X-VM-v5-Data: ([nil nil nil nil nil nil nil nil nil] ["447" "Thu" "11" "September" "1997" "09:51:02" "+0100" "Sebastian Rahtz" "s.rahtz@ELSEVIER.CO.UK" nil "14" "Re: HyperLaTeX" "^Date:" nil nil "9" nil "HyperLaTeX" nil nil nil] nil) Received: from listserv.gmd.de (listserv.gmd.de [192.88.97.1]) by mail.Uni-Mainz.DE (8.8.5/8.8.5) with ESMTP id LAA17067; Thu, 11 Sep 1997 11:04:11 +0200 (MET DST) Received: from lsv1.listserv.gmd.de by listserv.gmd.de (LSMTP for OpenVMS v1.1a) with SMTP id <0.ACA13327@listserv.gmd.de>; Thu, 11 Sep 1997 11:02:35 +0200 Received: from RELAY.URZ.UNI-HEIDELBERG.DE by RELAY.URZ.UNI-HEIDELBERG.DE (LISTSERV-TCP/IP release 1.8b) with spool id 197212 for LATEX-L@RELAY.URZ.UNI-HEIDELBERG.DE; Thu, 11 Sep 1997 11:03:27 +0200 Received: from pillar.elsevier.co.uk (root@pillar.elsevier.co.uk [193.131.222.35]) by relay.urz.uni-heidelberg.de (8.7.6/8.7.4) with ESMTP id LAA02748 for ; Thu, 11 Sep 1997 11:03:25 +0200 (MET DST) Received: from snowdon.elsevier.co.uk (snowdon.elsevier.co.uk [193.131.197.164]) by pillar.elsevier.co.uk (8.8.5/8.8.5) with ESMTP id KAA07898 for ; Thu, 11 Sep 1997 10:03:31 +0100 (BST) Received: from SRAHTZ (actually host srahtz.elsevier.co.uk) by snowdon.elsevier.co.uk with SMTP (PP); Thu, 11 Sep 1997 10:03:25 +0100 MIME-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii Content-Transfer-Encoding: 7bit References: <970910170626.c4ec@vms.rhbnc.ac.uk> X-Mailer: VM 6.33 under Emacs 19.34.4 Message-ID: <2172-Thu11Sep1997095102+0100-s.rahtz@elsevier.co.uk> Reply-To: Mailing list for the LaTeX3 project In-Reply-To: <970910170626.c4ec@vms.rhbnc.ac.uk> Date: Thu, 11 Sep 1997 09:51:02 +0100 From: Sebastian Rahtz Sender: Mailing list for the LaTeX3 project To: Multiple recipients of list LATEX-L Subject: Re: HyperLaTeX Status: R X-Status: X-Keywords: X-UID: 2307 > > Every new web page I create conforms to the HTML 4.0 spec. I _want_ > en- and em-dashes, cascading style sheets and so on: don't you? > no. i want Unicode, i want extensible markup, and a properly designed style language. that rules out HTML4 and CSS, no? incidentally, the proposal for XML's style language was just released; no doubt many people on this list will find it of interest: http://www.w3.org/TR/NOTE-XSL-970910 Sebastian