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<?xml version="1.0" encoding="ISO-8859-1"?>
<!-- $Id$ -->
<!--
<!DOCTYPE document SYSTEM "../../xml-docs/dtd/document-v10.dtd">
-->

<document>
  <header>
    <title>User agent refs</title>
    <authors>
      <person name="Peter B. West" email="pbwest@powerup.com.au"/>
    </authors>
  </header>
  <body>
    <s1 title="User Agent references in XSLFO">
      <s2 title="4.9.2 Viewport Geometry">
	<p>
	  If the block-progression-dimension of the reference-area is
	  larger than that of the viewport-area and the overflow trait
	  for the reference-area is scroll, then the
	  inline-scroll-amount and block-scroll-amount are determined
	  by a scrolling mechanism, if any, provided by the
	  <strong>user agent</strong>. Otherwise, both are zero.
	</p>
      </s2>
      <s2 title="5.1.3 Actual Values">
	<p>
	  A computed value is in principle ready to be used, but a
	  user agent may not be able to make use of the value in a
	  given environment. For example, a <strong>user
	  agent</strong> may only be able to render borders with
	  integer pixel widths and may, therefore, have to adjust the
	  computed width to an integral number of media pixels.
	</p>
      </s2>
      <s2 title="5.5.7 Font Properties">
	<p>
	  There is no XSL mechanism to specify a particular font;
	  instead, a selected font is chosen from the fonts available
	  to the <strong>User Agent</strong> based on a set of
	  selection criteria. The selection criteria are the following
	  font properties: "font-family", "font-style",
	  "font-variant", "font-weight", "font-stretch", and
	  "font-size", plus, for some formatting objects, one or more
	  characters.
	</p>
      </s2>
      <s2 title="5.9.13.1 Pixels">
	<p>
	  If the <strong>User Agent</strong> chooses a measurement for
	  a 'px' that does not match an integer number of device dots
	  in each axis it may produce undesirable effects...
	</p>
      </s2>
      <s2 title="5.10.4 Property Value Functions">
	<s3 title="Function: object merge-property-values( NCName)">
	  <p>
	    The merge-property-values function returns a value of the
	    property whose name matches the argument, or if omitted
	    for the property for which the expression is being
	    evaluated. The value returned is the specified value on
	    the last fo:multi-property-set, of the parent
	    fo:multi-properties, that applies to the <strong>User
	    Agent</strong> state. If there is no such value, the
	    computed value of the parent fo:multi-properties is
	    returned...
	  </p>
	  <p>
	    The test for applicability of a <strong>User
	    Agent</strong> state is specified using the "active-state"
	    property.
	  </p>
	</s3>
      </s2>
      <s2 title="6.3 Formatting Objects Summary">
	<s3 title="multi-property-set">
	  <p>
	    The fo:multi-property-set is used to specify an
	    alternative set of formatting properties that, dependent
	    on a <strong>User Agent</strong> state, are applied to the
	    content.
	  </p>
	</s3>
	<s3 title="title">
	  <p>
	    The fo:title formatting object is used to associate a
	    title with a given page-sequence. This title may be used
	    by an interactive <strong>User Agent</strong> to identify
	    the pages. For example, the content of the fo:title can be
	    formatted and displayed in a "title" window or in a "tool
	    tip".
	  </p>
	</s3>
      </s2>
      <s2 title="6.4.1.2 Page-masters">
	<p>
	  ... When pages are used with a <strong>User Agent</strong>
	  such as a Web browser, it is common that the each document
	  has only one page. The viewport used to view the page
	  determines the size of the page. When pages are placed on
	  non-interactive media, such as sheets of paper, pages
	  correspond to one or more of the surfaces of the paper.
	</p>
      </s2>
      <s2 title="6.4.20 fo:title">
	<s3 title="Common Usage:">
	  <p>
	    ... This title may be used by an interactive <strong>User
	    Agent</strong> to identify the pages.
	  </p>
	</s3>
      </s2>
      <s2 title="6.6.3 fo:character">
	<s3 title="Constraints:">
	  <p>
	    The dimensions of the areas are determined by the font
	    metrics for the glyph.
	  </p>
	  <p>
	    When formatting an fo:character with a
	    "treat-as-word-space" value of "true", the <strong>User
	    Agent</strong> may use a different method for determining
	    the inline-progression-dimension of the area.
	  </p>
	</s3>
      </s2>
      <s2 title="6.9 Dynamic Effects: Link and Multi Formatting
	  Objects">
	<s3 title="6.9.1 Introduction">
	  <p>
	    Dynamic effects, whereby user actions (including
	    <strong>User Agent</strong> state) can influence the
	    behavior and/or representation of portions of a document,
	    can be achieved through the use of the formatting objects
	    included in this section:
	  </p>
	  <ul>
	    <li>One-directional single-target links.</li>
	    <li>
	      The ability to switch between the display of two or more
	      formatting object subtrees. This can be used for, e.g.,
	      expandable/collapsible table of contents, display of an
	      icon or a full table or graphic.
	    </li>
	    <li>
	      The ability to switch between different property values,
	      such as color or font-weight, depending on a
	      <strong>User Agent</strong> state, such as "hover".
	    </li>
	  </ul>
	</s3>
      </s2>
      <s2 title="6.10 Out-of-Line Formatting Objects">
	<s3 title="6.10.1.3 Conditional Sub-Regions">
	  <p>
	    ... There may be limits on how much space conditionally
	    generated areas can borrow from the
	    region-reference-area. It is left to the <strong>user
	    agent</strong> to decide these limits.
	  </p>
	  <p>
	    ... An interactive <strong>user agent</strong> may choose
	    to create "hot links" to the footnotes from the
	    footnote-citation, or create "hot links" to the
	    before-floats from an implicit citation, instead of
	    realizing conditional sub-regions.
	  </p>
	</s3>
      </s2>
      <s2 title="6.10.2 fo:float">
	<s3 title="Constraints:">
	  <p>
	    ... The <strong>user agent</strong> may make its own
	    determination, after taking into account the intrusion
	    adjustments caused by one or more overlapping side-floats,
	    that the remaining space in the
	    inline-progression-direction is insufficient for the next
	    side-float or normal block-area. The <strong>user
	    agent</strong> may address this by causing the next
	    side-float or normal block-area to "clear" one of the
	    relevant side-floats, as described in the "clear" property
	    description, so the intrusion adjustment is sufficiently
	    reduced. Of the side-floats that could be cleared to meet
	    this constraint, the side-float that is actually cleared
	    must be the one whose after-edge is closest to the
	    before-edge of the parent reference-area.
	  </p>
	  <p>
            The <strong>user agent</strong> may determine sufficiency
            of space by using a fixed length, or by some heuristic
            such as whether an entire word fits into the available
            space, or by some combination, in order to handle text and
            images.
	  </p>
	</s3>
      </s2>
      <s2 title="6.10.3 fo:footnote">
	<s3 title="Constraints:">
	  <p>
	    ... The second block-area and any additional block-areas
	    returned by an fo:footnote must be placed on the
	    immediately subsequent pages to the page containing the
	    first block-area returned by the fo:footnote, before any
	    other content is placed. If a subsequent page does not
	    contain a region-body, the <strong>user agent</strong>
	    must use the region-master of the last page that did
	    contain a region-body to hold the additional block-areas.
	  </p>
	</s3>
      </s2>
      <s2 title="7.3 Reference Rectangle for Percentage Computations">
	<p>...</p>
	<s3 title="Exceptions ...">
	  <p>
	    5. When the absolute-position is "fixed", the containing
	    block is defined by the nearest ancestor viewport area. If
	    there is no ancestor viewport area, the containing block
	    is defined by the <strong>user agent</strong>.
	  </p>
	</s3>
      </s2>
      <s2 title=
	  '7.6.5 "pause-after" 7.6.6 "pause-before" 7.6.17 "voice-family"'>
	<p>Initial: depends on <strong>user agent</strong></p>
      </s2>
      <s2 title='7.7.1 "background-attachment"'>
	<s3 title="fixed">
	  <p>
	    ... <strong>User agents</strong> may treat fixed as
	    scroll. However, it is recommended they interpret fixed
	    correctly, at least for the HTML and BODY elements, since
	    there is no way for an author to provide an image only for
	    those browsers that support fixed.
	  </p>
	</s3>
      </s2>
      <s2 title='7.7.9 "border-before-width"'>
	<s3 title="&lt;length-conditional&gt;">
	  <p>
	    ... If border-before-width is specified using one of the
	    width keywords the .conditional component is set to
	    "discard" and the .length component to a <strong>User
	    Agent</strong> dependent length.
	  </p>
	</s3>
      </s2>
      <s2 title='7.7.19 "border-top-color"'>
	<s3 title="&lt;color&gt;">
	  <p>
	    ... If an element's border color is not specified with a
	    "border" property, <strong>user agents</strong> must use
	    the value of the element's "color" property as the
	    computed value for the border color.
	  </p>
	</s3>
      </s2>
      <s2 title='7.7.20 "border-top-style"'>
	<p>
	  Conforming HTML <strong>user agents</strong> may interpret
	  'dotted', 'dashed', 'double', 'groove', 'ridge', 'inset',
	  and 'outset' to be 'solid'.
	</p>
      </s2>
      <s2 title='7.7.21 "border-top-width"'>
	<s3 title="thin ... medium ... thick ...">
	  <p>
	    ... The interpretation of the first three values depends
	    on the <strong>user agent</strong>.
	  </p>
	</s3>
      </s2>
      <s2 title='7.8.2 "font-family"'>
	<p>Initial: depends on <strong>user agent</strong></p>
      </s2>
      <s2 title='7.8.3 "font-selection-strategy"'>
	<p>
	  There is no XSL mechanism to specify a particular font;
	  instead, a selected font is chosen from the fonts available
	  to the <strong>User Agent</strong> based on a set of
	  selection criteria. The selection criteria are the following
	  font properties: "font-family", "font-style",
	  "font-variant", "font-weight", "font-stretch", and
	  "font-size", plus, for some formatting objects, one or more
	  characters.
	</p>
	<p>
	  ... This fallback may be to seek a match using a
	  <strong>User Agent</strong> default "font-family", or it may
	  be a more elaborate fallback strategy where, for example,
	  "Helvetica" would be used as a fallback for "Univers".
	</p>
	<p>
	  If no match has been found for a particular character, there
	  is no selected font and the <strong>User Agent</strong>
	  should provide a visual indication that a character is not
	  being displayed (for example, using the 'missing character'
	  glyph).
	</p>
      </s2>
      <s2 title='7.8.4 "font-size"'>
	<s3 title="&lt;absolute-size&gt;">
	  <p>
	    An &lt;absolute-size&gt; keyword refers to an entry in a
	    table of font sizes computed and kept by the <strong>user
	    agent</strong>. Possible values are:<br/>[ xx-small |
	    x-small | small | medium | large | x-large | xx-large ]
	  </p>
	</s3>
	<s3 title="&lt;relative-size&gt;">
	  <p>
	    A &lt;relative-size&gt; keyword is interpreted relative to
	    the table of font sizes and the font size of the parent
	    element. Possible values are:<br/>[ larger | smaller
	    ]<br/>For example, if the parent element has a font size
	    of "medium", a value of "larger" will make the font size
	    of the current element be "large". If the parent element's
	    size is not close to a table entry, the <strong>user
	    agent</strong> is free to interpolate between table
	    entries or round off to the closest one. The <strong>user
	    agent</strong> may have to extrapolate table values if the
	    numerical value goes beyond the keywords.
	  </p>
	</s3>
	<s3 title="&lt;length&gt;">
	  <p>
	    A length value specifies an absolute font size (that is
	    independent of the <strong>user agent</strong>'s font
	    table).
	  </p>
	</s3>
      </s2>
      <s2 title='7.8.8 "font-variant"'>
	<s3 title="small-caps">
	  <p>
	    ... If a genuine small-caps font is not available,
	    <strong>user agents</strong> should simulate a small-caps
	    font...
	  </p>
	</s3>
      </s2>
      <s2 title='7.8.9 "font-weight"'>
	<s3 title="XSL modifications to the CSS definition:">
	  <p>
	    ... The association of other weights within a family to
	    the numerical weight values is intended only to preserve
	    the ordering of weights within that family. <strong>User
	    agents</strong> must map names to values in a way that
	    preserves visual order; a face mapped to a value must not
	    be lighter than faces mapped to lower values. There is no
	    guarantee on how a <strong>user agent</strong> will map
	    fonts within a family to weight values. However, the
	    following heuristics...
	  </p>
	</s3>
      </s2>
      <s2 title='7.13.1 "alignment-adjust"'>
	<s3 title="auto">
	  <p>
	    ... If the baseline-identifier does not exist in the
	    baseline-table for the glyph or other inline-area, then
	    the <strong>User Agent</strong> may either use heuristics
	    to determine where that missing baseline would be or may
	    use the dominant-baseline as a fallback.
	  </p>
	</s3>
      </s2>
      <s2 title='7.13.3 "baseline-shift"'>
	<s3 title="sub/super">
	  <p>
	    ... Because in most fonts the subscript position is
	    normally given relative to the "alphabetic" baseline, the
	    <strong>User Agent</strong> may compute the effective
	    position for sub/superscripts <em>[sub: spec typo!]</em>
	    when some other baseline is dominant. ... If there is no
	    applicable font data the <strong>User Agent</strong> may
	    use heuristics to determine the offset.
	  </p>
	</s3>
      </s2>
      <s2 title='7.13.5 "dominant-baseline"'>
	<p>
	  ... If there is no baseline-table in the nominal font or if
	  the baseline-table lacks an entry for the desired baseline,
	  then the <strong>User Agent</strong> may use heuristics to
	  determine the position of the desired baseline.
	</p>
      </s2>
      <s2 title='7.14.11 "scaling-method"'>
	<s3 title="auto">
	  <p>
	    The <strong>User Agent</strong> is free to choose either
	    resampling, integer scaling, or any other scaling method.
	  </p>
	</s3>
	<s3 title="integer-pixels">
	  <p>
	    The <strong>User Agent</strong> should scale the image
	    such that each pixel in the original image is scaled to
	    the nearest integer number of device-pixels that yields an
	    image less-then-or-equal-to the image size derived from
	    the content-height, content-width, and scaling properties.
	  </p>
	</s3>
	<s3 title="resample-any-method">
	  <p>
	    The <strong>User Agent</strong> should resample the
	    supplied image to provide an image that fills the size
	    derived from the content-height, content-width, and
	    scaling properties. The <strong>user agent</strong> may
	    use any sampling method.
	  </p>
	</s3>
	<p>
	  ... This is defined as a preference to allow the
	  <strong>user agent</strong> the flexibility to adapt to
	  device limitations and to accommodate over-constrained
	  situations involving min/max dimensions and scale factors.
	</p>
      </s2>
      <s2 title='7.14.12 "width"'>
	<p>
	  ... The width of a replaced element's box is intrinsic and
	  may be scaled by the <strong>user agent </strong> if the
	  value of this property is different than 'auto'.
	</p>
      </s2>
      <s2 title='7.15.4 "line-height"'>
	<s3 title="normal">
	  <p>
	    Tells <strong>user agents</strong> to set the computed
	    value to a "reasonable" value based on the font size of
	    the element.
	  </p>
	</s3>
	<p>
	  ... When an element contains text that is rendered in more
	  than one font, <strong>user agents</strong> should determine
	  the "line-height" value according to the largest font size.
	</p>
      </s2>
      <s2 title='7.15.9 "text-align"'>
	<p>
	  ... The actual justification algorithm used is <strong>user
	  agent</strong> and written language dependent.<br/>
	  Conforming <strong>user agents</strong> may interpret the
	  value 'justify' as 'left' or 'right', depending on whether
	  the element's default writing direction is left-to-right or
	  right-to-left, respectively.
	</p>
      </s2>
      <s2 title='7.15.11 "text-indent"'>
	<p>
	  ... <strong>User agents</strong> should render this
	  indentation as blank space.
	</p>
      </s2>
      <s2 title='7.16.2 "letter-spacing"'>
	<s3 title="normal">
	  <p>
	    The spacing is the normal spacing for the current
	    font. This value allows the <strong>user agent</strong> to
	    alter the space between characters in order to justify
	    text.
	  </p>
	</s3>
	<s3 title="&lt;length&gt;">
	  <p>
	    This value indicates inter-character space in addition to
	    the default space between characters. Values may be
	    negative, but there may be implementation-specific
	    limits. <strong>User agents</strong> may not further
	    increase or decrease the inter-character space in order to
	    justify text.
	  </p>
	</s3>
	<p>
	  Character-spacing algorithms are <strong>user agent</strong>
	  dependent. Character spacing may also be influenced by
	  justification (see the "text-align" property).<br/> When the
	  resultant space between two characters is not the same as
	  the default space, <strong>user agents</strong> should not
	  use ligatures.<br/> Conforming <strong>user agents</strong>
	  may consider the value of the 'letter-spacing' property to
	  be 'normal'.
	</p>
	<s3 title="XSL modifications to the CSS definition:">
	  <p>
	    ...  For "normal": .optimum = "the normal spacing for the
	    current font" / 2, .maximum = auto, .minimum = auto,
	    .precedence = force, and .conditionality = discard. A
	    value of auto for a component implies that the limits are
	    <strong>User Agent</strong> specific.
	  </p>
	  <p>
	    ... The CSS statement that "Conforming <strong>user
	    agents</strong> may consider the value of the
	    'letter-spacing' property to be 'normal'." does not apply
	    in XSL, if the <strong>User Agent</strong> implements the
	    "Extended" property set.
	  </p>
	  <p>
	    ... The algorithm for resolving the adjusted values
	    between word spacing and letter spacing is <strong>User
	    Agent</strong> dependent.
	  </p>
	</s3>
      </s2>
      <s2 title='7.16.4 "text-decoration"'>
	<p>
	  ... If the element has no content or no text content (e.g.,
	  the IMG element in HTML), <strong>user agents</strong> must
	  ignore this property.
	</p>
	<s3 title="blink">
	  <p>
	    ...  Conforming <strong>user agents</strong> are not
	    required to support this value.
	  </p>
	</s3>
      </s2>
      <s2 title='7.16.6 "text-transform"'>
	<p>
	  ... Conforming <strong>user agents</strong> may consider the
	  value of "text-transform" to be "none" for characters that
	  are not from the ISO Latin-1 repertoire and for elements in
	  languages for which the transformation is different from
	  that specified by the case-conversion tables of Unicode or
	  ISO 10646.
	</p>
      </s2>
      <s2 title='7.16.8 "word-spacing"'>
	<p>
	  ... Word spacing algorithms are <strong>user
	  agent</strong>-dependent.
	</p>
	<s3 title="XSL modifications to the CSS definition:">
	  <p>
	    ... The algorithm for resolving the adjusted values
	    between word spacing and letter spacing is <strong>User
	    Agent</strong> dependent.
	  </p>
	</s3>
      </s2>
      <s2 title='7.17.1 "color"'>
	<p>Initial: depends on <strong>user agent</strong></p>
      </s2>
      <s2 title='7.17.3 "rendering-intent"'>
	<s3 title="auto">
	  <p>
	    This is the default behavior. The <strong>User
	    Agent</strong> determines the best intent based on the
	    content type. For image content containing an embedded
	    profile, it shall be assumed that the intent specified
	    within the profile is the desired intent. Otherwise, the
	    <strong>user agent</strong> shall use the current profile
	    and force the intent, overriding any intent that might be
	    stored in the profile itself.
	  </p>
	</s3>
      </s2>
      <s2 title='7.20.2 "overflow"'>
	<s3 title="scroll">
	  <p>
	    This value indicates that the content is clipped and that
	    if the <strong>user agent</strong> uses a scrolling
	    mechanism that is visible on the screen (such as a scroll
	    bar or a panner), that mechanism should be displayed for a
	    box whether or not any of its content is clipped.
	  </p>
	</s3>
	<s3 title="auto">
	  <p>
	    The behavior of the "auto" value is <strong>user
	    agent</strong> dependent, but should cause a scrolling
	    mechanism to be provided for overflowing boxes.
	  </p>
	</s3>
      </s2>
      <s2 title='7.21.2 "leader-pattern"'>
	<s3 title="dots">
	  <p>
	    ... The choice of dot character is dependent on the
	    <strong>user agent</strong>.
	  </p>
	</s3>
      </s2>
      <s2 title='7.21.4 "leader-length"'>
	<p>
	  ... <strong>User agents</strong> may choose to use the value
	  of "leader-length.optimum" to determine where to break the
	  line, then use the minimum and maximum values during line
	  justification.
	</p>
      </s2>
      <s2 title='7.25.11 "media-usage"'>
	<s3 title="auto">
	  <p>
	    The <strong>User Agent</strong> determines which value of
	    "media-usage" (other than the "auto" value) is used. The
	    <strong>User Agent</strong> may consider the type of media
	    on which the presentation is to be placed in making this
	    determination.<br/> NOTE:<br/> For example, the
	    <strong>User Agent </strong> could use the following
	    decision process. If the media is not continuous and is of
	    fixed bounded size, then the "paginate" (described below)
	    is used. Otherwise, the "bounded-in-one-dimension" is
	    used.
	  </p>
	</s3>
	<s3 title="bounded-in-one-dimension">
	  <p>
	    ... It is an error if more or less than one of
	    "page-height" or "page-width" is specified on the first
	    page master that is used. The <strong>User Agent</strong>
	    may recover as follows:...
	  </p>
	</s3>
	<s3 title="unbounded">
	  <p>
	    Only one page is generated per fo:page-sequence descendant
	    from the fo:root. Neither "page-height" nor "page-width"
	    may be specified on any page master that is used. If a
	    value is specified for either property, it is an error and
	    a <strong>User Agent</strong> may recover by ignoring the
	    specified value. ...
	  </p>
	</s3>
      </s2>
      <s2 title='7.25.13 "page-height"'>
	<s3 title="auto">
	  <p>
	    The "page-height" shall be determined, in the case of
	    continuous media, from the size of the <strong>User
	    Agent</strong> window...
	  </p>
	</s3>
	<s3 title="NOTE:">
	  <p>
	    A <strong>User Agent</strong> may provide a way to declare
	    the media for which formatting is to be done. This may be
	    different from the media on which the formatted result is
	    viewed. For example, a browser <strong>User Agent</strong>
	    may be used to preview pages that are formatted for sheet
	    media. In that case, the size calculation is based on the
	    media for which formatting is done rather than the media
	    being currently used.
	  </p>
	</s3>
      </s2>
      <s2 title='7.25.15 "page-width"'>
	<s3 title="auto">
	  <p>
	    The "page-width" shall be determined, in the case of
	    continuous media, from the size of the <strong>User
	    Agent</strong> window...
	  </p>
	</s3>
      </s2>
      <s2 title='7.26.5 "border-separation"'>
	<s3 title="&lt;length-bp-ip-direction&gt;">
	  <p>
	    ... Rows, columns, row groups, and column groups cannot
	    have borders (i.e., <strong>user agents</strong> must
	    ignore the border properties for those elements).
	  </p>
	</s3>
      </s2>
      <s2 title='7.26.7 "caption-side"'>
	<p>
	  ... For a caption that is on the left or right side of a
	  table box, on the other hand, a value other than "auto" for
	  "width" sets the width explicitly, but "auto" tells the
	  <strong>user agent</strong> to chose a "reasonable width".
	</p>
      </s2>
      <s2 title='7.27.2 "glyph-orientation-horizontal"'>
	<s3 title="&lt;angle&gt;">
	  <p>
	    ... The <strong>User Agent</strong> shall round the value
	    of the angle to the closest of the permitted values.
	  </p>
	</s3>
      </s2>
      <s2 title='7.27.3 "glyph-orientation-vertical"'>
	<s3 title="auto">
	  <p>
	    ... The determination of which characters should be
	    auto-rotated may vary across <strong>User Agents</strong>.
	  </p>
	</s3>
	<s3 title="&lt;angle&gt;">
	  <p>
	    ... The <strong>User Agent</strong> shall round the value
	    of the angle to the closest of the permitted values.
	  </p>
	</s3>
      </s2>
      <s2 title='7.27.6 "unicode-bidi"'>
	<s3 title="XSL modifications to the CSS definition:">
	  <p>
	    ... Fallback:<br/> If it is not possible to present the
	    characters in the correct order, then the
	    <strong>UserAgent </strong> should display either a
	    'missing character' glyph or display some indication that
	    the content cannot be correctly rendered.
	  </p>
	</s3>
      </s2>
      <s2 title='7.28.1 "content-type"'>
	<p>
	  ... This property specifies the content-type and may be used
	  by a <strong>User Agent</strong> to select a rendering
	  processor for the object.
	</p>
	<s3 title="auto">
	  <p>
	    No identification of the content-type. The <strong>User
	    Agent</strong> may determine it by "sniffing" or by other
	    means.
	  </p>
	</s3>
      </s2>
      <s2 title='7.29.5 "border-color"'>
	<p>
	  ... If an element's border color is not specified with a
	  "border" property, <strong>user agents</strong> must use the
	  value of the element's "color" property as the computed
	  value for the border color.
	</p>
      </s2>
      <s2 title='7.29.9 "border-spacing"'>
	<p>
	  ... Rows, columns, row groups, and column groups cannot have
	  borders (i.e., <strong>user agents</strong> must ignore the
	  border properties for those elements).
	</p>
      </s2>
      <s2 title='7.29.13 "font"'>
	<p>
	  ... If no font with the indicated characteristics exists on
	  a given platform, the <strong>user agent</strong> should
	  either intelligently substitute (e.g., a smaller version of
	  the "caption" font might be used for the "small-caption"
	  font), or substitute a <strong>user agent</strong> default
	  font.
	</p>
      </s2>
      <s2 title='7.29.19 "pause"'>
	<p>Initial: depends on <strong>user agent</strong></p>
      </s2>
      <s2 title='7.29.21 "size"'>
	<p>
	  ... Relative page boxes allow <strong>user agents</strong>
	  to scale a document and make optimal use of the target size.
	</p>
	<p>
	  ... <strong>User agents</strong> may allow users to control
	  the transfer of the page box to the sheet (e.g., rotating an
	  absolute page box that's being printed).
	</p>
	<ul>
	  <li>
	    Rendering page boxes that do not fit a target sheet<br/>
	    If a page box does not fit the target sheet dimensions,
	    the <strong>user agent</strong> may choose to:
	    <ul>
	      <li>
		Rotate the page box 90 degrees if this will make the
		page box fit.
	      </li>
	      <li>Scale the page to fit the target.</li>
	    </ul>
	    The <strong>user agent</strong> should consult the user
	    before performing these operations.
	  </li>
	  <li>
	    Positioning the page box on the sheet<br/> When the page
	    box is smaller than the target size, the <strong>user
	    agent</strong> is free to place the page box anywhere on
	    the sheet.
	  </li>
	</ul>
      </s2>
      <s2 title='7.29.23 "white-space"'>
	<s3 title="normal">
	  <p>
	    This value directs <strong>user agents</strong> to
	    collapse sequences of whitespace, and break lines as
	    necessary to fill line boxes. ...
	  </p>
	</s3>
	<s3 title="pre">
	  <p>
	    This value prevents <strong>user agents</strong> from
	    collapsing sequences of whitespace. ...
	  </p>
	</s3>
	<p>
	  ... Conforming <strong>user agents</strong> may ignore the
	  'white-space' property in author and user style sheets but
	  must specify a value for it in the default style sheet.
	</p>
      </s2>
    </s1>
  </body>
</document>