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This Week in HTML 5 – Episode 25

March 31st, 2009 · No Comments

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Welcome back to "This Week in HTML 5," where I'll try to summarize the major activity in the ongoing standards process in the WHATWG and W3C HTML Working Group.

The big news for the week of February 23rd (yes, I'm that far behind) is a collection of changes about how video is processed. The changes revolve around the resource selection algorithm to handle cases where the src attribute of a <video> element is set dynamically from script.

Background reading on the resource selection algorithm: Re: play() sometimes doesn't do anything now that load() is async, r2849: "Change the way resources are loaded for media elements to make it actually work", r2873: "make all invokations of the resource selection algorithm asynchronous."

Other video-related changes this week:

  • r2845 changes the definition of the drawImage() method of the <canvas> element to allow playing a video on a canvas.
  • r2847 defines that <video> and <audio> elements delay the document's onload event.
  • r2848 changes the wording of the ready states documentation to prevent duplicate canplay events.
  • r2852 changes the wording of the ready states documentation to prevent duplicate playing events.
  • r2853 fixes the order of events of autoplayed video.
  • r2855 adds an autobuffer attribute to <audio> and <video> elements. "The autobuffer attribute provides a hint that the author expects that downloading the entire resource optimistically will be worth it, even in the absence of the autoplay attribute. In the absence of either attribute, the user agent is likely to find that waiting until the user starts playback before downloading any further content leads to a more efficient use of the network resources."

Another big change this week is the combination of r2859, 2860, and r2861: you can now declare the character encoding of XHTML documents served with the application/xhtml+xml MIME type by using the <meta charset> attribute, but only if the value is "UTF-8". Also, the charset attribute must appear in the first 512 bytes of the document. Previously, the only ways to control the character encoding of an application/xhtml+xml document were setting the charset parameter on the HTTP Content-Type header, or to use an encoding attribute in the XML prolog.

In practice, this will make no difference to encoding detection algorithms; other UTF-* encodings are detected earlier (with a Byte Order Mark), and any other encoding would require an XML prolog. This is mainly to address the desire of a few overly vocal authors to be able to serve the same markup in both text/html and application/xhtml+xml modes. Background reading: Bug 6613: Allow <meta charset="UTF-8"/> in XHTML.

Other interesting changes this week:

  • r2866 makes it clear that using tables for layout is non-conforming.
  • r2868 makes it clear that <canvas> elements must have accessible fallback content within them.
  • r2870 drops the <eventsource> element.

Tune in next week for another exciting episode of "This Week in HTML 5."

This item was originally posted at: http://blog.whatwg.org and is licensed under the MIT license

Tags: Weekly Review

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