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What you can do

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So you want to take part? You can!

Sending feedback

The most useful thing would be going through the spec and finding bits that don't make sense.

https://html.spec.whatwg.org/multipage/

You can use the link at the bottom (it says "File an issue about the selected text") to submit review comments on the spec. The best review comments are those along the lines of questions you couldn't find the answer to. For example, say you wanted to find out what elements you could put in a <p> element, and you couldn't work it out. Then you would file a bug "I couldn't find the answer to the question 'What elements are allowed inside <p> elements'.".

See also Reviewing.

A rationale document

It basically would consist of watching the GitHub repositories that are of interest, asking questions on IRC, and then writing documentation to explain the thinking behind different parts of the spec on the rationale page.

It could be as little work or as much work as you would want it to be. One could easily imagine this becoming a group effort.

How you can improve HTML

This text originated from an article Hixie wrote.

Are you trying to do something on the Web that you find you can't do because HTML simply doesn't have a way to do it?

With your help, we can improve HTML, add a feature to address your problem, and in a few years you'll finally be able to do it!

Here's how:

First, write a brief user-centric description of the problem. What are you trying to do? This should be a high-level description. One way to see if you're describing it at a high enough level is to consider whether your description makes as much sense for a Web developer as it does for, say, a mobile phone native app developer. So if your description talks about HTML elements or JavaScript or HTTP headers, then it's probably too low level. If it talks about what a user sees, how a user interacts with a computer or device, or how a user uses a computer or device to create some sort of content or effect some sort of change, then you're on the right path. If you hear people referring to "use cases", it is to this problem description that they refer. Some of the most useful information you can give is examples of what people are currently doing to work around the problem (e.g. they're writing native apps instead of Web pages, or they're using Flash or other extensions, etc).

In particular, your description should not be a solution. Don't propose new elements or attributes, new APIs, new semantics, new features. The time for discussions of solutions is later.

Next, do one or more of the following with this description:

  • Discuss the topic on our IRC channel (#whatwg on Freenode) to see if you've missed anything obvious
  • Post it as an issue at http://whatwg.org/newbug

Participate in any resulting discussions. Post a link to your issue to your own blog or to other social media sites to encourage others to participate. For best results, I recommend that you avoid creating new places for the discussion to occur (e.g. new mailing lists, wiki pages, or working groups). Keeping the discussions in existing places ensures that experience participants will see your discussions and will be able to lend you their experience. The most important part of these discussions is clarifying how common the problem is, what related problems other people have that could maybe be addressed at the same time, and what work-arounds exist to avoid the problem.

Ideally, some browser vendors will at this point start commenting on the problem, hopefully saying that they agree that it's a problem. Getting browser vendors to believe there's a problem is the second best thing that you can do to ensure your problems gets solved. (The best thing that can happen is for browser vendors to implement a solution. See notes below.) Once you have browser vendors buying-in to the problem's importance, you can start talking about possible solutions. (You don't have to, though, and there's no guarantee that the solutions you propose will be adopted rather than some other ones.)

When it comes to updating the standard, see https://whatwg.org/working-mode for what the process is. It boils down to writing a pull request for the standard and writing test cases, and getting support from implementers.

You may ask why browser vendors have a prominent role in this process. The answer is simple. The specification is not magical; it cannot force browser vendors to do anything they don't want to do. If I write something in the spec and they don't implement it, there's nothing we can do: the feature doesn't really exist, it's just fiction, and we've all wasted our time. To avoid wasting my time, I try to work with the browser vendors to make sure that what I specify is something they're willing to implement. (It doesn't always work out that way, but then after a while I update the spec to match what they did do, or didn't do, e.g. removing things that nobody has implemented.)

If you want to participate in the process in ways other than reporting problems you find with the Web, there are various things you can do: participate in discussions on GitHub; chat with us on IRC (#whatwg on Freenode); write test cases; write tutorials; review the spec... The best place to start is to join us on IRC and ask what you can do.

We also have a FAQ: https://whatwg.org/faq