Yes: all the implementations of server-side includes that i know of will
include files only located on the same server.
To reference files on other servers would not be impossible -- it's just that
if we're going to do it, we might as well properly hash out a way to
reference it in HTML instead of doing hacks to be parsed by http daemons.
The problem with including arbitrary bits of HTML is that you have no
guarantee other documents will be conforming documents. In fact, it would
not be possible to directly include another conforming document (with
another <head> and <body>) within a conforming document. Even two
fragments of correct HTML can cause havoc when one is included within
the other (to wit, imagine nested <A>s or <FIG>s).
This is why i believe included documents should be treated in a similar
fashion as figures: they are set apart in their own box (that is,
logically speaking -- the box doesn't have to be physically visible)
and continue to be treated as separate documents.
I mentioned this while attempting to open a more general discussion
about different presentation methods (see
http://www.acl.lanl.gov/HTML_WG/html-wg-95q2.messages/1230.html).
> In this context, <IMG> and <FIG> are merely ways of specifying that the
> media be somehow *embedded* into the document when it is presented; as
> concerns this <INCLUDE> idea, for instance, there is no reason why
> "text/html" can't be the "Content-Type:" of a <FIG>.
>
> If i could digress for a moment on <INCLUDE>: i agree that the
> ability to include referenced HTML is certainly needed and very useful.
> But i don't really see that a new tag needs to be created. There's a
> problem with *directly* inserting HTML source into a document, because
> there's no way to guarantee that the syntax will remain correct (stick
> a <BOLD> in the middle of a document, and you screw up the entire rest
> of the document). Furthermore, what happens when included subdocuments
> have their own style sheets? This is why it makes sense for an included
> HTML subdocument to be displayed off in its own area (like a figure box),
> where it cannot directly affect the main document.
>
> So, i propose a more general approach to presentation of referenced
> resources. As i see it, there are four presentation/retrieval
> methods, only two of which we use extensively at the moment.
[...]
Ping (Ka-Ping Yee): 2B Computer Engineering, University of Waterloo, Canada
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