This article may rely excessively on sources too closely associated with the subject, potentially preventing the article from being verifiable and neutral. (December 2011) |
Abbreviation | WHATWG |
---|---|
Formation | 4 June 2004 |
Purpose | Developing web standards |
Membership | Apple Inc., Google LLC, Microsoft Corporation, Mozilla Corporation[1] |
Main organ | Steering Group |
Website | whatwg |
The Web Hypertext Application Technology Working Group (WHATWG) is a community of people interested in evolving HTML and related technologies. The WHATWG was founded by individuals from Apple Inc., the Mozilla Foundation and Opera Software, leading Web browser vendors, in 2004.[2][3]
The central organizational membership and control of WHATWG today – its "Steering Group" – consists of Apple, Mozilla, Google, and Microsoft. WHATWG community members work with the editor of the specifications to ensure correct implementation.[4]
The WHATWG was formed in response to the slow development of World Wide Web Consortium (W3C) Web standards and W3C's decision to abandon HTML in favor of XML-based technologies.[5] The WHATWG mailing list was announced on 4 June 2004,[6] two days after the initiatives of a joint Opera–Mozilla position paper[7] had been voted down by the W3C members at the W3C Workshop on Web Applications and Compound Documents.[8]
On 10 April 2007, the Mozilla Foundation, Apple, and Opera Software proposed[9] that the new HTML working group of the W3C adopt the WHATWG's HTML5 as the starting point of its work and name its future deliverable as "HTML5" (though the WHATWG specification was later renamed HTML Living Standard).
On 9 May 2007, the new HTML working group of the W3C resolved to do that.[10] An Internet Explorer platform architect from Microsoft was invited but did not join, citing the lack of a patent policy to ensure all specifications can be implemented on a royalty-free basis.[11] Since then, the W3C and the WHATWG have been developing HTML independently, at times causing specifications to diverge.[12]
In 2017, the WHATWG established an intellectual property rights agreement that includes a patent policy.[13] This spurred a renewed attempt to allow the W3C and the WHATWG to work together on specifications. In 2019, the W3C and WHATWG agreed to a memorandum of understanding where development of HTML and DOM specifications would be done principally in the WHATWG.[12][14]
The editor has significant control over the specification, but the community can influence the decisions of the editor.[15] In one case, editor Ian Hickson proposed replacing the <time>
tag with a more generic <data>
tag, but the community disagreed and the change was reverted.[15]
On 28 May 2019, the W3C announced that WHATWG would be the sole publisher of the HTML and DOM standards.[16][17][18][19] The W3C and WHATWG had been publishing competing standards since 2012. While the W3C standard was identical to the WHATWG in 2007 the standards have since progressively diverged due to different design decisions.[20] The WHATWG "Living Standard" had been the de facto web standard for some time.[21]
The WHATWG publishes a number of standards that form a substantial portion of the web platform including:
If necessary, controversies are resolved by the Steering Group with members appointed from the organizations that develop browser engines, as a backstop to ensure the editor's judgment aligns with what they will implement.
Shortly thereafter, Apple, Mozilla, and Opera jointly announced their intent to continue working on the effort under the umbrella of a new venue called the WHATWG.
whatwg-url is a full implementation of the WHATWG URL Standard. It can be used standalone, but it also exposes a lot of the internal algorithms that are useful for integrating a URL parser into a project like jsdom.
By: Wikipedia.org
Edited: 2021-06-18 19:10:20
Source: Wikipedia.org