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Section 4-1 of the XML 1.0 second edition spec states: Well-Formedness Constraint: In DTD Parameter-entity references may only appear in the DTD. The Annotated XML spec notes that: This constraint is not actually wrong, but it is rather misleading. Suppose I have a parameter entity named Fred, then if the string %Fred; appears somewhere in the document, outside of the DTD, that's not an error as this suggests; it's just the string %Fred;. So my question is why is this constraint here at all? What is its effect? If we removed it form the spec (say in the third edition) would this in any way change which document are considered to be well-formed or valid? Would removing it give parsers any leeway they don't have now? Right now this seems like an unnecessary statement to me. -- +-----------------------+------------------------+-------------------+ | Elliotte Rusty Harold | elharo@m... | Writer/Programmer | +-----------------------+------------------------+-------------------+ | Java I/O (O'Reilly & Associates, 1999) | | http://metalab.unc.edu/javafaq/books/javaio/ | | http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ISBN=1565924851/cafeaulaitA/ | +----------------------------------+---------------------------------+ | Read Cafe au Lait for Java News: http://metalab.unc.edu/javafaq/ | | Read Cafe con Leche for XML News: http://metalab.unc.edu/xml/ | +----------------------------------+---------------------------------+
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