Le 13 mai 2008 à 18:55, Ian Hickson a écrit :
On Wed, 11 Apr 2007, Tyler Keating wrote:
Currently, I know that Firefox uses Mozilla Archive
Format (.maf), Internet Explorer and Opera use MIME HTML (.mht) and
Safari uses its own format (.webarchive) for saving a web page and
all
of its resources into a single file. So clearly a standard would be
beneficial in ensuring "archive" compatibility between browsers and I
think it's suitable for that standard to reside in HTML5.
[…]
There are some specifications for this kind of thing already, e.g.
multipart/related (RFC2387), and the derivative MHTML (RFC2557).
See Widgets 1.0: Packaging and Configuration
http://www.w3.org/TR/widgets/
Abstract
This document defines a Zip-based packaging format and an XML-based
configuration document format for widgets. The configuration document
is a simple XML-based language that authors can use to record metadata
and configuration parameters about a widget. The packaging format is a
container for files required by a widget.
--
Karl Dubost - W3C
http://www.w3.org/QA/
Be Strict To Be Cool