"The ordinals 17, 42 and 6.12 are reserved to reduce confusion.
The ordinals 18 and 19 are reserved for the strings "Reserved" and "Unassigned" respectively.
Unfortunately the ordinal 20 was used by two earlier, competing proposals, and so can mean either "Color" or Colour". Implementations are encouraged to disambiguate based upon context."
At which point I audibly snarfed.
I really admire people who can write a story like this off the top of their head.
Classic.
Yes, RFC 2324[1] is also serious business because it’s implemented in the real world. Or at least I have implemented HTTP 418 I’m a teapot. (I’ve also seen gross violations where some APIs use HTTP 418 as their custom error code instead of complying with the RFC.)
Take HTTP for example. The is no ISO standard, just a smattering of overlapping RFCs over the years with weird spellings (Referer) and ambiguities (GET request entity).
And the entire web is based on HTTP.
The quality of the "specification" documents is not high, nor very official, but it's the best we have, so people treat it as if it were.
> o This Change note was added. Nothing else changed.
This comment contains no commentary.
The IETF has the "Independent Submission Editor" stream of RFCs, which produces RFCs without getting IETF consensus. These RFCs are considered to be work "outside" of the IETF, but can still be published as an RFC.
A recent example is https://tools.ietf.org/html/rfc8674 from Mark Nottingham:
The mechanism described in this document does not have IETF consensus
and is not a standard. It is a widely deployed approach that has
turned out to be useful and is presented here so that server and
browser implementations can have a common understanding of how it
operates.Tldr: if you must send datagrams via pigeons, consider the rfc, then use an exfat microsd card.
What are "there tokens"? Aw come on. How do you expect me to take any of this seriously with grammatical mistakes like this?
I'm planning on putting this on GitHub soon, so that issues can be filed, and, more importantly, pull requests submitted. Important work....
(considering the document is a snarky comment about form, i think the usual proscription against snarky comments about form can be relaxed)
I know a lot of people disagree with the IETF's policy of imprisoning those who fail to comply with the RFC, but personally I don't think they go far enough.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fallacy_of_the_undistributed_m...