On Wed, Dec 19, 2012 at 5:07 PM, Terry Reedy <tjre...@udel.edu> wrote: > That says that my browser, Firefox 17, does not support HTML5. Golly gee. I > don't think any browser support5 all of that moving target, and Gecko > apparently supports about as large a subset as most. > https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Comparison_of_layout_engines_%28HTML5%29 > It is possible the FF still does not support the particular feature needed > for the clock, but then the page should say just that. Has the latest FF > (17) actually been tested?
It works for me using FF 17.0.1. >> To create an element, for instance an HTML anchor : >> doc <= A('Python',href="http://www.python.org") > > > To me, that is a awful choice and I urge you to change it. +1. The DOM already has a well-established API. The following may require more typing: link = document.createElement('a') link.setAttribute("href", "http://www.python.org/") link.appendChild(document.createTextNode('Python')) document.body.appendChild(link) But it is much clearer in intent. Since these methods map directly to DOM methods, I know exactly what I expect them to do, and I can look them up in the browser documentation if I have any doubts. With the one-liner above, I don't know exactly what that maps to in actual DOM calls, and so I'm a lot less clear on what exactly it is supposed to do. I'm not even entirely certain whether it's actually equivalent to my code above. I suggest that Brython should have a "low-level" DOM API that matches up to the actual DOM in as close to a 1:1 correspondence as possible. Then if you want to have a higher-level API that allows whiz-bang one-liners like the above, build it as an abstraction on top of the low-level API and include it as an optional library. This has the added benefit that if the user runs into an obscure bug where the fancy API breaks on some particular operation on some specific browser, they will still have the option of falling back to the low-level API to work around it. It would also make the conversion barrier much lower for web programmers looking to switch to Brython, if they can continue to use the constructs that they're already familiar with but just write them in Python instead of JavaScript. -- http://mail.python.org/mailman/listinfo/python-list