Message133096
| Author |
ezio.melotti |
| Recipients |
belopolsky, eric.araujo, ezio.melotti, fdrake, orsenthil, pluskid, python-dev, r.david.murray, v+python |
| Date |
2011年04月05日.22:37:11 |
| SpamBayes Score |
6.9267276e-07 |
| Marked as misclassified |
No |
| Message-id |
<1302043031.89.0.372758902315.issue7311@psf.upfronthosting.co.za> |
| In-reply-to |
| Content |
I don't see many use cases for the strict mode. It is not strict enough to be used for validation, and while parsing HTML I can't think of any other case where I would want an exception raised (always as long as what is parsed by the tolerant mode is a superset of what is parsed by the strict mode).
If the parser is still able to parse what it was parsing before, I wouldn't worry too much about backward compatibility, because I can't imagine a valid use case where people would want the parser to fail (maybe someone else can?). |
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