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Bikeshed is a spec-generating tool that takes in lightly-decorated Markdown and spits out a full spec, with cross-spec autolinking, automatic generation of indexes/ToC/etc, and many other features.
Conformance requirements are expressed with a combination of descriptive assertions and RFC 2119 terminology. The key words “MUST”, “MUST NOT”, “REQUIRED”, “SHALL”, “SHALL NOT”, “SHOULD”, “SHOULD NOT”, “RECOMMENDED”, “MAY”, and “OPTIONAL” in the normative parts of this document are to be interpreted as described in RFC 2119. However, for readability, these words do not appear in all uppercase letters in this specification.
All of the text of this specification is normative except sections explicitly marked as non-normative, examples, and notes. [RFC2119]
Examples in this specification are introduced with the words “for example”
or are set apart from the normative text with class="example"
, like this:
Informative notes begin with the word “Note”
and are set apart from the normative text with class="note"
, like this:
Note, this is an informative note.
Name | Value | Initial | Applies to | Inh. | %ages | Animation type | Canonical order | Computed value |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
flex-basis | content | <<'width'>> | auto | flex items | no | relative to the flex container’s inner main size | length | per grammar | as specified, with lengths made absolute |
interface {
Foo undefined (
bar long ,
arg1 DOMString ?); };
arg2
-t
output is already more than enough to actually work with,
but it would still be good to describe it more fully. ↵