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Term entries in the full glossary starting with the letter "R"

W3C Glossaries

Showing results 21 - 40 of 80

reference in entity value

From Extensible Markup Language (XML) 1.0 (2000-10-06) | Glossary for this source

as a reference within a parameter or internal entity's literal entity value in the entity's declaration; corresponds to the nonterminal EntityValue.
registry

From Web Services Glossary (2004-02-11) | Glossary for this source

Authoritative, centrally controlled store of information.

reify

From RDF Semantics (2004-02-10) | Glossary for this source

(v.), (n.) To categorize as an object; to describe as an entity. Often used to describe a convention whereby a syntactic expression is treated as a semantic object and itself described using another syntax. In RDF, a reified triple is a description of a triple-token using other RDF triples.
relation

From Mathematical Markup Language (MathML) Version 2.0 (2001-02-21) | Glossary for this source

A MathML content element used to construct expressions such as a < b.
remote resource

From XML Linking Language (XLink) (2001-06-27) | Glossary for this source

Any resource or resource portion that participates in a link by virtue of being addressed with a URI reference is considered a remote resource, even if it is in the same XML document as the link, or even inside the same linking element.
render

From Mathematical Markup Language (MathML) Version 2.0 (2001-02-21) | Glossary for this source

Faithfully translate into application-specific form allowing native application operations to be performed.
rendered content

From Glossary of Cascading Style Sheets, level 2 CSS2 Specification (1998-05-12) | Glossary for this source

The content of an element after the rendering that applies to it according to the relevant style sheets has been applied. The rendered content of a replaced element comes from outside the source document. Rendered content may also be alternate text for an element (e.g., the value of the HTML "alt" attribute), and may include items inserted implicitly or explicitly by the style sheet, such as bullets, numbering, etc.
rendered content, rendered text

From User Agent Accessibility Guidelines 1.0 (2002-12-17) | Glossary for this source

Rendered content is the part of content that the user agent makes available to the user's senses of sight and hearing (and only those senses for the purposes of this document). Any content that causes an effect that may be perceived through these senses constitutes rendered content. This includes text characters, images, style sheets, scripts, and anything else in content that, once processed, may be perceived through sight and hearing.The term "rendered text" refers to text content that is rendered in a way that communicates information about the characters themselves, whether visually or as synthesized speech.In the context of this document, invisible content is content that is not rendered but that may influence the graphical rendering (e.g., layout) of other content. Similarly, silent content is content that is not rendered but that may influence the audio rendering of other content. Neither invisible nor silent content is considered rendered content.
rendering

From XHTML 1.0: The Extensible HyperText Markup Language (Second Edition) (2000-01-26) | Glossary for this source

Rendering is the act whereby the information in a document is presented. This presentation is done in the form most appropriate to the environment (e.g. aurally, visually, in print).
rendering

From Glossary of Terms for Device Independence (2005-01-18) | Glossary for this source

The act of converting perceivable units into physical effects that can be perceivable by a user and with which a user may be able to interact .
rendering preferences

From Glossary of Terms for Device Independence (2005-01-18) | Glossary for this source

A set of preferences, specified by a user , that may affect the way the user agent renders a perceivable unit, and so change the resultant user experience.
repair content, repair text

From User Agent Accessibility Guidelines 1.0 (2002-12-17) | Glossary for this source

In this document, the term "repair content" refers to content generated by the user agent in order to correct an error condition. "Repair text" refers to the text portion of repair content. Some error conditions that may lead to the generation of repair content include: Erroneous or incomplete content (e.g., ill-formed markup, invalid markup, or missing conditional content that is required by format specification);Missing resources for handling or rendering content (e.g., the user agent lacks a font family to display some characters, or the user agent does not implement a particular scripting language).This document does not require user agents to include repair content in the document object. Repair content inserted in the document object should conform to the Web Content Accessibility Guidelines 1.0 [WCAG10]. For more information about repair techniques for Web content and software, refer to "Techniques for Authoring Tool Accessibility Guidelines 1.0" [ATAG10-TECHS].
replace

From XML Schema Part 2: Datatypes (2001-05-02) | Glossary for this source

All occurrences of #x9 (tab), #xA (line feed) and #xD (carriage return) are replaced with #x20 (space)
replace

From XML Linking Language (XLink) (2001-06-27) | Glossary for this source

An application traversing to the ending resource should load the resource in the same window, frame, pane, or other relevant presentation context in which the starting resource was loaded. This is similar to the effect achieved by the following HTML fragment:<A HREF="http://www.example.org" target="_self">...</A>
replaced element

From Glossary of Cascading Style Sheets, level 2 CSS2 Specification (1998-05-12) | Glossary for this source

An element for which the CSS formatter knows only the intrinsic dimensions. In HTML, IMG, INPUT, TEXTAREA, SELECT, and OBJECT elements can be examples of replaced elements. For example, the content of the IMG element is often replaced by the image that the "src" attribute designates. CSS does not define how the intrinsic dimensions are found.
replacement text

From Extensible Markup Language (XML) 1.1 (2004-02-04) | Glossary for this source

For an internal entity, the replacement text is the content of the entity, after replacement of character references and parameter-entity references.
For an external entity, the replacement text is the content of the entity, after stripping the text declaration (leaving any surrounding white space) if there is one but without any replacement of character references or parameter-entity references.
replacement text

From Extensible Markup Language (XML) 1.0 (2000-10-06) | Glossary for this source

The replacement text is the content of the entity, after replacement of character references and parameter-entity references.
repository

From The Platform for Privacy Preferences 1.0 (P3P1.0) Specification (2002-04-16) | Glossary for this source

A mechanism for storing user information under the control of the user agent.
representation

From Hypertext Transfer Protocol -- HTTP/1.1 (1999-06-15) | Glossary for this source

An entity included with a response that is subject to content negotiation, as described in section 12. There may exist multiple representations associated with a particular response status.
representation

From Architecture of the World Wide Web, Volume One (2004-12-15) | Glossary for this source

Data that encodes information about resource state.

The Glossary System has been built by Pierre Candela during an internship in W3C; it's now maintained by Dominique Hazael-Massieux

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