On Thu, Mar 6, 2008 at 12:22 PM, <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > the situation that's troubling is where one set of input is clear, > while another set of similar-but-not-identical input leads to > an interpretation that is _different_ yet still _equally-clear_, > but you can't easily write routines to differentiate the two, so > you have the spec disallow one of 'em because that's an easy > "solution", even though it disenfranchises one of the users...
Srsly, talk of disenfranchisement seems heated rhetoric given that no one will be prevented from writing a markdown document. On a constructive tip: What we're trying to do is design a perspective, by specifying what markdown does now, from which implementations of markdown can consistently interpret the same input. The first stage has always been to just write down some rules, etc. about what markdown is doing now. (Of course, the second stage is "???" and the third is "profit". If only we were underpants gnomes.) -- Joseph Lorenzo Hall UC Berkeley School of Information http://josephhall.org/ _______________________________________________ Markdown-Discuss mailing list Markdown-Discuss@six.pairlist.net http://six.pairlist.net/mailman/listinfo/markdown-discuss