Meadowcroft, Ben Millard, Benjamin Hawkes-Lewis, Bert Bos, Bill Mason, Billy Wong, Bjoern Hoehrmann, Boris Zbarsky, Brad Fults, Brad Neuberg, Brady Eidson, Brendan Eich, Brett Wilson, Brian Campbell, Brian Smith, Bruce Miller, Cameron McCormack, Carlos Perelló Marín, Chao Cai, 윤석찬 (Channy Yun), Charl van Niekerk, Charles Iliya Krempeaux, Charles McCathieNevile, Christian Biesinger, Christian Johansen, Chriswa, Cole Robison, Collin Jackson, Daniel Barclay, Daniel Brumbaugh Keeney, Daniel Glazman, Daniel Peng, Daniel Spång, Daniel Steinberg, Danny Sullivan, Darin Adler, Darin Fisher, Dave Camp, Dave Singer, Dave Townsend, David Baron, David Bloom, David Carlisle, David Flanagan, David Håsäther, David Hyatt, David Smith, Dean Edridge, Debi Orton, Derek Featherstone, DeWitt Clinton, Dimitri Glazkov, dolphinling, Doron Rosenberg, Doug Kramer, Edward O'Connor, Eira Monstad, Elliotte Harold, Eric Law, Erik Arvidsson, Evan Martin, Evan Prodromou, fantasai, Felix Sasaki, Franck 'Shift' Quélain, Garrett Smith, Geoffrey Garen, Geoffrey Sneddon, Håkon Wium Lie, Henri Sivonen, Henrik Lied, Henry Mason, Hugh Winkler, Ignacio Javier, Ivo Emanuel Gonçalves, J. King, Jacques Distler, James Graham, James Justin Harrell, James M Snell, James Perrett, Jan-Klaas Kollhof, Jason White, Jasper Bryant-Greene, Jeff Cutsinger, Jeff Schiller, Jeff Walden, Jens Bannmann, Jens Fendler, Jeroen van der Meer, Jim Jewett, Jim Meehan, Joe Clark, Joseph Kesselman, Jjgod Jiang, Joel Spolsky, Johan Herland, John Boyer, John Bussjaeger, John Harding, Johnny Stenback, Jon Perlow, Jonathan Worent, Jorgen Horstink, Josh Levenberg, Joshua Randall, Jukka K. Korpela, Julian Reschke, Kai Hendry, Kornel Lesinski, 黒澤剛志 (KUROSAWA Takeshi), Kristof Zelechovski, Lachlan Hunt, Larry Page, Lars Gunther, Laura L. Carlson, Laura Wisewell, Laurens Holst, Lee Kowalkowski, Leif Halvard Silli, Lenny Domnitser, Léonard Bouchet, Leons Petrazickis, Logan, Loune, Maciej Stachowiak, Magnus Kristiansen, Malcolm Rowe, Mark Nottingham, Mark Rowe, Mark Schenk, Martijn Wargers, Martin Atkins, Martin Dürst, Martin Honnen, Masataka Yakura, Mathieu Henri, Matthew Mastracci, Matthew Raymond, Matthew Thomas, Mattias Waldau, Max Romantschuk, Michael 'Ratt' Iannarelli, Michael A. Nachbaur, Michael A. Puls II, Michael Carter, Michael Gratton, Michael Powers, Michael(tm) Smith, Michel Fortin, Michiel van der Blonk, Mihai Şucan, Mike Brown, Mike Dierken, Mike Dixon, Mike Schinkel, Mike Shaver, Mikko Rantalainen, Neil Deakin, Neil Soiffer, Olaf Hoffmann, Olav Junker Kjær, Oliver Hunt, Peter Karlsson, Peter Kasting, Philip Jägenstedt, Philip Taylor, Philip TAYLOR, Rachid Finge, Rajas Moonka, Ralf Stoltze, Ralph Giles, Raphael Champeimont, Rene Saarsoo, Richard Ishida, Rimantas Liubertas, Robert Blaut, Robert O'Callahan, Robert Sayre, Roman Ivanov, Ryan King, S. Mike Dierken, Sam Ruby, Sam Weinig, Scott Hess, Sean Knapp, Shaun Inman, Silvia Pfeiffer, Simon Pieters, Stefan Haustein, Steffen Meschkat, Stephen Ma, Steve Faulkner, Steve Runyon, Steven Garrity, Stewart Brodie, Stuart Parmenter, Sunava Dutta, Tantek Çelik, Terrence Wood, Thomas Broyer, Thomas O'Connor, Tim Altman, Tim Johansson, Travis Leithead, Tyler Close, Vladimir Vukićević, Wakaba, Wayne Pollock, William Swanson, Yi-An Huang, Øistein E. Andersen の有用かつ重要なコメントに感謝します。 HTML5 についてブログや公開メイリング・リストや掲示板 (W3C public-html
メイリング・リストやWHATWG
各種メイリング・リストなど) に投稿したすべての方々にも感謝します。 Safari に最初に 事象に基づくドラッグ・アンド・ドロップ機構、 構文解析の章に採用するために編集者が逆行分析して不具合を修正せざるを得なかった、養子代理人算法の壊れた実装を考案した David Hyatt
に特に感謝し、賞金100万円を贈ります。 この仕様書中で使用した例文の着想を得た多くの出典に感謝します。 いくつかのアイディアについて Microsoft ブログ社会、
着想の元となった Web アプリケーションおよび複合文書に関する W3C 研究会の参加者の方々、
そしてアイディアを提供していただき支援してくださった #mrt の中の人達、 #mrt.no
の中の人達、 #whatwg の中の人達、秘密結社にも感謝します。8.2.1 Overview of the parsing
model
Document object.
Document
object, but the DOM tree in such cases is still used as the model for the
rest of the specification.
document.write() API.
...
<script>
document.write('<p>');
</script>
...
8.2.2 The input
stream
8.2.2.1. Determining the
character encoding
Bytes in Hexadecimal
Encoding
FE FF
UTF-16BE
FF FE
UTF-16LE
EF BB BF
UTF-8
charset" nor "content", then
return to step 2 in these inner steps.
charset", let
charset be the attribute's value, interpreted
as a character encoding.
content": apply the algorithm
for extracting an encoding from a Content-Type, giving the
attribute's value as the string to parse. If an encoding is
returned, let charset be that encoding.
Otherwise, return to step 2 in these inner steps.
UTF-8 encoding is recommended. Due to its use in legacy
content, windows-1252 is recommended as a default
in predominantly Western demographics instead. Since these encodings can
in many cases be distinguished by inspection, a user agent may
heuristically decide which to use as a default.
8.2.2.2. Character encoding
requirements
Input encoding
Replacement encoding
参考文献
EUC-KR
Windows-949
[EUCKR]
[WIN949]
GB2312
GBK
[GB2312] [GBK]
GB_2312-80
GBK
[RFC1345]
[GBK]
ISO-8859-1
Windows-1252
[RFC1345]
[WIN1252]
ISO-8859-9
Windows-1254
[RFC1345]
[WIN1254]
ISO-8859-11
Windows-874
[ISO885911]
[WIN874]
KS_C_5601-1987
Windows-949
[RFC1345]
[WIN949]
TIS-620
Windows-874
[TIS620]
[WIN874]
x-x-big5
Big5
[BIG5]
8.2.2.3. Preprocessing the
input stream
document.write() is actually
inserted. The insertion point is relative to the position of the character
immediately after it, it is not an absolute offset into the input stream.
Initially, the insertion point is uninitialized.
document.close()
method) is consumed. Otherwise, the "EOF" character is not a real
character in the stream, but rather the lack of any further characters.
8.2.2.4. Changing the encoding
while parsing
8.2.3 構文解析状態
8.2.3.1. 挿入モード
select 要素の場合、挿入モードを "in select" に切り替え、
これらの段階を停止します。
(素片の場合)td 要素か
th 要素の場合で last
が偽の場合、挿入モードを "in cell" に切り替え、これらの段階を停止します。tr
要素の場合、挿入モードを "in row" に切り替え、
これらの段階を停止します。tbody, thead, or tfoot
要素の場合、挿入モードを "in table body" に切り替え、
これらの段階を停止します。caption
要素の場合、挿入モードを "in caption" に切り替え、
これらの段階を停止します。colgroup 要素の場合、挿入モードを "in column group" に切り替え、
これらの段階を停止します。
(素片の場合)table
要素の場合、挿入モードを "in table" に切り替え、
これらの段階を停止します。head
要素の場合、挿入モードを "in body" ("in body"! "in head"
ではなく!) に切り替え、これらの段階を停止します。
(素片の場合)body
要素の場合、挿入モードを "in body" に切り替え、
これらの段階を停止します。frameset 要素の場合、挿入モードを "in frameset" に切り替え、
これらの段階を停止します。
(素片の場合)html element, then: if the head element pointer is
null, switch the insertion mode to "before head", otherwise, switch
the insertion mode to "after head". In either case, abort these steps. (fragment case)8.2.3.2. The stack of open
elements
html root element node, which is then added to the
stack.
html element that is created as part of that
algorithm. (The fragment case skips the "before html"
insertion mode.)
html node, however it is created,
is the topmost node of the stack. It never gets popped off the stack.
table element in the stack of
open elements, if there is one. If there is no table element in the stack of
open elements (fragment case), then the current table is the first element in the stack of open elements (the html element).
address, area, article, aside, base,
basefont, bgsound, blockquote, body, br,
center, col, colgroup, command, datagrid, dd, details,
dialog, dir, div, dl, dt, embed,
eventsource
fieldset, figure,
footer, form,
frame, frameset, h1, h2, h3, h4, h5, h6, head, header,
hr, iframe,
img, input,
isindex, li, link, listing, menu, meta,
nav, noembed,
noframes, noscript,
ol, optgroup,
option, p, param, plaintext, pre, script,
section, select,
spacer, style, tbody, textarea, tfoot, thead, title, tr,
ul, and wbr.
applet, button,
caption, html, marquee, object, table, td,
th.
a, b,
big, em, font,
i, nobr, s,
small, strike, strong, tt, and u.
eventsource, section, nav,
article, aside, header,
footer, datagrid, command
html element — is reached.)
html element — is reached.)
Document tree. In particular, the stack
is not changed in this situation. This can cause, amongst other strange
effects, content to be appended to nodes that are no longer in the DOM.
8.2.3.3. The list of active
formatting elements
applet elements, buttons, object elements, marquees, table cells, and
table captions, and are used to prevent formatting from "leaking" into
applet elements, buttons, object elements, marquees, and tables.
8.2.3.4. The element pointers
head element
pointer and the form
element pointer are both null.
head element has been parsed
(whether implicitly or explicitly) the head element pointer gets set to point to this node.
form element
pointer points to the last form element that was opened
and whose end tag has not yet been seen. It is used to make form controls
associate with forms in the face of dramatically bad markup, for
historical reasons.
8.2.3.5. スクリプティング状態
Document with which the parser is associated was with script when the parser was created, and
"disabled" otherwise.
8.2.4 字句化
script element can result
in scripts executing and using the dynamic markup
insertion APIs to insert characters into the stream being tokenised.)
8.2.4.1. Data state
8.2.4.2. Character reference data state
8.2.4.3. Tag
open state
8.2.4.4. Close tag
open state
8.2.4.5. Tag
name state
8.2.4.6. Before
attribute name state
8.2.4.7. Attribute name state
8.2.4.8. After
attribute name state
8.2.4.9. Before
attribute value state
8.2.4.10. Attribute value (double-quoted) state
8.2.4.11. Attribute value (single-quoted) state
8.2.4.12. Attribute value (unquoted) state
8.2.4.13. Character reference in attribute value state
8.2.4.14. After
attribute value (quoted) state
8.2.4.15. Self-closing start tag state
8.2.4.16. Bogus
comment state
8.2.4.17. Markup
declaration open state
8.2.4.18. Comment
start state
8.2.4.19. Comment
start dash state
8.2.4.20. Comment
state
8.2.4.21. Comment
end dash state
8.2.4.22. Comment
end state
8.2.4.23. DOCTYPE
state
8.2.4.24. Before
DOCTYPE name state
8.2.4.25. DOCTYPE
name state
8.2.4.26. After
DOCTYPE name state
8.2.4.27. Before
DOCTYPE public identifier state
8.2.4.28. DOCTYPE
public identifier (double-quoted) state
8.2.4.29. DOCTYPE
public identifier (single-quoted) state
8.2.4.30. After
DOCTYPE public identifier state
8.2.4.31. Before
DOCTYPE system identifier state
8.2.4.32. DOCTYPE system identifier (double-quoted) state
8.2.4.33. DOCTYPE system identifier (single-quoted) state
8.2.4.34. After
DOCTYPE system identifier state
8.2.4.35. Bogus
DOCTYPE state
8.2.4.36. CDATA
section state
]]>), or the end of the file
(EOF), whichever comes first. Emit a series of text tokens consisting of
all the characters consumed except the matching three character sequence
at the end (if one was found before the end of the file).
8.2.4.37. Tokenizing character
references
数 Unicode 文字
0x0D
U+000A
LINE FEED (LF)
0x80
U+20AC
EURO SIGN ('€')
0x81
U+FFFD
REPLACEMENT CHARACTER
0x82
U+201A
SINGLE LOW-9 QUOTATION MARK ('‚')
0x83
U+0192
LATIN SMALL LETTER F WITH HOOK ('ƒ')
0x84
U+201E
DOUBLE LOW-9 QUOTATION MARK ('„')
0x85
U+2026
HORIZONTAL ELLIPSIS ('…')
0x86
U+2020
DAGGER ('†')
0x87
U+2021
DOUBLE DAGGER ('‡')
0x88
U+02C6
MODIFIER LETTER CIRCUMFLEX ACCENT ('ˆ')
0x89
U+2030
PER MILLE SIGN ('‰')
0x8A
U+0160
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER S WITH CARON ('Š')
0x8B
U+2039
SINGLE LEFT-POINTING ANGLE QUOTATION MARK ('‹')
0x8C
U+0152
LATIN CAPITAL LIGATURE OE ('Œ')
0x8D
U+FFFD
REPLACEMENT CHARACTER
0x8E
U+017D
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER Z WITH CARON ('Ž')
0x8F
U+FFFD
REPLACEMENT CHARACTER
0x90
U+FFFD
REPLACEMENT CHARACTER
0x91
U+2018
LEFT SINGLE QUOTATION MARK ('‘')
0x92
U+2019
RIGHT SINGLE QUOTATION MARK ('’')
0x93
U+201C
LEFT DOUBLE QUOTATION MARK ('“')
0x94
U+201D
RIGHT DOUBLE QUOTATION MARK ('”')
0x95
U+2022
BULLET ('•')
0x96
U+2013
EN DASH ('–')
0x97
U+2014
EM DASH ('—')
0x98
U+02DC
SMALL TILDE ('˜')
0x99
U+2122
TRADE MARK SIGN ('™')
0x9A
U+0161
LATIN SMALL LETTER S WITH CARON ('š')
0x9B
U+203A
SINGLE RIGHT-POINTING ANGLE QUOTATION MARK ('›')
0x9C
U+0153
LATIN SMALL LIGATURE OE ('œ')
0x9D
U+FFFD
REPLACEMENT CHARACTER
0x9E
U+017E
LATIN SMALL LETTER Z WITH CARON ('ž')
0x9F
U+0178
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER Y WITH DIAERESIS ('Ÿ')
;), there is a parse error.;), and the next character is in the range U+0030
DIGIT ZERO to U+0039 DIGIT NINE, U+0041 LATIN CAPITAL LETTER A to U+005A
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER Z, or U+0061 LATIN SMALL LETTER A to U+007A LATIN
SMALL LETTER Z, then, for historical reasons, all the characters that
were matched after the U+0026 AMPERSAND (&) must be unconsumed, and
nothing is returned.I'm ¬it; I tell
you, the character reference is parsed as "not", as in, I'm ¬it; I tell you. But if the markup was I'm ∉ I tell you, the character reference
would be parsed as "notin;", resulting in I'm ∉ I
tell you.8.2.5 Tree construction
Document object when a parser
is created. The "output" of this stage consists of dynamically modifying
or extending that document's DOM tree.
Document so that it is available to the user, or
when it has to begin accepting user input.
Text node, then the character must be appended to that
Text node; otherwise, a new Text node whose data
is just that character must be inserted in the appropriate place.
document.write() and document.writeln() calls. [DOM3EVENTS]
8.2.5.1. Creating and inserting
elements
a element in the
HTML namespace, this specification defines
it to be the HTMLAnchorElement interface), with
the tag name being the name of that element, with the node being in the
given namespace, and with the attributes on the node being those given in
the given token.
HTMLElement. The
interface appropriate for an element in another namespace that is not
defined by that namespace's specification is Element.
xmlns attribute in the XMLNS
namespace whose value is not exactly the same as the element's
namespace, that is a parse error.xml:lang.)
Attribute name
接頭辞 Local name
Namespace
xlink:actuate
xlink
actuate
XLink namespace
xlink:arcrole
xlink
arcrole
XLink namespace
xlink:href
xlink
href
XLink namespace
xlink:role
xlink
role
XLink namespace
xlink:show
xlink
show
XLink namespace
xlink:title
xlink
title
XLink namespace
xlink:type
xlink
type
XLink namespace
xml:base
xml
base
XML namespace
xml:lang
xml
lang
XML namespace
xml:space
xml
space
XML namespace
xmlns
(none)
xmlns
XMLNS namespace
xmlns:xlink
xmlns
xlink
XMLNS namespace
Text node, whose contents is the concatenation of
all those tokens' characters, to the new element node.
8.2.5.2. Closing elements that
have implied end tags
dd element, a dt element, an li
element, an option element, an optgroup element,
a p element, an rp element, or an rt
element, the UA must pop the current node off the
stack of open elements.
8.2.5.3. Foster parenting
table element in the stack of open elements, if there is a table element and it has such a parent element.
If there is no table element in the stack of open elements (fragment
case), then the foster parent element is
the first element in the stack of open elements (the
html element). Otherwise, if there is a
table element in the stack of open elements, but the last table element in the stack of
open elements has no parent, or its parent node is not an element,
then the foster parent element is the
element before the last table element in
the stack of open elements.
table element in the
stack of open elements, then node
must be inserted immediately before the last table element in the stack of
open elements in the foster parent
element; otherwise, node must be
appended to the foster parent
element.
8.2.5.4. "initial" 挿入モード
Comment node to the Document object
with the data attribute set to the data given in
the comment token.name is not an ASCII case-insensitive match for the string "HTML", or if the token's public identifier is not
missing, or if the token's system identifier is not missing, then there
is a parse error. Conformance checkers may,
instead of reporting this error, switch to a conformance checking mode
for another language (e.g. based on the DOCTYPE token a conformance
checker could recognize that the document is an HTML4-era document, and
defer to an HTML4 conformance checker.)DocumentType node to the Document
node, with the name attribute set to the name
given in the DOCTYPE token; the publicId attribute
set to the public identifier given in the DOCTYPE token, or the empty
string if the public identifier was missing; the systemId attribute set to the system identifier given in
the DOCTYPE token, or the empty string if the system identifier was
missing; and the other attributes specific to DocumentType
objects set to null and empty lists as appropriate. Associate the
DocumentType node with the Document object so
that it is returned as the value of the doctype
attribute of the Document object.
HTML".
+//Silmaril//dtd
html Pro v0r11 19970101//"
-//AdvaSoft
Ltd//DTD HTML 3.0 asWedit + extensions//"
-//AS//DTD HTML
3.0 asWedit + extensions//"
-//IETF//DTD
HTML 2.0 Level 1//"
-//IETF//DTD
HTML 2.0 Level 2//"
-//IETF//DTD
HTML 2.0 Strict Level 1//"
-//IETF//DTD
HTML 2.0 Strict Level 2//"
-//IETF//DTD
HTML 2.0 Strict//"
-//IETF//DTD
HTML 2.0//"
-//IETF//DTD
HTML 2.1E//"
-//IETF//DTD
HTML 3.0//"-//IETF//DTD
HTML 3.2 Final//"
-//IETF//DTD
HTML 3.2//"
-//IETF//DTD
HTML 3//"
-//IETF//DTD
HTML Level 0//"-//IETF//DTD
HTML Level 1//"-//IETF//DTD
HTML Level 2//"-//IETF//DTD
HTML Level 3//"-//IETF//DTD
HTML Strict Level 0//"-//IETF//DTD
HTML Strict Level 1//"-//IETF//DTD
HTML Strict Level 2//"-//IETF//DTD
HTML Strict Level 3//"-//IETF//DTD
HTML Strict//"-//IETF//DTD
HTML//"-//Metrius//DTD
Metrius Presentational//"
-//Microsoft//DTD Internet Explorer 2.0 HTML
Strict//"
-//Microsoft//DTD Internet Explorer 2.0
HTML//"
-//Microsoft//DTD Internet Explorer 2.0
Tables//"
-//Microsoft//DTD Internet Explorer 3.0 HTML
Strict//"
-//Microsoft//DTD Internet Explorer 3.0
HTML//"
-//Microsoft//DTD Internet Explorer 3.0
Tables//"
-//Netscape
Comm. Corp.//DTD HTML//"
-//Netscape
Comm. Corp.//DTD Strict HTML//"
-//O'Reilly and
Associates//DTD HTML 2.0//"
-//O'Reilly and
Associates//DTD HTML Extended 1.0//"
-//O'Reilly and
Associates//DTD HTML Extended Relaxed 1.0//"
-//SoftQuad
Software//DTD HoTMetaL PRO 6.0::19990601::extensions to HTML
4.0//"
-//SoftQuad//DTD
HoTMetaL PRO 4.0::19971010::extensions to HTML 4.0//"
-//Spyglass//DTD
HTML 2.0 Extended//"
-//SQ//DTD HTML
2.0 HoTMetaL + extensions//"
-//Sun
Microsystems Corp.//DTD HotJava HTML//"
-//Sun
Microsystems Corp.//DTD HotJava Strict HTML//"
-//W3C//DTD HTML
3 1995-03-24//"
-//W3C//DTD HTML
3.2 Draft//"
-//W3C//DTD HTML
3.2 Final//"
-//W3C//DTD HTML
3.2//"
-//W3C//DTD HTML
3.2S Draft//"
-//W3C//DTD HTML
4.0 Frameset//"
-//W3C//DTD HTML
4.0 Transitional//"
-//W3C//DTD HTML
Experimental 19960712//"
-//W3C//DTD HTML
Experimental 970421//"
-//W3C//DTD W3
HTML//"
-//W3O//DTD W3
HTML 3.0//"-//W3O//DTD W3
HTML Strict 3.0//EN//"
-//WebTechs//DTD
Mozilla HTML 2.0//"
-//WebTechs//DTD
Mozilla HTML//"
-/W3C/DTD HTML 4.0
Transitional/EN"
HTML"
http://www.ibm.com/data/dtd/v11/ibmxhtml1-transitional.dtd"
-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01 Frameset//"
-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01
Transitional//"
-//W3C//DTD
XHTML 1.0 Frameset//"
-//W3C//DTD
XHTML 1.0 Transitional//"
-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01
Frameset//"
-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01
Transitional//"
8.2.5.5. "before html" 挿入モード
Comment node to the Document object
with the data attribute set to the data given in
the comment token.Document object. Put this element in the stack of open elements.HTMLElement node
with the tag name html, in the HTML namespace. Append it to the
Document object. Put this element in the stack of open elements.Document
object, e.g. by scripts; nothing in particular happens in such cases,
content continues being appended to the nodes as described in the next
section.
8.2.5.6. "before head" 挿入モード
Comment node to the current
node with the data attribute set to the data
given in the comment token.head
要素指示子を新たに作られた head
要素に設定します。head 要素が生成され、
現在の字句は "after head" 挿入モードで再処理されることとなります。8.2.5.7. "in head" 挿入モード
Comment node to the current
node with the data attribute set to the data
given in the comment token.charset
attribute, and its value is a supported encoding, and the confidence is
currently tentative, then change the
encoding to the encoding given by the value of the charset
attribute.content attribute, and applying the algorithm for extracting an encoding from a
Content-Type to its value returns a supported encoding encoding, and the confidence is currently
tentative, then change the encoding to the
encoding encoding.document.write() calls in the
script will execute in-line, instead of blowing the document away, as
would happen in most other cases.Text node to the script element node whose contents is the
concatenation of all those tokens' characters.script element as "already
executed". Otherwise, the token is the script element's end tag, so ignore it.script element as "already executed", and skip the rest of the
processing described for this token (including the part below where
"pending external scripts"
are executed). (fragment case)script
element as "already executed" prevents it from executing when it is
inserted into the document a few paragraphs below. Thus, scripts missing
their end tags and scripts that were inserted using innerHTML,
outerHTML, or insertAdjacentHTML() aren't
executed.script element is inserted into a document that might
cause some script to execute, which might cause new characters
to be inserted into the tokeniser.
document.write():
head element) off the stack of open elements.8.2.5.8. "in head noscript" 挿入モード
noscript element) from the stack of open elements; the new current node will be a head element.8.2.5.9. "after head" 挿入モード
Comment node to the current
node with the data attribute set to the data
given in the comment token.head element pointer onto the stack
of open elements.head
element pointer) off the stack of open
elements.8.2.5.10. "in body" 挿入モード
Comment node to the current
node with the data attribute set to the data
given in the comment token.body element,
or, if the stack of open elements has only one node
on it, then ignore the token. (fragment case)body element (the second element) on the stack of open elements. If it is not, add the
attribute and its corresponding value to that element.dd element, a
dt element, an li element, a p
element, a tbody element, a td element, a tfoot element, a th element, a thead element, a tr element, the body element, or the html element, then this is a parse error.body
element in scope, this is a parse error;
ignore the token.dd
element, a dt element, an li element, a p
element, a tbody element, a td element, a tfoot element, a th element, a thead element, a tr element, the body element, or the html element, then this is a parse error.p element in
scope, then act as if an end tag with the tag name "p" had been
seen.p element in
scope, then act as if an end tag with the tag name "p" had been
seen.pre blocks are ignored as an authoring
convenience.)form element
pointer is not null, then this is a parse
error; ignore the token.p element in
scope, then act as if an end tag with the tag name "p" had been
seen.form element pointer to point to the element
created.
li
element, then act as if an end tag with the tag name "li" had been
seen, then jump to the last step.
address, div, or p
element, then jump to the last step.
p
element in scope, then act as if an end tag with the tag name "p"
had been seen.
dd
or dt element, then act as if an end
tag with the same tag name as node had been seen,
then jump to the last step.
address, div, or p
element, then jump to the last step.
p
element in scope, then act as if an end tag with the tag name "p"
had been seen.p element in
scope, then act as if an end tag with the tag name "p" had been
seen.
form element
pointer to null.
p had been seen, then reprocess the
current token.
<a href="a">a<table><a href="b">b</table>x
において、最初の a 要素は2つ目のを見たときに閉じられ、
「x」文字は「a」へのリンクではなく、「b」へのリンクの内側に入ります。
これは、外側の a 要素が表範囲中にないためです
(つまり、表の最初に普通の </a> 終了タグがあったとしても、
外側の a 要素を閉じないということになります)。nobr element in
scope, then this is a parse error; act as if
an end tag with the tag name "nobr" had been seen, then once again reconstruct the active formatting elements, if
any.
table, tbody, tfoot, thead, or tr
element, then, foster parent whatever last node ended up being in the previous step.button element in
scope, then this is a parse error; act as if
an end tag with the tag name "button" had been seen, then reprocess the
token.form element
pointer is not null, then associate
the button element with the form element
pointed to by the form
element pointer.
p element in
scope, then act as if an end tag with the tag name "p" had been
seen.p element in
scope, then act as if an end tag with the tag name "p" had been
seen.form element
pointer is not null, then associate
the newly created input element with the form
element pointed to by the form element pointer.form element
pointer is not null, then ignore the token.action attribute on the resulting
form element to the value of the "action" attribute of the
token.name
attribute of the resulting input element to the value
"isindex".input element, express the equivalent of "This is a
searchable index. Insert your search keywords here: (input field)" in
the user's preferred language.form element
pointer is not null, then associate
the newly created textarea element with the
form element pointed to by the form element pointer.textarea elements are ignored as an authoring convenience.)Text node, whose contents is the concatenation of
all those tokens' characters, to the new element node.form element
pointer is not null, then associate
the select element with the form element
pointed to by the form
element pointer.ruby element in
scope, then generate implied end tags. If
the current node is not then a ruby element, this is a parse
error; pop all the nodes from the current
node up to the node immediately before the bottommost ruby element on the stack of
open elements.
8.2.5.11. "in table" 挿入モード
Comment node to the current
node with the data attribute set to the data
given in the comment token.table element has been popped from the stack.form element
pointer is not null, then associate
the input element with the form element
pointed to by the form
element pointer.input element off the stack of
open elements.html element, then this is a parse error.table, tbody, tfoot, thead, or tr
element, then, whenever a node would be inserted into the current node, it must instead be foster parented.table element or an html element, pop elements from the stack of open elements.
html element after this process is a fragment case.
8.2.5.12. "in caption" 挿入モード
caption element, then this is a parse error.caption element has been popped from the
stack.8.2.5.13. "in column group" 挿入モード
Comment node to the current
node with the data attribute set to the data
given in the comment token.html element, then this is a parse error; ignore the token. (fragment case)colgroup element) from the stack of open elements. Switch the insertion
mode to "in
table".html element, then stop
parsing. (fragment case)8.2.5.14. "in table body" 挿入モード
tbody, thead, or tfoot element in
table scope, this is a parse error. Ignore the
token. (fragment case)tbody, tfoot,
thead, or html element, pop elements from the stack of open elements.
html element after this process is a fragment case.
8.2.5.15. "in row" 挿入モード
tr element) from the stack of
open elements. Switch the insertion mode to "in table
body".tr element or an html element, pop elements from the stack of open elements.
html element after this process is a fragment case.
8.2.5.16. "in cell" 挿入モード
tr element at this point.)td or th element in table scope, then this
is a parse error; ignore the token. (fragment case)
td element in
table scope, then act as if an end tag token with the tag name "td"
had been seen.
th element in table scope; act as if an end tag token
with the tag name "th" had been seen.
td and a th element in table scope at the same time, nor can it have
neither when the insertion mode is "in cell".
8.2.5.17. "in select" 挿入モード
Comment node to the current
node with the data attribute set to the data
given in the comment token.option
element, act as if an end tag with the tag name "option" had been seen.option
element, act as if an end tag with the tag name "option" had been seen.optgroup element, act as if an end tag with the tag name
"optgroup" had been seen.option element, and the node immediately before it in the
stack of open elements is an optgroup
element, then act as if an end tag with the tag name "option" had been
seen.optgroup element, then pop that node from the stack of open elements. Otherwise, this is a parse error; ignore the token.option
element, then pop that node from the stack of open
elements. Otherwise, this is a parse error;
ignore the token.select element has been popped from the stack.html element, then this is a parse error.8.2.5.18. "in select in table" 挿入モード
8.2.5.19. "in foreign content" 挿入モード
Comment node to the current
node with the data attribute set to the data
given in the comment token.mi
element in the MathML namespace.
mo
element in the MathML namespace.
mn
element in the MathML namespace.
ms
element in the MathML namespace.
mtext element in the MathML
namespace.8.2.5.20. "after body" 挿入モード
Comment node to the first element in the stack of open elements (the html element), with the data attribute set to the data given in the comment
token.8.2.5.21. "in frameset" 挿入モード
Comment node to the current
node with the data attribute set to the data
given in the comment token.html element, then this is a parse error; ignore the token. (fragment case)frameset element, then switch the
insertion mode to "after frameset".html element, then this is a parse error.8.2.5.22. "after frameset" 挿入モード
Comment node to the current
node with the data attribute set to the data
given in the comment token.8.2.5.23. "after after body" 挿入モード
Comment node to the Document object
with the data attribute set to the data given in
the comment token.8.2.5.24. "after after frameset" 挿入モード
Comment node to the Document object
with the data attribute set to the data given in
the comment token.8.2.6 The end
script element
definition.
DOMContentLoaded at the
Document.
load event at the
body element.8.2.7 Coercing an HTML DOM into an
infoset
xmlns, since they conflict with the
Namespaces in XML syntax. There is also some data that the HTML parser generates that isn't included in the DOM
itself. This section specifies some rules for handling these issues.
xmlns", attributes whose names start with "xmlns:", or attributes in the XMLNS
namespace, then the tool may drop such attributes.
foo<bar, which can be output by the HTML parser, though it is neither a legal HTML element
name nor a well-formed XML element name, would be converted into fooU0003Cbar, which is a well-formed XML element
name (though it's still not legal in HTML by any means).
xlink:href. Used on a MathML element, it becomes, after being
adjusted, an
attribute with a prefix "xlink" and a local name
"href". However, used on an HTML element, it becomes
an attribute with no prefix and the local name "xlink:href", which is not a valid NCName, and thus might
not be accepted by an XML API. It could thus get converted, becoming
"xlinkU0003Ahref".
form element ancestor (use of the form element pointer in the parser)
<a::> start tag will be closed by a
</a::> end tag, and never by a </aU0003AU0003A> end tag, even if the user agent is
using the rules above to then generate an actual element in the DOM with
the name aU0003AU0003A for that start tag.
8.3 Namespaces
http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml
http://www.w3.org/1998/Math/MathML
http://www.w3.org/2000/svg
http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink
http://www.w3.org/XML/1998/namespace
http://www.w3.org/2000/xmlns/
8.4 Serializing HTML fragments
Element or Document, referred to as the node, and either returns a string or raises an
exception.
Element
<)
character, followed by the element's tag name. (For nodes created by
the HTML parser, Document.createElement(), or Document.renameNode(), the tag name will be
lowercase.)Element.setAttributeNode() or Element.setAttribute(), will be lowercase), a U+003D
EQUALS SIGN (=) character, a U+0022 QUOTATION
MARK (") character, the attribute's
value, escaped
as described below in attribute mode, and a second U+0022
QUOTATION MARK (") character.>)
character.area, base,
basefont, bgsound, br, col,
embed, frame,
hr, img, input, link, meta, param, spacer, or
wbr element, then continue on to the next child node at
this point.pre textarea, or
listing element, append a U+000A LINE FEED (LF)
character.<) character, a U+002F SOLIDUS (/) character, the element's tag name again, and
finally a U+003E GREATER-THAN SIGN (>)
character.Text or CDATASection node
style, script, xmp, iframe, noembed,
noframes, noscript, or plaintext
element, then append the value of current node's
data DOM attribute literally.data DOM attribute, escaped as described below.Comment
<!-- (U+003C LESS-THAN
SIGN, U+0021 EXCLAMATION MARK, U+002D HYPHEN-MINUS, U+002D
HYPHEN-MINUS), followed by the value of current
node's data DOM attribute, followed by
the literal string --> (U+002D HYPHEN-MINUS, U+002D
HYPHEN-MINUS, U+003E GREATER-THAN SIGN).ProcessingInstruction
<? (U+003C LESS-THAN
SIGN, U+003F QUESTION MARK), followed by the value of current node's target DOM
attribute, followed by a single U+0020 SPACE character, followed by
the value of current node's data DOM attribute, followed by a single U+003E
GREATER-THAN SIGN character ('>').DocumentType
<!DOCTYPE (U+003C
LESS-THAN SIGN, U+0021 EXCLAMATION MARK, U+0044 LATIN CAPITAL LETTER
D, U+004F LATIN CAPITAL LETTER O, U+0043 LATIN CAPITAL LETTER C,
U+0054 LATIN CAPITAL LETTER T, U+0059 LATIN CAPITAL LETTER Y, U+0050
LATIN CAPITAL LETTER P, U+0045 LATIN CAPITAL LETTER E), followed by
a space (U+0020 SPACE), followed by the value of current node's name DOM
attribute, followed by the literal string > (U+003E
GREATER-THAN SIGN).Attr) cannot occur as
children of elements. If, despite this, they somehow do occur, this
algorithm must raise an INVALID_STATE_ERR exception.&" character by the string "&", any occurrences of the "<" character by the string "<", any occurrences of the ">" character by the string ">", any occurrences of the U+00A0 NO-BREAK SPACE
character by the string " ", and, if the
algorithm was invoked in the attribute mode, any occurrences of the
""" character by the string """.
textarea element to which
a Comment node has been appended is serialized and
the output is then reparsed, the comment will end up being displayed in
the text field. Similarly, if, as a result of DOM manipulation, an element
contains a comment that contains the literal string "-->", then when the result of serializing the element
is parsed, the comment will be truncated at that point and the rest of the
comment will be interpreted as markup. More examples would be making a
script element contain a text node
with the text string "</script>", or having a p element that contains a ul element (as the ul
element's start tag would imply the
end tag for the p).
8.5 Parsing HTML fragments
Element, referred to as the context
element, which gives the context for the parser, as well as input, a string to parse, and returns a list of zero or
more nodes.
Document node, and mark it as being an HTML document.Document node.
title or
textarea element
style, script, xmp, iframe, noembed, or
noframes element
noscript element
plaintext element
html element with no attributes.Document node created above.form element
pointer to the nearest node to the context
element that is a form element (going straight up the
ancestor chain, and including the element itself, if it is a
form element), or, if there is no such form
element, to null.8.6 Named character
references
Name
Character
AElig; U+000C6
AElig U+000C6
AMP; U+00026
AMP U+00026
Aacute; U+000C1
Aacute U+000C1
Abreve; U+00102
Acirc; U+000C2
Acirc U+000C2
Acy; U+00410
Afr; U+1D504
Agrave; U+000C0
Agrave U+000C0
Alpha; U+00391
Amacr; U+00100
And; U+02A53
Aogon; U+00104
Aopf; U+1D538
ApplyFunction; U+02061
Aring; U+000C5
Aring U+000C5
Ascr; U+1D49C
Assign; U+02254
Atilde; U+000C3
Atilde U+000C3
Auml; U+000C4
Auml U+000C4
Backslash; U+02216
Barv; U+02AE7
Barwed; U+02306
Bcy; U+00411
Because; U+02235
Bernoullis; U+0212C
Beta; U+00392
Bfr; U+1D505
Bopf; U+1D539
Breve; U+002D8
Bscr; U+0212C
Bumpeq; U+0224E
CHcy; U+00427
COPY; U+000A9
COPY U+000A9
Cacute; U+00106
Cap; U+022D2
CapitalDifferentialD; U+02145
Cayleys; U+0212D
Ccaron; U+0010C
Ccedil; U+000C7
Ccedil U+000C7
Ccirc; U+00108
Cconint; U+02230
Cdot; U+0010A
Cedilla; U+000B8
CenterDot; U+000B7
Cfr; U+0212D
Chi; U+003A7
CircleDot; U+02299
CircleMinus; U+02296
CirclePlus; U+02295
CircleTimes; U+02297
ClockwiseContourIntegral; U+02232
CloseCurlyDoubleQuote; U+0201D
CloseCurlyQuote; U+02019
Colon; U+02237
Colone; U+02A74
Congruent; U+02261
Conint; U+0222F
ContourIntegral; U+0222E
Copf; U+02102
Coproduct; U+02210
CounterClockwiseContourIntegral; U+02233
Cross; U+02A2F
Cscr; U+1D49E
Cup; U+022D3
CupCap; U+0224D
DD; U+02145
DDotrahd; U+02911
DJcy; U+00402
DScy; U+00405
DZcy; U+0040F
Dagger; U+02021
Darr; U+021A1
Dashv; U+02AE4
Dcaron; U+0010E
Dcy; U+00414
Del; U+02207
Delta; U+00394
Dfr; U+1D507
DiacriticalAcute; U+000B4
DiacriticalDot; U+002D9
DiacriticalDoubleAcute; U+002DD
DiacriticalGrave; U+00060
DiacriticalTilde; U+002DC
Diamond; U+022C4
DifferentialD; U+02146
Dopf; U+1D53B
Dot; U+000A8
DotDot; U+020DC
DotEqual; U+02250
DoubleContourIntegral; U+0222F
DoubleDot; U+000A8
DoubleDownArrow; U+021D3
DoubleLeftArrow; U+021D0
DoubleLeftRightArrow; U+021D4
DoubleLeftTee; U+02AE4
DoubleLongLeftArrow; U+027F8
DoubleLongLeftRightArrow; U+027FA
DoubleLongRightArrow; U+027F9
DoubleRightArrow; U+021D2
DoubleRightTee; U+022A8
DoubleUpArrow; U+021D1
DoubleUpDownArrow; U+021D5
DoubleVerticalBar; U+02225
DownArrow; U+02193
DownArrowBar; U+02913
DownArrowUpArrow; U+021F5
DownBreve; U+00311
DownLeftRightVector; U+02950
DownLeftTeeVector; U+0295E
DownLeftVector; U+021BD
DownLeftVectorBar; U+02956
DownRightTeeVector; U+0295F
DownRightVector; U+021C1
DownRightVectorBar; U+02957
DownTee; U+022A4
DownTeeArrow; U+021A7
Downarrow; U+021D3
Dscr; U+1D49F
Dstrok; U+00110
ENG; U+0014A
ETH; U+000D0
ETH U+000D0
Eacute; U+000C9
Eacute U+000C9
Ecaron; U+0011A
Ecirc; U+000CA
Ecirc U+000CA
Ecy; U+0042D
Edot; U+00116
Efr; U+1D508
Egrave; U+000C8
Egrave U+000C8
Element; U+02208
Emacr; U+00112
EmptySmallSquare; U+025FB
EmptyVerySmallSquare; U+025AB
Eogon; U+00118
Eopf; U+1D53C
Epsilon; U+00395
Equal; U+02A75
EqualTilde; U+02242
Equilibrium; U+021CC
Escr; U+02130
Esim; U+02A73
Eta; U+00397
Euml; U+000CB
Euml U+000CB
Exists; U+02203
ExponentialE; U+02147
Fcy; U+00424
Ffr; U+1D509
FilledSmallSquare; U+025FC
FilledVerySmallSquare; U+025AA
Fopf; U+1D53D
ForAll; U+02200
Fouriertrf; U+02131
Fscr; U+02131
GJcy; U+00403
GT; U+0003E
GT U+0003E
Gamma; U+00393
Gammad; U+003DC
Gbreve; U+0011E
Gcedil; U+00122
Gcirc; U+0011C
Gcy; U+00413
Gdot; U+00120
Gfr; U+1D50A
Gg; U+022D9
Gopf; U+1D53E
GreaterEqual; U+02265
GreaterEqualLess; U+022DB
GreaterFullEqual; U+02267
GreaterGreater; U+02AA2
GreaterLess; U+02277
GreaterSlantEqual; U+02A7E
GreaterTilde; U+02273
Gscr; U+1D4A2
Gt; U+0226B
HARDcy; U+0042A
Hacek; U+002C7
Hat; U+0005E
Hcirc; U+00124
Hfr; U+0210C
HilbertSpace; U+0210B
Hopf; U+0210D
HorizontalLine; U+02500
Hscr; U+0210B
Hstrok; U+00126
HumpDownHump; U+0224E
HumpEqual; U+0224F
IEcy; U+00415
IJlig; U+00132
IOcy; U+00401
Iacute; U+000CD
Iacute U+000CD
Icirc; U+000CE
Icirc U+000CE
Icy; U+00418
Idot; U+00130
Ifr; U+02111
Igrave; U+000CC
Igrave U+000CC
Im; U+02111
Imacr; U+0012A
ImaginaryI; U+02148
Implies; U+021D2
Int; U+0222C
Integral; U+0222B
Intersection; U+022C2
InvisibleComma; U+02063
InvisibleTimes; U+02062
Iogon; U+0012E
Iopf; U+1D540
Iota; U+00399
Iscr; U+02110
Itilde; U+00128
Iukcy; U+00406
Iuml; U+000CF
Iuml U+000CF
Jcirc; U+00134
Jcy; U+00419
Jfr; U+1D50D
Jopf; U+1D541
Jscr; U+1D4A5
Jsercy; U+00408
Jukcy; U+00404
KHcy; U+00425
KJcy; U+0040C
Kappa; U+0039A
Kcedil; U+00136
Kcy; U+0041A
Kfr; U+1D50E
Kopf; U+1D542
Kscr; U+1D4A6
LJcy; U+00409
LT; U+0003C
LT U+0003C
Lacute; U+00139
Lambda; U+0039B
Lang; U+027EA
Laplacetrf; U+02112
Larr; U+0219E
Lcaron; U+0013D
Lcedil; U+0013B
Lcy; U+0041B
LeftAngleBracket; U+027E8
LeftArrow; U+02190
LeftArrowBar; U+021E4
LeftArrowRightArrow; U+021C6
LeftCeiling; U+02308
LeftDoubleBracket; U+027E6
LeftDownTeeVector; U+02961
LeftDownVector; U+021C3
LeftDownVectorBar; U+02959
LeftFloor; U+0230A
LeftRightArrow; U+02194
LeftRightVector; U+0294E
LeftTee; U+022A3
LeftTeeArrow; U+021A4
LeftTeeVector; U+0295A
LeftTriangle; U+022B2
LeftTriangleBar; U+029CF
LeftTriangleEqual; U+022B4
LeftUpDownVector; U+02951
LeftUpTeeVector; U+02960
LeftUpVector; U+021BF
LeftUpVectorBar; U+02958
LeftVector; U+021BC
LeftVectorBar; U+02952
Leftarrow; U+021D0
Leftrightarrow; U+021D4
LessEqualGreater; U+022DA
LessFullEqual; U+02266
LessGreater; U+02276
LessLess; U+02AA1
LessSlantEqual; U+02A7D
LessTilde; U+02272
Lfr; U+1D50F
Ll; U+022D8
Lleftarrow; U+021DA
Lmidot; U+0013F
LongLeftArrow; U+027F5
LongLeftRightArrow; U+027F7
LongRightArrow; U+027F6
Longleftarrow; U+027F8
Longleftrightarrow; U+027FA
Longrightarrow; U+027F9
Lopf; U+1D543
LowerLeftArrow; U+02199
LowerRightArrow; U+02198
Lscr; U+02112
Lsh; U+021B0
Lstrok; U+00141
Lt; U+0226A
Map; U+02905
Mcy; U+0041C
MediumSpace; U+0205F
Mellintrf; U+02133
Mfr; U+1D510
MinusPlus; U+02213
Mopf; U+1D544
Mscr; U+02133
Mu; U+0039C
NJcy; U+0040A
Nacute; U+00143
Ncaron; U+00147
Ncedil; U+00145
Ncy; U+0041D
NegativeMediumSpace; U+0200B
NegativeThickSpace; U+0200B
NegativeThinSpace; U+0200B
NegativeVeryThinSpace; U+0200B
NestedGreaterGreater; U+0226B
NestedLessLess; U+0226A
NewLine; U+0000A
Nfr; U+1D511
NoBreak; U+02060
NonBreakingSpace; U+000A0
Nopf; U+02115
Not; U+02AEC
NotCongruent; U+02262
NotCupCap; U+0226D
NotDoubleVerticalBar; U+02226
NotElement; U+02209
NotEqual; U+02260
NotExists; U+02204
NotGreater; U+0226F
NotGreaterEqual; U+02271
NotGreaterLess; U+02279
NotGreaterTilde; U+02275
NotLeftTriangle; U+022EA
NotLeftTriangleEqual; U+022EC
NotLess; U+0226E
NotLessEqual; U+02270
NotLessGreater; U+02278
NotLessTilde; U+02274
NotPrecedes; U+02280
NotPrecedesSlantEqual; U+022E0
NotReverseElement; U+0220C
NotRightTriangle; U+022EB
NotRightTriangleEqual; U+022ED
NotSquareSubsetEqual; U+022E2
NotSquareSupersetEqual; U+022E3
NotSubsetEqual; U+02288
NotSucceeds; U+02281
NotSucceedsSlantEqual; U+022E1
NotSupersetEqual; U+02289
NotTilde; U+02241
NotTildeEqual; U+02244
NotTildeFullEqual; U+02247
NotTildeTilde; U+02249
NotVerticalBar; U+02224
Nscr; U+1D4A9
Ntilde; U+000D1
Ntilde U+000D1
Nu; U+0039D
OElig; U+00152
Oacute; U+000D3
Oacute U+000D3
Ocirc; U+000D4
Ocirc U+000D4
Ocy; U+0041E
Odblac; U+00150
Ofr; U+1D512
Ograve; U+000D2
Ograve U+000D2
Omacr; U+0014C
Omega; U+003A9
Omicron; U+0039F
Oopf; U+1D546
OpenCurlyDoubleQuote; U+0201C
OpenCurlyQuote; U+02018
Or; U+02A54
Oscr; U+1D4AA
Oslash; U+000D8
Oslash U+000D8
Otilde; U+000D5
Otilde U+000D5
Otimes; U+02A37
Ouml; U+000D6
Ouml U+000D6
OverBar; U+000AF
OverBrace; U+023DE
OverBracket; U+023B4
OverParenthesis; U+023DC
PartialD; U+02202
Pcy; U+0041F
Pfr; U+1D513
Phi; U+003A6
Pi; U+003A0
PlusMinus; U+000B1
Poincareplane; U+0210C
Popf; U+02119
Pr; U+02ABB
Precedes; U+0227A
PrecedesEqual; U+02AAF
PrecedesSlantEqual; U+0227C
PrecedesTilde; U+0227E
Prime; U+02033
Product; U+0220F
Proportion; U+02237
Proportional; U+0221D
Pscr; U+1D4AB
Psi; U+003A8
QUOT; U+00022
QUOT U+00022
Qfr; U+1D514
Qopf; U+0211A
Qscr; U+1D4AC
RBarr; U+02910
REG; U+000AE
REG U+000AE
Racute; U+00154
Rang; U+027EB
Rarr; U+021A0
Rarrtl; U+02916
Rcaron; U+00158
Rcedil; U+00156
Rcy; U+00420
Re; U+0211C
ReverseElement; U+0220B
ReverseEquilibrium; U+021CB
ReverseUpEquilibrium; U+0296F
Rfr; U+0211C
Rho; U+003A1
RightAngleBracket; U+027E9
RightArrow; U+02192
RightArrowBar; U+021E5
RightArrowLeftArrow; U+021C4
RightCeiling; U+02309
RightDoubleBracket; U+027E7
RightDownTeeVector; U+0295D
RightDownVector; U+021C2
RightDownVectorBar; U+02955
RightFloor; U+0230B
RightTee; U+022A2
RightTeeArrow; U+021A6
RightTeeVector; U+0295B
RightTriangle; U+022B3
RightTriangleBar; U+029D0
RightTriangleEqual; U+022B5
RightUpDownVector; U+0294F
RightUpTeeVector; U+0295C
RightUpVector; U+021BE
RightUpVectorBar; U+02954
RightVector; U+021C0
RightVectorBar; U+02953
Rightarrow; U+021D2
Ropf; U+0211D
RoundImplies; U+02970
Rrightarrow; U+021DB
Rscr; U+0211B
Rsh; U+021B1
RuleDelayed; U+029F4
SHCHcy; U+00429
SHcy; U+00428
SOFTcy; U+0042C
Sacute; U+0015A
Sc; U+02ABC
Scaron; U+00160
Scedil; U+0015E
Scirc; U+0015C
Scy; U+00421
Sfr; U+1D516
ShortDownArrow; U+02193
ShortLeftArrow; U+02190
ShortRightArrow; U+02192
ShortUpArrow; U+02191
Sigma; U+003A3
SmallCircle; U+02218
Sopf; U+1D54A
Sqrt; U+0221A
Square; U+025A1
SquareIntersection; U+02293
SquareSubset; U+0228F
SquareSubsetEqual; U+02291
SquareSuperset; U+02290
SquareSupersetEqual; U+02292
SquareUnion; U+02294
Sscr; U+1D4AE
Star; U+022C6
Sub; U+022D0
Subset; U+022D0
SubsetEqual; U+02286
Succeeds; U+0227B
SucceedsEqual; U+02AB0
SucceedsSlantEqual; U+0227D
SucceedsTilde; U+0227F
SuchThat; U+0220B
Sum; U+02211
Sup; U+022D1
Superset; U+02283
SupersetEqual; U+02287
Supset; U+022D1
THORN; U+000DE
THORN U+000DE
TRADE; U+02122
TSHcy; U+0040B
TScy; U+00426
Tab; U+00009
Tau; U+003A4
Tcaron; U+00164
Tcedil; U+00162
Tcy; U+00422
Tfr; U+1D517
Therefore; U+02234
Theta; U+00398
ThinSpace; U+02009
Tilde; U+0223C
TildeEqual; U+02243
TildeFullEqual; U+02245
TildeTilde; U+02248
Topf; U+1D54B
TripleDot; U+020DB
Tscr; U+1D4AF
Tstrok; U+00166
Uacute; U+000DA
Uacute U+000DA
Uarr; U+0219F
Uarrocir; U+02949
Ubrcy; U+0040E
Ubreve; U+0016C
Ucirc; U+000DB
Ucirc U+000DB
Ucy; U+00423
Udblac; U+00170
Ufr; U+1D518
Ugrave; U+000D9
Ugrave U+000D9
Umacr; U+0016A
UnderBar; U+00332
UnderBrace; U+023DF
UnderBracket; U+023B5
UnderParenthesis; U+023DD
Union; U+022C3
UnionPlus; U+0228E
Uogon; U+00172
Uopf; U+1D54C
UpArrow; U+02191
UpArrowBar; U+02912
UpArrowDownArrow; U+021C5
UpDownArrow; U+02195
UpEquilibrium; U+0296E
UpTee; U+022A5
UpTeeArrow; U+021A5
Uparrow; U+021D1
Updownarrow; U+021D5
UpperLeftArrow; U+02196
UpperRightArrow; U+02197
Upsi; U+003D2
Upsilon; U+003A5
Uring; U+0016E
Uscr; U+1D4B0
Utilde; U+00168
Uuml; U+000DC
Uuml U+000DC
VDash; U+022AB
Vbar; U+02AEB
Vcy; U+00412
Vdash; U+022A9
Vdashl; U+02AE6
Vee; U+022C1
Verbar; U+02016
Vert; U+02016
VerticalBar; U+02223
VerticalLine; U+0007C
VerticalSeparator; U+02758
VerticalTilde; U+02240
VeryThinSpace; U+0200A
Vfr; U+1D519
Vopf; U+1D54D
Vscr; U+1D4B1
Vvdash; U+022AA
Wcirc; U+00174
Wedge; U+022C0
Wfr; U+1D51A
Wopf; U+1D54E
Wscr; U+1D4B2
Xfr; U+1D51B
Xi; U+0039E
Xopf; U+1D54F
Xscr; U+1D4B3
YAcy; U+0042F
YIcy; U+00407
YUcy; U+0042E
Yacute; U+000DD
Yacute U+000DD
Ycirc; U+00176
Ycy; U+0042B
Yfr; U+1D51C
Yopf; U+1D550
Yscr; U+1D4B4
Yuml; U+00178
ZHcy; U+00416
Zacute; U+00179
Zcaron; U+0017D
Zcy; U+00417
Zdot; U+0017B
ZeroWidthSpace; U+0200B
Zeta; U+00396
Zfr; U+02128
Zopf; U+02124
Zscr; U+1D4B5
aacute; U+000E1
aacute U+000E1
abreve; U+00103
ac; U+0223E
acd; U+0223F
acirc; U+000E2
acirc U+000E2
acute; U+000B4
acute U+000B4
acy; U+00430
aelig; U+000E6
aelig U+000E6
af; U+02061
afr; U+1D51E
agrave; U+000E0
agrave U+000E0
alefsym; U+02135
aleph; U+02135
alpha; U+003B1
amacr; U+00101
amalg; U+02A3F
amp; U+00026
amp U+00026
and; U+02227
andand; U+02A55
andd; U+02A5C
andslope; U+02A58
andv; U+02A5A
ang; U+02220
ange; U+029A4
angle; U+02220
angmsd; U+02221
angmsdaa; U+029A8
angmsdab; U+029A9
angmsdac; U+029AA
angmsdad; U+029AB
angmsdae; U+029AC
angmsdaf; U+029AD
angmsdag; U+029AE
angmsdah; U+029AF
angrt; U+0221F
angrtvb; U+022BE
angrtvbd; U+0299D
angsph; U+02222
angst; U+0212B
angzarr; U+0237C
aogon; U+00105
aopf; U+1D552
ap; U+02248
apE; U+02A70
apacir; U+02A6F
ape; U+0224A
apid; U+0224B
apos; U+00027
approx; U+02248
approxeq; U+0224A
aring; U+000E5
aring U+000E5
ascr; U+1D4B6
ast; U+0002A
asymp; U+02248
asympeq; U+0224D
atilde; U+000E3
atilde U+000E3
auml; U+000E4
auml U+000E4
awconint; U+02233
awint; U+02A11
bNot; U+02AED
backcong; U+0224C
backepsilon; U+003F6
backprime; U+02035
backsim; U+0223D
backsimeq; U+022CD
barvee; U+022BD
barwed; U+02305
barwedge; U+02305
bbrk; U+023B5
bbrktbrk; U+023B6
bcong; U+0224C
bcy; U+00431
bdquo; U+0201E
becaus; U+02235
because; U+02235
bemptyv; U+029B0
bepsi; U+003F6
bernou; U+0212C
beta; U+003B2
beth; U+02136
between; U+0226C
bfr; U+1D51F
bigcap; U+022C2
bigcirc; U+025EF
bigcup; U+022C3
bigodot; U+02A00
bigoplus; U+02A01
bigotimes; U+02A02
bigsqcup; U+02A06
bigstar; U+02605
bigtriangledown; U+025BD
bigtriangleup; U+025B3
biguplus; U+02A04
bigvee; U+022C1
bigwedge; U+022C0
bkarow; U+0290D
blacklozenge; U+029EB
blacksquare; U+025AA
blacktriangle; U+025B4
blacktriangledown; U+025BE
blacktriangleleft; U+025C2
blacktriangleright; U+025B8
blank; U+02423
blk12; U+02592
blk14; U+02591
blk34; U+02593
block; U+02588
bnot; U+02310
bopf; U+1D553
bot; U+022A5
bottom; U+022A5
bowtie; U+022C8
boxDL; U+02557
boxDR; U+02554
boxDl; U+02556
boxDr; U+02553
boxH; U+02550
boxHD; U+02566
boxHU; U+02569
boxHd; U+02564
boxHu; U+02567
boxUL; U+0255D
boxUR; U+0255A
boxUl; U+0255C
boxUr; U+02559
boxV; U+02551
boxVH; U+0256C
boxVL; U+02563
boxVR; U+02560
boxVh; U+0256B
boxVl; U+02562
boxVr; U+0255F
boxbox; U+029C9
boxdL; U+02555
boxdR; U+02552
boxdl; U+02510
boxdr; U+0250C
boxh; U+02500
boxhD; U+02565
boxhU; U+02568
boxhd; U+0252C
boxhu; U+02534
boxminus; U+0229F
boxplus; U+0229E
boxtimes; U+022A0
boxuL; U+0255B
boxuR; U+02558
boxul; U+02518
boxur; U+02514
boxv; U+02502
boxvH; U+0256A
boxvL; U+02561
boxvR; U+0255E
boxvh; U+0253C
boxvl; U+02524
boxvr; U+0251C
bprime; U+02035
breve; U+002D8
brvbar; U+000A6
brvbar U+000A6
bscr; U+1D4B7
bsemi; U+0204F
bsim; U+0223D
bsime; U+022CD
bsol; U+0005C
bsolb; U+029C5
bull; U+02022
bullet; U+02022
bump; U+0224E
bumpE; U+02AAE
bumpe; U+0224F
bumpeq; U+0224F
cacute; U+00107
cap; U+02229
capand; U+02A44
capbrcup; U+02A49
capcap; U+02A4B
capcup; U+02A47
capdot; U+02A40
caret; U+02041
caron; U+002C7
ccaps; U+02A4D
ccaron; U+0010D
ccedil; U+000E7
ccedil U+000E7
ccirc; U+00109
ccups; U+02A4C
ccupssm; U+02A50
cdot; U+0010B
cedil; U+000B8
cedil U+000B8
cemptyv; U+029B2
cent; U+000A2
cent U+000A2
centerdot; U+000B7
cfr; U+1D520
chcy; U+00447
check; U+02713
checkmark; U+02713
chi; U+003C7
cir; U+025CB
cirE; U+029C3
circ; U+002C6
circeq; U+02257
circlearrowleft; U+021BA
circlearrowright; U+021BB
circledR; U+000AE
circledS; U+024C8
circledast; U+0229B
circledcirc; U+0229A
circleddash; U+0229D
cire; U+02257
cirfnint; U+02A10
cirmid; U+02AEF
cirscir; U+029C2
clubs; U+02663
clubsuit; U+02663
colon; U+0003A
colone; U+02254
coloneq; U+02254
comma; U+0002C
commat; U+00040
comp; U+02201
compfn; U+02218
complement; U+02201
complexes; U+02102
cong; U+02245
congdot; U+02A6D
conint; U+0222E
copf; U+1D554
coprod; U+02210
copy; U+000A9
copy U+000A9
copysr; U+02117
crarr; U+021B5
cross; U+02717
cscr; U+1D4B8
csub; U+02ACF
csube; U+02AD1
csup; U+02AD0
csupe; U+02AD2
ctdot; U+022EF
cudarrl; U+02938
cudarrr; U+02935
cuepr; U+022DE
cuesc; U+022DF
cularr; U+021B6
cularrp; U+0293D
cup; U+0222A
cupbrcap; U+02A48
cupcap; U+02A46
cupcup; U+02A4A
cupdot; U+0228D
cupor; U+02A45
curarr; U+021B7
curarrm; U+0293C
curlyeqprec; U+022DE
curlyeqsucc; U+022DF
curlyvee; U+022CE
curlywedge; U+022CF
curren; U+000A4
curren U+000A4
curvearrowleft; U+021B6
curvearrowright; U+021B7
cuvee; U+022CE
cuwed; U+022CF
cwconint; U+02232
cwint; U+02231
cylcty; U+0232D
dArr; U+021D3
dHar; U+02965
dagger; U+02020
daleth; U+02138
darr; U+02193
dash; U+02010
dashv; U+022A3
dbkarow; U+0290F
dblac; U+002DD
dcaron; U+0010F
dcy; U+00434
dd; U+02146
ddagger; U+02021
ddarr; U+021CA
ddotseq; U+02A77
deg; U+000B0
deg U+000B0
delta; U+003B4
demptyv; U+029B1
dfisht; U+0297F
dfr; U+1D521
dharl; U+021C3
dharr; U+021C2
diam; U+022C4
diamond; U+022C4
diamondsuit; U+02666
diams; U+02666
die; U+000A8
digamma; U+003DD
disin; U+022F2
div; U+000F7
divide; U+000F7
divide U+000F7
divideontimes; U+022C7
divonx; U+022C7
djcy; U+00452
dlcorn; U+0231E
dlcrop; U+0230D
dollar; U+00024
dopf; U+1D555
dot; U+002D9
doteq; U+02250
doteqdot; U+02251
dotminus; U+02238
dotplus; U+02214
dotsquare; U+022A1
doublebarwedge; U+02306
downarrow; U+02193
downdownarrows; U+021CA
downharpoonleft; U+021C3
downharpoonright; U+021C2
drbkarow; U+02910
drcorn; U+0231F
drcrop; U+0230C
dscr; U+1D4B9
dscy; U+00455
dsol; U+029F6
dstrok; U+00111
dtdot; U+022F1
dtri; U+025BF
dtrif; U+025BE
duarr; U+021F5
duhar; U+0296F
dwangle; U+029A6
dzcy; U+0045F
dzigrarr; U+027FF
eDDot; U+02A77
eDot; U+02251
eacute; U+000E9
eacute U+000E9
easter; U+02A6E
ecaron; U+0011B
ecir; U+02256
ecirc; U+000EA
ecirc U+000EA
ecolon; U+02255
ecy; U+0044D
edot; U+00117
ee; U+02147
efDot; U+02252
efr; U+1D522
eg; U+02A9A
egrave; U+000E8
egrave U+000E8
egs; U+02A96
egsdot; U+02A98
el; U+02A99
elinters; U+023E7
ell; U+02113
els; U+02A95
elsdot; U+02A97
emacr; U+00113
empty; U+02205
emptyset; U+02205
emptyv; U+02205
emsp13; U+02004
emsp14; U+02005
emsp; U+02003
eng; U+0014B
ensp; U+02002
eogon; U+00119
eopf; U+1D556
epar; U+022D5
eparsl; U+029E3
eplus; U+02A71
epsi; U+003F5
epsilon; U+003B5
epsiv; U+003B5
eqcirc; U+02256
eqcolon; U+02255
eqsim; U+02242
eqslantgtr; U+02A96
eqslantless; U+02A95
equals; U+0003D
equest; U+0225F
equiv; U+02261
equivDD; U+02A78
eqvparsl; U+029E5
erDot; U+02253
erarr; U+02971
escr; U+0212F
esdot; U+02250
esim; U+02242
eta; U+003B7
eth; U+000F0
eth U+000F0
euml; U+000EB
euml U+000EB
euro; U+020AC
excl; U+00021
exist; U+02203
expectation; U+02130
exponentiale; U+02147
fallingdotseq; U+02252
fcy; U+00444
female; U+02640
ffilig; U+0FB03
fflig; U+0FB00
ffllig; U+0FB04
ffr; U+1D523
filig; U+0FB01
flat; U+0266D
fllig; U+0FB02
fltns; U+025B1
fnof; U+00192
fopf; U+1D557
forall; U+02200
fork; U+022D4
forkv; U+02AD9
fpartint; U+02A0D
frac12; U+000BD
frac12 U+000BD
frac13; U+02153
frac14; U+000BC
frac14 U+000BC
frac15; U+02155
frac16; U+02159
frac18; U+0215B
frac23; U+02154
frac25; U+02156
frac34; U+000BE
frac34 U+000BE
frac35; U+02157
frac38; U+0215C
frac45; U+02158
frac56; U+0215A
frac58; U+0215D
frac78; U+0215E
frasl; U+02044
frown; U+02322
fscr; U+1D4BB
gE; U+02267
gEl; U+02A8C
gacute; U+001F5
gamma; U+003B3
gammad; U+003DD
gap; U+02A86
gbreve; U+0011F
gcirc; U+0011D
gcy; U+00433
gdot; U+00121
ge; U+02265
gel; U+022DB
geq; U+02265
geqq; U+02267
geqslant; U+02A7E
ges; U+02A7E
gescc; U+02AA9
gesdot; U+02A80
gesdoto; U+02A82
gesdotol; U+02A84
gesles; U+02A94
gfr; U+1D524
gg; U+0226B
ggg; U+022D9
gimel; U+02137
gjcy; U+00453
gl; U+02277
glE; U+02A92
gla; U+02AA5
glj; U+02AA4
gnE; U+02269
gnap; U+02A8A
gnapprox; U+02A8A
gne; U+02A88
gneq; U+02A88
gneqq; U+02269
gnsim; U+022E7
gopf; U+1D558
grave; U+00060
gscr; U+0210A
gsim; U+02273
gsime; U+02A8E
gsiml; U+02A90
gt; U+0003E
gt U+0003E
gtcc; U+02AA7
gtcir; U+02A7A
gtdot; U+022D7
gtlPar; U+02995
gtquest; U+02A7C
gtrapprox; U+02A86
gtrarr; U+02978
gtrdot; U+022D7
gtreqless; U+022DB
gtreqqless; U+02A8C
gtrless; U+02277
gtrsim; U+02273
hArr; U+021D4
hairsp; U+0200A
half; U+000BD
hamilt; U+0210B
hardcy; U+0044A
harr; U+02194
harrcir; U+02948
harrw; U+021AD
hbar; U+0210F
hcirc; U+00125
hearts; U+02665
heartsuit; U+02665
hellip; U+02026
hercon; U+022B9
hfr; U+1D525
hksearow; U+02925
hkswarow; U+02926
hoarr; U+021FF
homtht; U+0223B
hookleftarrow; U+021A9
hookrightarrow; U+021AA
hopf; U+1D559
horbar; U+02015
hscr; U+1D4BD
hslash; U+0210F
hstrok; U+00127
hybull; U+02043
hyphen; U+02010
iacute; U+000ED
iacute U+000ED
ic; U+02063
icirc; U+000EE
icirc U+000EE
icy; U+00438
iecy; U+00435
iexcl; U+000A1
iexcl U+000A1
iff; U+021D4
ifr; U+1D526
igrave; U+000EC
igrave U+000EC
ii; U+02148
iiiint; U+02A0C
iiint; U+0222D
iinfin; U+029DC
iiota; U+02129
ijlig; U+00133
imacr; U+0012B
image; U+02111
imagline; U+02110
imagpart; U+02111
imath; U+00131
imof; U+022B7
imped; U+001B5
in; U+02208
incare; U+02105
infin; U+0221E
infintie; U+029DD
inodot; U+00131
int; U+0222B
intcal; U+022BA
integers; U+02124
intercal; U+022BA
intlarhk; U+02A17
intprod; U+02A3C
iocy; U+00451
iogon; U+0012F
iopf; U+1D55A
iota; U+003B9
iprod; U+02A3C
iquest; U+000BF
iquest U+000BF
iscr; U+1D4BE
isin; U+02208
isinE; U+022F9
isindot; U+022F5
isins; U+022F4
isinsv; U+022F3
isinv; U+02208
it; U+02062
itilde; U+00129
iukcy; U+00456
iuml; U+000EF
iuml U+000EF
jcirc; U+00135
jcy; U+00439
jfr; U+1D527
jmath; U+00237
jopf; U+1D55B
jscr; U+1D4BF
jsercy; U+00458
jukcy; U+00454
kappa; U+003BA
kappav; U+003F0
kcedil; U+00137
kcy; U+0043A
kfr; U+1D528
kgreen; U+00138
khcy; U+00445
kjcy; U+0045C
kopf; U+1D55C
kscr; U+1D4C0
lAarr; U+021DA
lArr; U+021D0
lAtail; U+0291B
lBarr; U+0290E
lE; U+02266
lEg; U+02A8B
lHar; U+02962
lacute; U+0013A
laemptyv; U+029B4
lagran; U+02112
lambda; U+003BB
lang; U+027E8
langd; U+02991
langle; U+027E8
lap; U+02A85
laquo; U+000AB
laquo U+000AB
larr; U+02190
larrb; U+021E4
larrbfs; U+0291F
larrfs; U+0291D
larrhk; U+021A9
larrlp; U+021AB
larrpl; U+02939
larrsim; U+02973
larrtl; U+021A2
lat; U+02AAB
latail; U+02919
late; U+02AAD
lbarr; U+0290C
lbbrk; U+02772
lbrace; U+0007B
lbrack; U+0005B
lbrke; U+0298B
lbrksld; U+0298F
lbrkslu; U+0298D
lcaron; U+0013E
lcedil; U+0013C
lceil; U+02308
lcub; U+0007B
lcy; U+0043B
ldca; U+02936
ldquo; U+0201C
ldquor; U+0201E
ldrdhar; U+02967
ldrushar; U+0294B
ldsh; U+021B2
le; U+02264
leftarrow; U+02190
leftarrowtail; U+021A2
leftharpoondown; U+021BD
leftharpoonup; U+021BC
leftleftarrows; U+021C7
leftrightarrow; U+02194
leftrightarrows; U+021C6
leftrightharpoons; U+021CB
leftrightsquigarrow; U+021AD
leftthreetimes; U+022CB
leg; U+022DA
leq; U+02264
leqq; U+02266
leqslant; U+02A7D
les; U+02A7D
lescc; U+02AA8
lesdot; U+02A7F
lesdoto; U+02A81
lesdotor; U+02A83
lesges; U+02A93
lessapprox; U+02A85
lessdot; U+022D6
lesseqgtr; U+022DA
lesseqqgtr; U+02A8B
lessgtr; U+02276
lesssim; U+02272
lfisht; U+0297C
lfloor; U+0230A
lfr; U+1D529
lg; U+02276
lgE; U+02A91
lhard; U+021BD
lharu; U+021BC
lharul; U+0296A
lhblk; U+02584
ljcy; U+00459
ll; U+0226A
llarr; U+021C7
llcorner; U+0231E
llhard; U+0296B
lltri; U+025FA
lmidot; U+00140
lmoust; U+023B0
lmoustache; U+023B0
lnE; U+02268
lnap; U+02A89
lnapprox; U+02A89
lne; U+02A87
lneq; U+02A87
lneqq; U+02268
lnsim; U+022E6
loang; U+027EC
loarr; U+021FD
lobrk; U+027E6
longleftarrow; U+027F5
longleftrightarrow; U+027F7
longmapsto; U+027FC
longrightarrow; U+027F6
looparrowleft; U+021AB
looparrowright; U+021AC
lopar; U+02985
lopf; U+1D55D
loplus; U+02A2D
lotimes; U+02A34
lowast; U+02217
lowbar; U+0005F
loz; U+025CA
lozenge; U+025CA
lozf; U+029EB
lpar; U+00028
lparlt; U+02993
lrarr; U+021C6
lrcorner; U+0231F
lrhar; U+021CB
lrhard; U+0296D
lrm; U+0200E
lrtri; U+022BF
lsaquo; U+02039
lscr; U+1D4C1
lsh; U+021B0
lsim; U+02272
lsime; U+02A8D
lsimg; U+02A8F
lsqb; U+0005B
lsquo; U+02018
lsquor; U+0201A
lstrok; U+00142
lt; U+0003C
lt U+0003C
ltcc; U+02AA6
ltcir; U+02A79
ltdot; U+022D6
lthree; U+022CB
ltimes; U+022C9
ltlarr; U+02976
ltquest; U+02A7B
ltrPar; U+02996
ltri; U+025C3
ltrie; U+022B4
ltrif; U+025C2
lurdshar; U+0294A
luruhar; U+02966
mDDot; U+0223A
macr; U+000AF
macr U+000AF
male; U+02642
malt; U+02720
maltese; U+02720
map; U+021A6
mapsto; U+021A6
mapstodown; U+021A7
mapstoleft; U+021A4
mapstoup; U+021A5
marker; U+025AE
mcomma; U+02A29
mcy; U+0043C
mdash; U+02014
measuredangle; U+02221
mfr; U+1D52A
mho; U+02127
micro; U+000B5
micro U+000B5
mid; U+02223
midast; U+0002A
midcir; U+02AF0
middot; U+000B7
middot U+000B7
minus; U+02212
minusb; U+0229F
minusd; U+02238
minusdu; U+02A2A
mlcp; U+02ADB
mldr; U+02026
mnplus; U+02213
models; U+022A7
mopf; U+1D55E
mp; U+02213
mscr; U+1D4C2
mstpos; U+0223E
mu; U+003BC
multimap; U+022B8
mumap; U+022B8
nLeftarrow; U+021CD
nLeftrightarrow; U+021CE
nRightarrow; U+021CF
nVDash; U+022AF
nVdash; U+022AE
nabla; U+02207
nacute; U+00144
nap; U+02249
napos; U+00149
napprox; U+02249
natur; U+0266E
natural; U+0266E
naturals; U+02115
nbsp; U+000A0
nbsp U+000A0
ncap; U+02A43
ncaron; U+00148
ncedil; U+00146
ncong; U+02247
ncup; U+02A42
ncy; U+0043D
ndash; U+02013
ne; U+02260
neArr; U+021D7
nearhk; U+02924
nearr; U+02197
nearrow; U+02197
nequiv; U+02262
nesear; U+02928
nexist; U+02204
nexists; U+02204
nfr; U+1D52B
nge; U+02271
ngeq; U+02271
ngsim; U+02275
ngt; U+0226F
ngtr; U+0226F
nhArr; U+021CE
nharr; U+021AE
nhpar; U+02AF2
ni; U+0220B
nis; U+022FC
nisd; U+022FA
niv; U+0220B
njcy; U+0045A
nlArr; U+021CD
nlarr; U+0219A
nldr; U+02025
nle; U+02270
nleftarrow; U+0219A
nleftrightarrow; U+021AE
nleq; U+02270
nless; U+0226E
nlsim; U+02274
nlt; U+0226E
nltri; U+022EA
nltrie; U+022EC
nmid; U+02224
nopf; U+1D55F
not; U+000AC
not U+000AC
notin; U+02209
notinva; U+02209
notinvb; U+022F7
notinvc; U+022F6
notni; U+0220C
notniva; U+0220C
notnivb; U+022FE
notnivc; U+022FD
npar; U+02226
nparallel; U+02226
npolint; U+02A14
npr; U+02280
nprcue; U+022E0
nprec; U+02280
nrArr; U+021CF
nrarr; U+0219B
nrightarrow; U+0219B
nrtri; U+022EB
nrtrie; U+022ED
nsc; U+02281
nsccue; U+022E1
nscr; U+1D4C3
nshortmid; U+02224
nshortparallel; U+02226
nsim; U+02241
nsime; U+02244
nsimeq; U+02244
nsmid; U+02224
nspar; U+02226
nsqsube; U+022E2
nsqsupe; U+022E3
nsub; U+02284
nsube; U+02288
nsubseteq; U+02288
nsucc; U+02281
nsup; U+02285
nsupe; U+02289
nsupseteq; U+02289
ntgl; U+02279
ntilde; U+000F1
ntilde U+000F1
ntlg; U+02278
ntriangleleft; U+022EA
ntrianglelefteq; U+022EC
ntriangleright; U+022EB
ntrianglerighteq; U+022ED
nu; U+003BD
num; U+00023
numero; U+02116
numsp; U+02007
nvDash; U+022AD
nvHarr; U+02904
nvdash; U+022AC
nvinfin; U+029DE
nvlArr; U+02902
nvrArr; U+02903
nwArr; U+021D6
nwarhk; U+02923
nwarr; U+02196
nwarrow; U+02196
nwnear; U+02927
oS; U+024C8
oacute; U+000F3
oacute U+000F3
oast; U+0229B
ocir; U+0229A
ocirc; U+000F4
ocirc U+000F4
ocy; U+0043E
odash; U+0229D
odblac; U+00151
odiv; U+02A38
odot; U+02299
odsold; U+029BC
oelig; U+00153
ofcir; U+029BF
ofr; U+1D52C
ogon; U+002DB
ograve; U+000F2
ograve U+000F2
ogt; U+029C1
ohbar; U+029B5
ohm; U+02126
oint; U+0222E
olarr; U+021BA
olcir; U+029BE
olcross; U+029BB
oline; U+0203E
olt; U+029C0
omacr; U+0014D
omega; U+003C9
omicron; U+003BF
omid; U+029B6
ominus; U+02296
oopf; U+1D560
opar; U+029B7
operp; U+029B9
oplus; U+02295
or; U+02228
orarr; U+021BB
ord; U+02A5D
order; U+02134
orderof; U+02134
ordf; U+000AA
ordf U+000AA
ordm; U+000BA
ordm U+000BA
origof; U+022B6
oror; U+02A56
orslope; U+02A57
orv; U+02A5B
oscr; U+02134
oslash; U+000F8
oslash U+000F8
osol; U+02298
otilde; U+000F5
otilde U+000F5
otimes; U+02297
otimesas; U+02A36
ouml; U+000F6
ouml U+000F6
ovbar; U+0233D
par; U+02225
para; U+000B6
para U+000B6
parallel; U+02225
parsim; U+02AF3
parsl; U+02AFD
part; U+02202
pcy; U+0043F
percnt; U+00025
period; U+0002E
permil; U+02030
perp; U+022A5
pertenk; U+02031
pfr; U+1D52D
phi; U+003C6
phiv; U+003C6
phmmat; U+02133
phone; U+0260E
pi; U+003C0
pitchfork; U+022D4
piv; U+003D6
planck; U+0210F
planckh; U+0210E
plankv; U+0210F
plus; U+0002B
plusacir; U+02A23
plusb; U+0229E
pluscir; U+02A22
plusdo; U+02214
plusdu; U+02A25
pluse; U+02A72
plusmn; U+000B1
plusmn U+000B1
plussim; U+02A26
plustwo; U+02A27
pm; U+000B1
pointint; U+02A15
popf; U+1D561
pound; U+000A3
pound U+000A3
pr; U+0227A
prE; U+02AB3
prap; U+02AB7
prcue; U+0227C
pre; U+02AAF
prec; U+0227A
precapprox; U+02AB7
preccurlyeq; U+0227C
preceq; U+02AAF
precnapprox; U+02AB9
precneqq; U+02AB5
precnsim; U+022E8
precsim; U+0227E
prime; U+02032
primes; U+02119
prnE; U+02AB5
prnap; U+02AB9
prnsim; U+022E8
prod; U+0220F
profalar; U+0232E
profline; U+02312
profsurf; U+02313
prop; U+0221D
propto; U+0221D
prsim; U+0227E
prurel; U+022B0
pscr; U+1D4C5
psi; U+003C8
puncsp; U+02008
qfr; U+1D52E
qint; U+02A0C
qopf; U+1D562
qprime; U+02057
qscr; U+1D4C6
quaternions; U+0210D
quatint; U+02A16
quest; U+0003F
questeq; U+0225F
quot; U+00022
quot U+00022
rAarr; U+021DB
rArr; U+021D2
rAtail; U+0291C
rBarr; U+0290F
rHar; U+02964
race; U+029DA
racute; U+00155
radic; U+0221A
raemptyv; U+029B3
rang; U+027E9
rangd; U+02992
range; U+029A5
rangle; U+027E9
raquo; U+000BB
raquo U+000BB
rarr; U+02192
rarrap; U+02975
rarrb; U+021E5
rarrbfs; U+02920
rarrc; U+02933
rarrfs; U+0291E
rarrhk; U+021AA
rarrlp; U+021AC
rarrpl; U+02945
rarrsim; U+02974
rarrtl; U+021A3
rarrw; U+0219D
ratail; U+0291A
ratio; U+02236
rationals; U+0211A
rbarr; U+0290D
rbbrk; U+02773
rbrace; U+0007D
rbrack; U+0005D
rbrke; U+0298C
rbrksld; U+0298E
rbrkslu; U+02990
rcaron; U+00159
rcedil; U+00157
rceil; U+02309
rcub; U+0007D
rcy; U+00440
rdca; U+02937
rdldhar; U+02969
rdquo; U+0201D
rdquor; U+0201D
rdsh; U+021B3
real; U+0211C
realine; U+0211B
realpart; U+0211C
reals; U+0211D
rect; U+025AD
reg; U+000AE
reg U+000AE
rfisht; U+0297D
rfloor; U+0230B
rfr; U+1D52F
rhard; U+021C1
rharu; U+021C0
rharul; U+0296C
rho; U+003C1
rhov; U+003F1
rightarrow; U+02192
rightarrowtail; U+021A3
rightharpoondown; U+021C1
rightharpoonup; U+021C0
rightleftarrows; U+021C4
rightleftharpoons; U+021CC
rightrightarrows; U+021C9
rightsquigarrow; U+0219D
rightthreetimes; U+022CC
ring; U+002DA
risingdotseq; U+02253
rlarr; U+021C4
rlhar; U+021CC
rlm; U+0200F
rmoust; U+023B1
rmoustache; U+023B1
rnmid; U+02AEE
roang; U+027ED
roarr; U+021FE
robrk; U+027E7
ropar; U+02986
ropf; U+1D563
roplus; U+02A2E
rotimes; U+02A35
rpar; U+00029
rpargt; U+02994
rppolint; U+02A12
rrarr; U+021C9
rsaquo; U+0203A
rscr; U+1D4C7
rsh; U+021B1
rsqb; U+0005D
rsquo; U+02019
rsquor; U+02019
rthree; U+022CC
rtimes; U+022CA
rtri; U+025B9
rtrie; U+022B5
rtrif; U+025B8
rtriltri; U+029CE
ruluhar; U+02968
rx; U+0211E
sacute; U+0015B
sbquo; U+0201A
sc; U+0227B
scE; U+02AB4
scap; U+02AB8
scaron; U+00161
sccue; U+0227D
sce; U+02AB0
scedil; U+0015F
scirc; U+0015D
scnE; U+02AB6
scnap; U+02ABA
scnsim; U+022E9
scpolint; U+02A13
scsim; U+0227F
scy; U+00441
sdot; U+022C5
sdotb; U+022A1
sdote; U+02A66
seArr; U+021D8
searhk; U+02925
searr; U+02198
searrow; U+02198
sect; U+000A7
sect U+000A7
semi; U+0003B
seswar; U+02929
setminus; U+02216
setmn; U+02216
sext; U+02736
sfr; U+1D530
sfrown; U+02322
sharp; U+0266F
shchcy; U+00449
shcy; U+00448
shortmid; U+02223
shortparallel; U+02225
shy; U+000AD
shy U+000AD
sigma; U+003C3
sigmaf; U+003C2
sigmav; U+003C2
sim; U+0223C
simdot; U+02A6A
sime; U+02243
simeq; U+02243
simg; U+02A9E
simgE; U+02AA0
siml; U+02A9D
simlE; U+02A9F
simne; U+02246
simplus; U+02A24
simrarr; U+02972
slarr; U+02190
smallsetminus; U+02216
smashp; U+02A33
smeparsl; U+029E4
smid; U+02223
smile; U+02323
smt; U+02AAA
smte; U+02AAC
softcy; U+0044C
sol; U+0002F
solb; U+029C4
solbar; U+0233F
sopf; U+1D564
spades; U+02660
spadesuit; U+02660
spar; U+02225
sqcap; U+02293
sqcup; U+02294
sqsub; U+0228F
sqsube; U+02291
sqsubset; U+0228F
sqsubseteq; U+02291
sqsup; U+02290
sqsupe; U+02292
sqsupset; U+02290
sqsupseteq; U+02292
squ; U+025A1
square; U+025A1
squarf; U+025AA
squf; U+025AA
srarr; U+02192
sscr; U+1D4C8
ssetmn; U+02216
ssmile; U+02323
sstarf; U+022C6
star; U+02606
starf; U+02605
straightepsilon; U+003F5
straightphi; U+003D5
strns; U+000AF
sub; U+02282
subE; U+02AC5
subdot; U+02ABD
sube; U+02286
subedot; U+02AC3
submult; U+02AC1
subnE; U+02ACB
subne; U+0228A
subplus; U+02ABF
subrarr; U+02979
subset; U+02282
subseteq; U+02286
subseteqq; U+02AC5
subsetneq; U+0228A
subsetneqq; U+02ACB
subsim; U+02AC7
subsub; U+02AD5
subsup; U+02AD3
succ; U+0227B
succapprox; U+02AB8
succcurlyeq; U+0227D
succeq; U+02AB0
succnapprox; U+02ABA
succneqq; U+02AB6
succnsim; U+022E9
succsim; U+0227F
sum; U+02211
sung; U+0266A
sup1; U+000B9
sup1 U+000B9
sup2; U+000B2
sup2 U+000B2
sup3; U+000B3
sup3 U+000B3
sup; U+02283
supE; U+02AC6
supdot; U+02ABE
supdsub; U+02AD8
supe; U+02287
supedot; U+02AC4
suphsub; U+02AD7
suplarr; U+0297B
supmult; U+02AC2
supnE; U+02ACC
supne; U+0228B
supplus; U+02AC0
supset; U+02283
supseteq; U+02287
supseteqq; U+02AC6
supsetneq; U+0228B
supsetneqq; U+02ACC
supsim; U+02AC8
supsub; U+02AD4
supsup; U+02AD6
swArr; U+021D9
swarhk; U+02926
swarr; U+02199
swarrow; U+02199
swnwar; U+0292A
szlig; U+000DF
szlig U+000DF
target; U+02316
tau; U+003C4
tbrk; U+023B4
tcaron; U+00165
tcedil; U+00163
tcy; U+00442
tdot; U+020DB
telrec; U+02315
tfr; U+1D531
there4; U+02234
therefore; U+02234
theta; U+003B8
thetasym; U+003D1
thetav; U+003D1
thickapprox; U+02248
thicksim; U+0223C
thinsp; U+02009
thkap; U+02248
thksim; U+0223C
thorn; U+000FE
thorn U+000FE
tilde; U+002DC
times; U+000D7
times U+000D7
timesb; U+022A0
timesbar; U+02A31
timesd; U+02A30
tint; U+0222D
toea; U+02928
top; U+022A4
topbot; U+02336
topcir; U+02AF1
topf; U+1D565
topfork; U+02ADA
tosa; U+02929
tprime; U+02034
trade; U+02122
triangle; U+025B5
triangledown; U+025BF
triangleleft; U+025C3
trianglelefteq; U+022B4
triangleq; U+0225C
triangleright; U+025B9
trianglerighteq; U+022B5
tridot; U+025EC
trie; U+0225C
triminus; U+02A3A
triplus; U+02A39
trisb; U+029CD
tritime; U+02A3B
trpezium; U+023E2
tscr; U+1D4C9
tscy; U+00446
tshcy; U+0045B
tstrok; U+00167
twixt; U+0226C
twoheadleftarrow; U+0219E
twoheadrightarrow; U+021A0
uArr; U+021D1
uHar; U+02963
uacute; U+000FA
uacute U+000FA
uarr; U+02191
ubrcy; U+0045E
ubreve; U+0016D
ucirc; U+000FB
ucirc U+000FB
ucy; U+00443
udarr; U+021C5
udblac; U+00171
udhar; U+0296E
ufisht; U+0297E
ufr; U+1D532
ugrave; U+000F9
ugrave U+000F9
uharl; U+021BF
uharr; U+021BE
uhblk; U+02580
ulcorn; U+0231C
ulcorner; U+0231C
ulcrop; U+0230F
ultri; U+025F8
umacr; U+0016B
uml; U+000A8
uml U+000A8
uogon; U+00173
uopf; U+1D566
uparrow; U+02191
updownarrow; U+02195
upharpoonleft; U+021BF
upharpoonright; U+021BE
uplus; U+0228E
upsi; U+003C5
upsih; U+003D2
upsilon; U+003C5
upuparrows; U+021C8
urcorn; U+0231D
urcorner; U+0231D
urcrop; U+0230E
uring; U+0016F
urtri; U+025F9
uscr; U+1D4CA
utdot; U+022F0
utilde; U+00169
utri; U+025B5
utrif; U+025B4
uuarr; U+021C8
uuml; U+000FC
uuml U+000FC
uwangle; U+029A7
vArr; U+021D5
vBar; U+02AE8
vBarv; U+02AE9
vDash; U+022A8
vangrt; U+0299C
varepsilon; U+003B5
varkappa; U+003F0
varnothing; U+02205
varphi; U+003C6
varpi; U+003D6
varpropto; U+0221D
varr; U+02195
varrho; U+003F1
varsigma; U+003C2
vartheta; U+003D1
vartriangleleft; U+022B2
vartriangleright; U+022B3
vcy; U+00432
vdash; U+022A2
vee; U+02228
veebar; U+022BB
veeeq; U+0225A
vellip; U+022EE
verbar; U+0007C
vert; U+0007C
vfr; U+1D533
vltri; U+022B2
vopf; U+1D567
vprop; U+0221D
vrtri; U+022B3
vscr; U+1D4CB
vzigzag; U+0299A
wcirc; U+00175
wedbar; U+02A5F
wedge; U+02227
wedgeq; U+02259
weierp; U+02118
wfr; U+1D534
wopf; U+1D568
wp; U+02118
wr; U+02240
wreath; U+02240
wscr; U+1D4CC
xcap; U+022C2
xcirc; U+025EF
xcup; U+022C3
xdtri; U+025BD
xfr; U+1D535
xhArr; U+027FA
xharr; U+027F7
xi; U+003BE
xlArr; U+027F8
xlarr; U+027F5
xmap; U+027FC
xnis; U+022FB
xodot; U+02A00
xopf; U+1D569
xoplus; U+02A01
xotime; U+02A02
xrArr; U+027F9
xrarr; U+027F6
xscr; U+1D4CD
xsqcup; U+02A06
xuplus; U+02A04
xutri; U+025B3
xvee; U+022C1
xwedge; U+022C0
yacute; U+000FD
yacute U+000FD
yacy; U+0044F
ycirc; U+00177
ycy; U+0044B
yen; U+000A5
yen U+000A5
yfr; U+1D536
yicy; U+00457
yopf; U+1D56A
yscr; U+1D4CE
yucy; U+0044E
yuml; U+000FF
yuml U+000FF
zacute; U+0017A
zcaron; U+0017E
zcy; U+00437
zdot; U+0017C
zeetrf; U+02128
zeta; U+003B6
zfr; U+1D537
zhcy; U+00436
zigrarr; U+021DD
zopf; U+1D56B
zscr; U+1D4CF
zwj; U+0200D
zwnj; U+0200C 9. レンダリングと利用者エージェントの動作
9.1 Rendering and the DOM
AbstractView interface must also
implement the MediaModeAbstractView interface.
interface MediaModeAbstractView {
readonly attribute DOMString mediaMode;
};
mediaMode attribute on objects
implementing the MediaModeAbstractView interface
must return the string that represents the canvas' current rendering mode
(screen, print, etc). This is a lowercase
string, as defined by the
CSS specification. [CSS21]
AbstractView
interface. Only the default view implements the Window interface. The other views can be reached
using the view attribute of the
UIEvent interface, during event propagation. There is no way
currently to enumerate all the views.9.2 Rendering and menus/toolbars
9.2.1 The 'icon' property
command attribute, but when the property
computes to an actual image, it should use that image instead.
9.3 廃止要素・属性・API
9.3.1
body 要素[XXX] interface HTMLDocument {
attribute DOMString fgColor;
attribute DOMString bgColor;
attribute DOMString linkColor;
attribute DOMString vlinkColor;
attribute DOMString alinkColor;
};
Document オブジェクトの fgColor 属性は、文書 body 要素の text
属性を反映しなければなりません。Document オブジェクトの bgColor 属性は、文書 body 要素の bgcolor
属性を反映しなければなりません。Document オブジェクトの linkColor 属性は、文書 body 要素の link
属性を反映しなければなりません。Document オブジェクトの vLinkColor 属性は、文書 body 要素の vlink
属性を反映しなければなりません。Document オブジェクトの aLinkColor 属性は、文書 body 要素の alink
属性を反映しなければなりません。[XXX] interface HTMLBodyElement {
attribute DOMString text;
attribute DOMString bgColor;
attribute DOMString background;
attribute DOMString link;
attribute DOMString vLink;
attribute DOMString aLink;
};
body 要素の text DOM 属性は、
その要素の text
内容属性を反映しなければなりません。body 要素の bgColor DOM 属性は、
その要素の bgcolor
内容属性を反映しなければなりません。body 要素の background DOM 属性は、
その要素の background
内容属性を反映しなければなりません。body 要素の link DOM 属性は、
その要素の link
内容属性を反映しなければなりません。body 要素の aLink DOM 属性は、
その要素の alink
内容属性を反映しなければなりません。body 要素の vLink DOM 属性は、
その要素の vlink
内容属性を反映しなければなりません。9.3.2
applet 要素applet 要素は、
embed 要素の Java
専用の異形です。 HTML5 では
applet 要素は廃止されており、
すべての拡張の枠組み (Java、.NET、Flash など) は一貫した方法で扱われます。applet 要素の文書が活性文書である閲覧文脈において砂箱化プラグイン閲覧文脈旗が設定されている場合、
要素は無視されなければなりません (何も表しません)。[XXX] interface HTMLDocument {
readonly attribute HTMLCollection applets;
};
applets 属性は、
Document 節点を根とし、濾過器が applet
要素にのみ一致するような HTMLCollection
を返さなければなりません。
10. ここで詳しく説明する他の技術を使う方がよりうまく取り扱えるのでこの仕様書では行うことができない事柄
10.1 局所化
10.2 宣言的2次元ベクトル画像・アニメーション
10.3 宣言的3次元場面
10.4 タイマー
Window 界面を実装するオブジェクトは、
WindowTimers
界面も実装しなければなりません。[NoInterfaceObject] interface WindowTimers {
// timers
long setTimeout(in TimeoutHandler handler, in long timeout);
long setTimeout(in TimeoutHandler handler, in long timeout, arguments...);
long setTimeout(in DOMString code, in long timeout);
long setTimeout(in DOMString code, in long timeout, in DOMString language);
void clearTimeout(in long handle);
long setInterval(in TimeoutHandler handler, in long timeout);
long setInterval(in TimeoutHandler handler, in long timeout, arguments...);
long setInterval(in DOMString code, in long timeout);
long setInterval(in DOMString code, in long timeout, in DOMString language);
void clearInterval(in long handle);
};
interface TimeoutHandler {
void handleEvent([Variadic] in any args);
};
setTimeout and setInterval methods allow authors to
schedule timer-based events.
setTimeout(handler, timeout[, arguments...]) method takes a reference to a
TimeoutHandler object and a
length of time in milliseconds. It must return a handle to the timeout
created, and then asynchronously wait timeout
milliseconds and then queue a task to invoke
handleEvent() on the handler object. If
any arguments... were provided, they must be passed to
the handler as arguments to the
handleEvent() function.
setTimeout(code, timeout[, language]) may be used. This variant takes a
string instead of a TimeoutHandler object. define the actual requirements for this method, as with
the previous one. That string must be parsed using the specified
language (defaulting to ECMAScript if the third
argument is omitted) and executed in the scope of the browsing context associated with the Window object on which the setTimeout() method was invoked.
setInterval(...)
variants must work in the same way as the setTimeout variants
except that if timeout is a value greater than zero,
the task that invokes the handler or code must be queued again every timeout milliseconds, not just the once.clearTimeout() and
clearInterval()
methods take one integer (the value returned by setTimeout() and setInterval() respectively) and must
cancel the specified timeout. When called with a value that does not
correspond to an active timeout or interval, the methods must return
without doing anything.
索引
参考文献
謝辞
canvas
を実装した Richard Williamson に特に感謝します。画布機能はこれをもとに設計しました。contenteditable、
その他 Windows Internet Explorer ブラウザではじめて広く採用された機能を最初に実装した
Microsoft の従業員のみなさんにも特に感謝します。