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authorGravatar Adam Chlipala <adam@chlipala.net>2010-12-16 13:35:40 -0500
committerGravatar Adam Chlipala <adam@chlipala.net>2010-12-16 13:35:40 -0500
commit6aaa09dfff50fdd22aeef563de63a50926bb553f (patch)
treeed45e1d909672cac6d74d612f2c9531bb71681fa /doc
parentc7996285ff4b1b05a4cecdb2c1e944f7c17b18a7 (diff)
Fiddly tweaks
Diffstat (limited to 'doc')
-rw-r--r--doc/manual.tex2
1 files changed, 1 insertions, 1 deletions
diff --git a/doc/manual.tex b/doc/manual.tex
index 03219a4e..58fbc84d 100644
--- a/doc/manual.tex
+++ b/doc/manual.tex
@@ -1823,7 +1823,7 @@ $$\begin{array}{l}
Ur/Web's library contains an encoding of XML syntax and semantic constraints. We make no effort to follow the standards governing XML schemas. Rather, XML fragments are viewed more as values of ML datatypes, and we only track which tags are allowed inside which other tags. The Ur/Web standard library encodes a very loose version of XHTML, where it is very easy to produce documents which are invalid XHTML, but which still display properly in all major browsers. The main purposes of the invariants that are enforced are first, to provide some documentation about the places where it would make sense to insert XML fragments; and second, to rule out code injection attacks and other abstraction violations related to HTML syntax.
-The basic XML type family has arguments respectively indicating the \emph{context} of a fragment, the fields that the fragment expects to be bound on entry (and their types), and the fields that the fragment will bind (and their types). Contexts are a record-based ``poor man's subtyping'' encoding, with each possible set of valid tags corresponding to a different context record. The arguments dealing with field binding are only relevant to HTML forms.
+The basic XML type family has arguments respectively indicating the \emph{context} of a fragment, the fields that the fragment expects to be bound on entry (and their types), and the fields that the fragment will bind (and their types). Contexts are a record-based ``poor man's subtyping'' encoding, with each possible set of valid tags corresponding to a different context record. For instance, the context for the \texttt{<td>} tag is $[\mt{Body}, \mt{Tr}]$, to indicate a kind of nesting inside \texttt{<body>} and \texttt{<tr>}. Contexts are maintained in a somewhat ad-hoc way; the only definitive reference for their meanings is the types of the tag values in \texttt{basis.urs}. The arguments dealing with field binding are only relevant to HTML forms.
$$\begin{array}{l}
\mt{con} \; \mt{xml} :: \{\mt{Unit}\} \to \{\mt{Type}\} \to \{\mt{Type}\} \to \mt{Type}
\end{array}$$