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   #8.2.4 Tokenization Table of contents 8.4 Serializing HTML fragments

   WHATWG

HTML 5

Draft Recommendation — 13 January 2009

   ← 8.2.4 Tokenization – Table of contents – 8.4 Serializing HTML
   fragments →

    8.2.5 Tree construction

   The input to the tree construction stage is a sequence of tokens from
   the tokenization stage. The tree construction stage is associated with
   a DOM Document object when a parser is created. The "output" of this
   stage consists of dynamically modifying or extending that document's
   DOM tree.

   This specification does not define when an interactive user agent has
   to render the Document so that it is available to the user, or when it
   has to begin accepting user input.

   As each token is emitted from the tokeniser, the user agent must
   process the token according to the rules given in the section
   corresponding to the current insertion mode.

   When the steps below require the UA to insert a character into a node,
   if that node has a child immediately before where the character is to
   be inserted, and that child is a Text node, and that Text node was the
   last node that the parser inserted into the document, then the
   character must be appended to that Text node; otherwise, a new Text
   node whose data is just that character must be inserted in the
   appropriate place.

   DOM mutation events must not fire for changes caused by the UA parsing
   the document. (Conceptually, the parser is not mutating the DOM, it is
   constructing it.) This includes the parsing of any content inserted
   using document.write() and document.writeln() calls. [DOM3EVENTS]

   Not all of the tag names mentioned below are conformant tag names in
   this specification; many are included to handle legacy content. They
   still form part of the algorithm that implementations are required to
   implement to claim conformance.

   The algorithm described below places no limit on the depth of the DOM
   tree generated, or on the length of tag names, attribute names,
   attribute values, text nodes, etc. While implementors are encouraged to
   avoid arbitrary limits, it is recognized that practical concerns will
   likely force user agents to impose nesting depths.

      8.2.5.1 Creating and inserting elements

   When the steps below require the UA to create an element for a token in
   a particular namespace, the UA must create a node implementing the
   interface appropriate for the element type corresponding to the tag
   name of the token in the given namespace (as given in the specification
   that defines that element, e.g. for an a element in the HTML namespace,
   this specification defines it to be the HTMLAnchorElement interface),
   with the tag name being the name of that element, with the node being
   in the given namespace, and with the attributes on the node being those
   given in the given token.

   The interface appropriate for an element in the HTML namespace that is
   not defined in this specification is HTMLElement. The interface
   appropriate for an element in another namespace that is not defined by
   that namespace's specification is Element.

   When a resettable element is created in this manner, its reset
   algorithm must be invoked once the attributes are set. (This
   initializes the element's value and checkedness based on the element's
   attributes.)
     __________________________________________________________________

   When the steps below require the UA to insert an HTML element for a
   token, the UA must first create an element for the token in the HTML
   namespace, and then append this node to the current node, and push it
   onto the stack of open elements so that it is the new current node.

   The steps below may also require that the UA insert an HTML element in
   a particular place, in which case the UA must follow the same steps
   except that it must insert or append the new node in the location
   specified instead of appending it to the current node. (This happens in
   particular during the parsing of tables with invalid content.)

   If an element created by the insert an HTML element algorithm is a
   form-associated element, and the form element pointer is not null, and
   the newly created element doesn't have a form attribute, the user agent
   must associate the newly created element with the form element pointed
   to by the form element pointer before inserting it wherever it is to be
   inserted.
     __________________________________________________________________

   When the steps below require the UA to insert a foreign element for a
   token, the UA must first create an element for the token in the given
   namespace, and then append this node to the current node, and push it
   onto the stack of open elements so that it is the new current node. If
   the newly created element has an xmlns attribute in the XMLNS namespace
   whose value is not exactly the same as the element's namespace, that is
   a parse error.

   When the steps below require the user agent to adjust MathML attributes
   for a token, then, if the token has an attribute named definitionurl,
   change its name to definitionURL (note the case difference).

   When the steps below require the user agent to adjust foreign
   attributes for a token, then, if any of the attributes on the token
   match the strings given in the first column of the following table, let
   the attribute be a namespaced attribute, with the prefix being the
   string given in the corresponding cell in the second column, the local
   name being the string given in the corresponding cell in the third
   column, and the namespace being the namespace given in the
   corresponding cell in the fourth column. (This fixes the use of
   namespaced attributes, in particular xml:lang.)

   Attribute name Prefix Local name    Namespace
   xlink:actuate  xlink  actuate    XLink namespace
   xlink:arcrole  xlink  arcrole    XLink namespace
   xlink:href     xlink  href       XLink namespace
   xlink:role     xlink  role       XLink namespace
   xlink:show     xlink  show       XLink namespace
   xlink:title    xlink  title      XLink namespace
   xlink:type     xlink  type       XLink namespace
   xml:base       xml    base       XML namespace
   xml:lang       xml    lang       XML namespace
   xml:space      xml    space      XML namespace
   xmlns          (none) xmlns      XMLNS namespace
   xmlns:xlink    xmlns  xlink      XMLNS namespace
     __________________________________________________________________

   The generic CDATA element parsing algorithm and the generic RCDATA
   element parsing algorithm consist of the following steps. These
   algorithms are always invoked in response to a start tag token.
    1. Insert an HTML element for the token.
    2. If the algorithm that was invoked is the generic CDATA element
       parsing algorithm, switch the tokeniser's content model flag to the
       CDATA state; otherwise the algorithm invoked was the generic RCDATA
       element parsing algorithm, switch the tokeniser's content model
       flag to the RCDATA state.
    3. Let the original insertion mode be the current insertion mode.
    4. Then, switch the insertion mode to "in CDATA/RCDATA".

      8.2.5.2 Closing elements that have implied end tags

   When the steps below require the UA to generate implied end tags, then,
   while the current node is a dd element, a dt element, an li element, an
   option element, an optgroup element, a p element, an rp element, or an
   rt element, the UA must pop the current node off the stack of open
   elements.

   If a step requires the UA to generate implied end tags but lists an
   element to exclude from the process, then the UA must perform the above
   steps as if that element was not in the above list.

      8.2.5.3 Foster parenting

   Foster parenting happens when content is misnested in tables.

   When a node node is to be foster parented, the node node must be
   inserted into the foster parent element, and the current table must be
   marked as tainted. (Once the current table has been tainted, whitespace
   characters are inserted into the foster parent element instead of the
   current node.)

   The foster parent element is the parent element of the last table
   element in the stack of open elements, if there is a table element and
   it has such a parent element. If there is no table element in the stack
   of open elements (fragment case), then the foster parent element is the
   first element in the stack of open elements (the html element).
   Otherwise, if there is a table element in the stack of open elements,
   but the last table element in the stack of open elements has no parent,
   or its parent node is not an element, then the foster parent element is
   the element before the last table element in the stack of open
   elements.

   If the foster parent element is the parent element of the last table
   element in the stack of open elements, then node must be inserted
   immediately before the last table element in the stack of open elements
   in the foster parent element; otherwise, node must be appended to the
   foster parent element.

      8.2.5.4 The "initial" insertion mode

   When the insertion mode is "initial", tokens must be handled as
   follows:

   A character token that is one of one of U+0009 CHARACTER TABULATION,
          U+000A LINE FEED (LF), U+000C FORM FEED (FF), or U+0020 SPACE
          Ignore the token.

   A comment token
          Append a Comment node to the Document object with the data
          attribute set to the data given in the comment token.

   A DOCTYPE token
          If the DOCTYPE token's name is not a case-sensitive match for
          the string "html", or if the token's public identifier is
          neither missing nor a case-sensitive match for the string
          "XSLT-compat", or if the token's system identifier is not
          missing, then there is a parse error (this is the DOCTYPE parse
          error). Conformance checkers may, instead of reporting this
          error, switch to a conformance checking mode for another
          language (e.g. based on the DOCTYPE token a conformance checker
          could recognize that the document is an HTML4-era document, and
          defer to an HTML4 conformance checker.)

          Append a DocumentType node to the Document node, with the name
          attribute set to the name given in the DOCTYPE token; the
          publicId attribute set to the public identifier given in the
          DOCTYPE token, or the empty string if the public identifier was
          missing; the systemId attribute set to the system identifier
          given in the DOCTYPE token, or the empty string if the system
          identifier was missing; and the other attributes specific to
          DocumentType objects set to null and empty lists as appropriate.
          Associate the DocumentType node with the Document object so that
          it is returned as the value of the doctype attribute of the
          Document object.

          Then, if the DOCTYPE token matches one of the conditions in the
          following list, then set the document to quirks mode:

          + The force-quirks flag is set to on.
          + The name is set to anything other than "HTML".
          + The public identifier starts with: "+//Silmaril//dtd html Pro
            v0r11 19970101//"
          + The public identifier starts with: "-//AdvaSoft Ltd//DTD HTML
            3.0 asWedit + extensions//"
          + The public identifier starts with: "-//AS//DTD HTML 3.0
            asWedit + extensions//"
          + The public identifier starts with: "-//IETF//DTD HTML 2.0
            Level 1//"
          + The public identifier starts with: "-//IETF//DTD HTML 2.0
            Level 2//"
          + The public identifier starts with: "-//IETF//DTD HTML 2.0
            Strict Level 1//"
          + The public identifier starts with: "-//IETF//DTD HTML 2.0
            Strict Level 2//"
          + The public identifier starts with: "-//IETF//DTD HTML 2.0
            Strict//"
          + The public identifier starts with: "-//IETF//DTD HTML 2.0//"
          + The public identifier starts with: "-//IETF//DTD HTML 2.1E//"
          + The public identifier starts with: "-//IETF//DTD HTML 3.0//"
          + The public identifier starts with: "-//IETF//DTD HTML 3.2
            Final//"
          + The public identifier starts with: "-//IETF//DTD HTML 3.2//"
          + The public identifier starts with: "-//IETF//DTD HTML 3//"
          + The public identifier starts with: "-//IETF//DTD HTML Level
            0//"
          + The public identifier starts with: "-//IETF//DTD HTML Level
            1//"
          + The public identifier starts with: "-//IETF//DTD HTML Level
            2//"
          + The public identifier starts with: "-//IETF//DTD HTML Level
            3//"
          + The public identifier starts with: "-//IETF//DTD HTML Strict
            Level 0//"
          + The public identifier starts with: "-//IETF//DTD HTML Strict
            Level 1//"
          + The public identifier starts with: "-//IETF//DTD HTML Strict
            Level 2//"
          + The public identifier starts with: "-//IETF//DTD HTML Strict
            Level 3//"
          + The public identifier starts with: "-//IETF//DTD HTML
            Strict//"
          + The public identifier starts with: "-//IETF//DTD HTML//"
          + The public identifier starts with: "-//Metrius//DTD Metrius
            Presentational//"
          + The public identifier starts with: "-//Microsoft//DTD Internet
            Explorer 2.0 HTML Strict//"
          + The public identifier starts with: "-//Microsoft//DTD Internet
            Explorer 2.0 HTML//"
          + The public identifier starts with: "-//Microsoft//DTD Internet
            Explorer 2.0 Tables//"
          + The public identifier starts with: "-//Microsoft//DTD Internet
            Explorer 3.0 HTML Strict//"
          + The public identifier starts with: "-//Microsoft//DTD Internet
            Explorer 3.0 HTML//"
          + The public identifier starts with: "-//Microsoft//DTD Internet
            Explorer 3.0 Tables//"
          + The public identifier starts with: "-//Netscape Comm.
            Corp.//DTD HTML//"
          + The public identifier starts with: "-//Netscape Comm.
            Corp.//DTD Strict HTML//"
          + The public identifier starts with: "-//O'Reilly and
            Associates//DTD HTML 2.0//"
          + The public identifier starts with: "-//O'Reilly and
            Associates//DTD HTML Extended 1.0//"
          + The public identifier starts with: "-//O'Reilly and
            Associates//DTD HTML Extended Relaxed 1.0//"
          + The public identifier starts with: "-//SoftQuad Software//DTD
            HoTMetaL PRO 6.0::19990601::extensions to HTML 4.0//"
          + The public identifier starts with: "-//SoftQuad//DTD HoTMetaL
            PRO 4.0::19971010::extensions to HTML 4.0//"
          + The public identifier starts with: "-//Spyglass//DTD HTML 2.0
            Extended//"
          + The public identifier starts with: "-//SQ//DTD HTML 2.0
            HoTMetaL + extensions//"
          + The public identifier starts with: "-//Sun Microsystems
            Corp.//DTD HotJava HTML//"
          + The public identifier starts with: "-//Sun Microsystems
            Corp.//DTD HotJava Strict HTML//"
          + The public identifier starts with: "-//W3C//DTD HTML 3
            1995-03-24//"
          + The public identifier starts with: "-//W3C//DTD HTML 3.2
            Draft//"
          + The public identifier starts with: "-//W3C//DTD HTML 3.2
            Final//"
          + The public identifier starts with: "-//W3C//DTD HTML 3.2//"
          + The public identifier starts with: "-//W3C//DTD HTML 3.2S
            Draft//"
          + The public identifier starts with: "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.0
            Frameset//"
          + The public identifier starts with: "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.0
            Transitional//"
          + The public identifier starts with: "-//W3C//DTD HTML
            Experimental 19960712//"
          + The public identifier starts with: "-//W3C//DTD HTML
            Experimental 970421//"
          + The public identifier starts with: "-//W3C//DTD W3 HTML//"
          + The public identifier starts with: "-//W3O//DTD W3 HTML 3.0//"
          + The public identifier is set to: "-//W3O//DTD W3 HTML Strict
            3.0//EN//"
          + The public identifier starts with: "-//WebTechs//DTD Mozilla
            HTML 2.0//"
          + The public identifier starts with: "-//WebTechs//DTD Mozilla
            HTML//"
          + The public identifier is set to: "-/W3C/DTD HTML 4.0
            Transitional/EN"
          + The public identifier is set to: "HTML"
          + The system identifier is set to:
            "http://www.ibm.com/data/dtd/v11/ibmxhtml1-transitional.dtd"
          + The system identifier is missing and the public identifier
            starts with: "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01 Frameset//"
          + The system identifier is missing and the public identifier
            starts with: "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01 Transitional//"

          Otherwise, if the DOCTYPE token matches one of the conditions in
          the following list, then set the document to limited quirks
          mode:

          + The public identifier starts with: "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0
            Frameset//"
          + The public identifier starts with: "-//W3C//DTD XHTML 1.0
            Transitional//"
          + The system identifier is not missing and the public identifier
            starts with: "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01 Frameset//"
          + The system identifier is not missing and the public identifier
            starts with: "-//W3C//DTD HTML 4.01 Transitional//"

          The name, system identifier, and public identifier strings must
          be compared to the values given in the lists above in an ASCII
          case-insensitive manner. A system identifier whose value is the
          empty string is not considered missing for the purposes of the
          conditions above.

          Then, switch the insertion mode to "before html".

   Anything else
          Parse error.

          Set the document to quirks mode.

          Switch the insertion mode to "before html", then reprocess the
          current token.

      8.2.5.5 The "before html" insertion mode

   When the insertion mode is "before html", tokens must be handled as
   follows:

   A DOCTYPE token
          Parse error. Ignore the token.

   A comment token
          Append a Comment node to the Document object with the data
          attribute set to the data given in the comment token.

   A character token that is one of one of U+0009 CHARACTER TABULATION,
          U+000A LINE FEED (LF), U+000C FORM FEED (FF), or U+0020 SPACE
          Ignore the token.

   A start tag whose tag name is "html"
          Create an element for the token in the HTML namespace. Append it
          to the Document object. Put this element in the stack of open
          elements.

          If the token has an attribute "manifest", then resolve the value
          of that attribute to an absolute URL, and if that is successful,
          run the application cache selection algorithm with the resulting
          absolute URL. Otherwise, if there is no such attribute or
          resolving it fails, run the application cache selection
          algorithm with no manifest. The algorithm must be passed the
          Document object.

          Switch the insertion mode to "before head".

   Anything else
          Create an HTMLElement node with the tag name html, in the HTML
          namespace. Append it to the Document object. Put this element in
          the stack of open elements.

          Run the application cache selection algorithm with no manifest,
          passing it the Document object.

          Switch the insertion mode to "before head", then reprocess the
          current token.

          Should probably make end tags be ignored, so that "</head><!--
          --><html>" puts the comment before the root node (or should we?)

   The root element can end up being removed from the Document object,
   e.g. by scripts; nothing in particular happens in such cases, content
   continues being appended to the nodes as described in the next section.

      8.2.5.6 The "before head" insertion mode

   When the insertion mode is "before head", tokens must be handled as
   follows:

   A character token that is one of one of U+0009 CHARACTER TABULATION,
          U+000A LINE FEED (LF), U+000C FORM FEED (FF), or U+0020 SPACE
          Ignore the token.

   A comment token
          Append a Comment node to the current node with the data
          attribute set to the data given in the comment token.

   A DOCTYPE token
          Parse error. Ignore the token.

   A start tag whose tag name is "html"
          Process the token using the rules for the "in body" insertion
          mode.

   A start tag whose tag name is "head"
          Insert an HTML element for the token.

          Set the head element pointer to the newly created head element.

          Switch the insertion mode to "in head".

   An end tag whose tag name is one of: "head", "br"
          Act as if a start tag token with the tag name "head" and no
          attributes had been seen, then reprocess the current token.

   Any other end tag
          Parse error. Ignore the token.

   Anything else
          Act as if a start tag token with the tag name "head" and no
          attributes had been seen, then reprocess the current token.

          This will result in an empty head element being generated, with
          the current token being reprocessed in the "after head"
          insertion mode.

      8.2.5.7 The "in head" insertion mode

   When the insertion mode is "in head", tokens must be handled as
   follows:

   A character token that is one of one of U+0009 CHARACTER TABULATION,
          U+000A LINE FEED (LF), U+000C FORM FEED (FF), or U+0020 SPACE
          Insert the character into the current node.

   A comment token
          Append a Comment node to the current node with the data
          attribute set to the data given in the comment token.

   A DOCTYPE token
          Parse error. Ignore the token.

   A start tag whose tag name is "html"
          Process the token using the rules for the "in body" insertion
          mode.

   A start tag whose tag name is one of: "base", "command", "eventsource",
          "link"
          Insert an HTML element for the token. Immediately pop the
          current node off the stack of open elements.

          Acknowledge the token's self-closing flag, if it is set.

   A start tag whose tag name is "meta"
          Insert an HTML element for the token. Immediately pop the
          current node off the stack of open elements.

          Acknowledge the token's self-closing flag, if it is set.

          If the element has a charset attribute, and its value is a
          supported encoding, and the confidence is currently tentative,
          then change the encoding to the encoding given by the value of
          the charset attribute.

          Otherwise, if the element has a content attribute, and applying
          the algorithm for extracting an encoding from a Content-Type to
          its value returns a supported encoding encoding, and the
          confidence is currently tentative, then change the encoding to
          the encoding encoding.

   A start tag whose tag name is "title"
          Follow the generic RCDATA element parsing algorithm.

   A start tag whose tag name is "noscript", if the scripting flag is
          enabled

   A start tag whose tag name is one of: "noframes", "style"
          Follow the generic CDATA element parsing algorithm.

   A start tag whose tag name is "noscript", if the scripting flag is
          disabled
          Insert an HTML element for the token.

          Switch the insertion mode to "in head noscript".

   A start tag whose tag name is "script"

         1. Create an element for the token in the HTML namespace.
         2. Mark the element as being "parser-inserted".
            This ensures that, if the script is external, any
            document.write() calls in the script will execute in-line,
            instead of blowing the document away, as would happen in most
            other cases. It also prevents the script from executing until
            the end tag is seen.
         3. If the parser was originally created for the HTML fragment
            parsing algorithm, then mark the script element as "already
            executed". (fragment case)
         4. Append the new element to the current node.
         5. Switch the tokeniser's content model flag to the CDATA state.
         6. Let the original insertion mode be the current insertion mode.
         7. Switch the insertion mode to "in CDATA/RCDATA".

   An end tag whose tag name is "head"
          Pop the current node (which will be the head element) off the
          stack of open elements.

          Switch the insertion mode to "after head".

   An end tag whose tag name is "br"
          Act as described in the "anything else" entry below.

   A start tag whose tag name is "head"
   Any other end tag
          Parse error. Ignore the token.

   Anything else
          Act as if an end tag token with the tag name "head" had been
          seen, and reprocess the current token.

          In certain UAs, some elements don't trigger the "in body" mode
          straight away, but instead get put into the head. Do we want to
          copy that?

      8.2.5.8 The "in head noscript" insertion mode

   When the insertion mode is "in head noscript", tokens must be handled
   as follows:

   A DOCTYPE token
          Parse error. Ignore the token.

   A start tag whose tag name is "html"
          Process the token using the rules for the "in body" insertion
          mode.

   An end tag whose tag name is "noscript"
          Pop the current node (which will be a noscript element) from the
          stack of open elements; the new current node will be a head
          element.

          Switch the insertion mode to "in head".

   A character token that is one of one of U+0009 CHARACTER TABULATION,
          U+000A LINE FEED (LF), U+000C FORM FEED (FF), or U+0020 SPACE

   A comment token
   A start tag whose tag name is one of: "link", "meta", "noframes",
          "style"
          Process the token using the rules for the "in head" insertion
          mode.

   An end tag whose tag name is "br"
          Act as described in the "anything else" entry below.

   A start tag whose tag name is one of: "head", "noscript"
   Any other end tag
          Parse error. Ignore the token.

   Anything else
          Parse error. Act as if an end tag with the tag name "noscript"
          had been seen and reprocess the current token.

      8.2.5.9 The "after head" insertion mode

   When the insertion mode is "after head", tokens must be handled as
   follows:

   A character token that is one of one of U+0009 CHARACTER TABULATION,
          U+000A LINE FEED (LF), U+000C FORM FEED (FF), or U+0020 SPACE
          Insert the character into the current node.

   A comment token
          Append a Comment node to the current node with the data
          attribute set to the data given in the comment token.

   A DOCTYPE token
          Parse error. Ignore the token.

   A start tag whose tag name is "html"
          Process the token using the rules for the "in body" insertion
          mode.

   A start tag whose tag name is "body"
          Insert an HTML element for the token.

          Switch the insertion mode to "in body".

   A start tag whose tag name is "frameset"
          Insert an HTML element for the token.

          Switch the insertion mode to "in frameset".

   A start tag token whose tag name is one of: "base", "link", "meta",
          "noframes", "script", "style", "title"
          Parse error.

          Push the node pointed to by the head element pointer onto the
          stack of open elements.

          Process the token using the rules for the "in head" insertion
          mode.

          Remove the node pointed to by the head element pointer from the
          stack of open elements.

   An end tag whose tag name is "br"
          Act as described in the "anything else" entry below.

   A start tag whose tag name is "head"
   Any other end tag
          Parse error. Ignore the token.

   Anything else
          Act as if a start tag token with the tag name "body" and no
          attributes had been seen, and then reprocess the current token.

      8.2.5.10 The "in body" insertion mode

   When the insertion mode is "in body", tokens must be handled as
   follows:

   A character token
          Reconstruct the active formatting elements, if any.

          Insert the token's character into the current node.

   A comment token
          Append a Comment node to the current node with the data
          attribute set to the data given in the comment token.

   A DOCTYPE token
          Parse error. Ignore the token.

   A start tag whose tag name is "html"
          Parse error. For each attribute on the token, check to see if
          the attribute is already present on the top element of the stack
          of open elements. If it is not, add the attribute and its
          corresponding value to that element.

   A start tag token whose tag name is one of: "base", "command",
          "eventsource", "link", "meta", "noframes", "script", "style",
          "title"
          Process the token using the rules for the "in head" insertion
          mode.

   A start tag whose tag name is "body"
          Parse error.

          If the second element on the stack of open elements is not a
          body element, or, if the stack of open elements has only one
          node on it, then ignore the token. (fragment case)

          Otherwise, for each attribute on the token, check to see if the
          attribute is already present on the body element (the second
          element) on the stack of open elements. If it is not, add the
          attribute and its corresponding value to that element.

   An end-of-file token
          If there is a node in the stack of open elements that is not
          either a dd element, a dt element, an li element, a p element, a
          tbody element, a td element, a tfoot element, a th element, a
          thead element, a tr element, the body element, or the html
          element, then this is a parse error.

          Stop parsing.

   An end tag whose tag name is "body"
          If the stack of open elements does not have a body element in
          scope, this is a parse error; ignore the token.

          Otherwise, if there is a node in the stack of open elements that
          is not either a dd element, a dt element, an li element, a p
          element, a tbody element, a td element, a tfoot element, a th
          element, a thead element, a tr element, the body element, or the
          html element, then this is a parse error.

          Switch the insertion mode to "after body".

   An end tag whose tag name is "html"
          Act as if an end tag with tag name "body" had been seen, then,
          if that token wasn't ignored, reprocess the current token.

          The fake end tag token here can only be ignored in the fragment
          case.

   A start tag whose tag name is one of: "address", "article", "aside",
          "blockquote", "center", "datagrid", "details", "dialog", "dir",
          "div", "dl", "fieldset", "figure", "footer", "header", "menu",
          "nav", "ol", "p", "section", "ul"
          If the stack of open elements has a p element in scope, then act
          as if an end tag with the tag name "p" had been seen.

          Insert an HTML element for the token.

   A start tag whose tag name is one of: "h1", "h2", "h3", "h4", "h5",
          "h6"
          If the stack of open elements has a p element in scope, then act
          as if an end tag with the tag name "p" had been seen.

          If the current node is an element whose tag name is one of "h1",
          "h2", "h3", "h4", "h5", or "h6", then this is a parse error; pop
          the current node off the stack of open elements.

          Insert an HTML element for the token.

   A start tag whose tag name is one of: "pre", "listing"
          If the stack of open elements has a p element in scope, then act
          as if an end tag with the tag name "p" had been seen.

          Insert an HTML element for the token.

          If the next token is a U+000A LINE FEED (LF) character token,
          then ignore that token and move on to the next one. (Newlines at
          the start of pre blocks are ignored as an authoring
          convenience.)

   A start tag whose tag name is "form"
          If the form element pointer is not null, then this is a parse
          error; ignore the token.

          Otherwise:

          If the stack of open elements has a p element in scope, then act
          as if an end tag with the tag name "p" had been seen.

          Insert an HTML element for the token, and set the form element
          pointer to point to the element created.

   A start tag whose tag name is "li"
          Run the following algorithm:

         1. Initialize node to be the current node (the bottommost node of
            the stack).
         2. If node is an li element, then act as if an end tag with the
            tag name "li" had been seen, then jump to the last step.
         3. If node is not in the formatting category, and is not in the
            phrasing category, and is not an address, div, or p element,
            then jump to the last step.
         4. Otherwise, set node to the previous entry in the stack of open
            elements and return to step 2.
         5. This is the last step.
            If the stack of open elements has a p element in scope, then
            act as if an end tag with the tag name "p" had been seen.
            Finally, insert an HTML element for the token.

   A start tag whose tag name is one of: "dd", "dt"
          Run the following algorithm:

         1. Initialize node to be the current node (the bottommost node of
            the stack).
         2. If node is a dd or dt element, then act as if an end tag with
            the same tag name as node had been seen, then jump to the last
            step.
         3. If node is not in the formatting category, and is not in the
            phrasing category, and is not an address, div, or p element,
            then jump to the last step.
         4. Otherwise, set node to the previous entry in the stack of open
            elements and return to step 2.
         5. This is the last step.
            If the stack of open elements has a p element in scope, then
            act as if an end tag with the tag name "p" had been seen.
            Finally, insert an HTML element for the token.

   A start tag whose tag name is "plaintext"
          If the stack of open elements has a p element in scope, then act
          as if an end tag with the tag name "p" had been seen.

          Insert an HTML element for the token.

          Switch the content model flag to the PLAINTEXT state.

          Once a start tag with the tag name "plaintext" has been seen,
          that will be the last token ever seen other than character
          tokens (and the end-of-file token), because there is no way to
          switch the content model flag out of the PLAINTEXT state.

   An end tag whose tag name is one of: "address", "article", "aside",
          "blockquote", "center", "datagrid", "details", "dialog", "dir",
          "div", "dl", "fieldset", "figure", "footer", "header",
          "listing", "menu", "nav", "ol", "pre", "section", "ul"
          If the stack of open elements does not have an element in scope
          with the same tag name as that of the token, then this is a
          parse error; ignore the token.

          Otherwise, run these steps:

         1. Generate implied end tags.
         2. If the current node is not an element with the same tag name
            as that of the token, then this is a parse error.
         3. Pop elements from the stack of open elements until an element
            with the same tag name as the token has been popped from the
            stack.

   An end tag whose tag name is "form"
          Let node be the element that the form element pointer is set to.

          Set the form element pointer to null.

          If node is null or the stack of open elements does not have node
          in scope, then this is a parse error; ignore the token.

          Otherwise, run these steps:

         1. Generate implied end tags.
         2. If the current node is not node, then this is a parse error.
         3. Remove node from the stack of open elements.

   An end tag whose tag name is "p"
          If the stack of open elements does not have an element in scope
          with the same tag name as that of the token, then this is a
          parse error; act as if a start tag with the tag name p had been
          seen, then reprocess the current token.

          Otherwise, run these steps:

         1. Generate implied end tags, except for elements with the same
            tag name as the token.
         2. If the current node is not an element with the same tag name
            as that of the token, then this is a parse error.
         3. Pop elements from the stack of open elements until an element
            with the same tag name as the token has been popped from the
            stack.

   An end tag whose tag name is one of: "dd", "dt", "li"
          If the stack of open elements does not have an element in scope
          with the same tag name as that of the token, then this is a
          parse error; ignore the token.

          Otherwise, run these steps:

         1. Generate implied end tags, except for elements with the same
            tag name as the token.
         2. If the current node is not an element with the same tag name
            as that of the token, then this is a parse error.
         3. Pop elements from the stack of open elements until an element
            with the same tag name as the token has been popped from the
            stack.

   An end tag whose tag name is one of: "h1", "h2", "h3", "h4", "h5", "h6"
          If the stack of open elements does not have an element in scope
          whose tag name is one of "h1", "h2", "h3", "h4", "h5", or "h6",
          then this is a parse error; ignore the token.

          Otherwise, run these steps:

         1. Generate implied end tags.
         2. If the current node is not an element with the same tag name
            as that of the token, then this is a parse error.
         3. Pop elements from the stack of open elements until an element
            whose tag name is one of "h1", "h2", "h3", "h4", "h5", or "h6"
            has been popped from the stack.

   An end tag whose tag name is "sarcasm"
          Take a deep breath, then act as described in the "any other end
          tag" entry below.

   A start tag whose tag name is "a"
          If the list of active formatting elements contains an element
          whose tag name is "a" between the end of the list and the last
          marker on the list (or the start of the list if there is no
          marker on the list), then this is a parse error; act as if an
          end tag with the tag name "a" had been seen, then remove that
          element from the list of active formatting elements and the
          stack of open elements if the end tag didn't already remove it
          (it might not have if the element is not in table scope).

          In the non-conforming stream
          <a href="a">a<table><a href="b">b</table>x, the first a element
          would be closed upon seeing the second one, and the "x"
          character would be inside a link to "b", not to "a". This is
          despite the fact that the outer a element is not in table scope
          (meaning that a regular </a> end tag at the start of the table
          wouldn't close the outer a element).

          Reconstruct the active formatting elements, if any.

          Insert an HTML element for the token. Add that element to the
          list of active formatting elements.

   A start tag whose tag name is one of: "b", "big", "em", "font", "i",
          "s", "small", "strike", "strong", "tt", "u"
          Reconstruct the active formatting elements, if any.

          Insert an HTML element for the token. Add that element to the
          list of active formatting elements.

   A start tag whose tag name is "nobr"
          Reconstruct the active formatting elements, if any.

          If the stack of open elements has a nobr element in scope, then
          this is a parse error; act as if an end tag with the tag name
          "nobr" had been seen, then once again reconstruct the active
          formatting elements, if any.

          Insert an HTML element for the token. Add that element to the
          list of active formatting elements.

   An end tag whose tag name is one of: "a", "b", "big", "em", "font",
          "i", "nobr", "s", "small", "strike", "strong", "tt", "u"
          Follow these steps:

         1. Let the formatting element be the last element in the list of
            active formatting elements that:
               o is between the end of the list and the last scope marker
                 in the list, if any, or the start of the list otherwise,
                 and
               o has the same tag name as the token.
            If there is no such node, or, if that node is also in the
            stack of open elements but the element is not in scope, then
            this is a parse error; ignore the token, and abort these
            steps.
            Otherwise, if there is such a node, but that node is not in
            the stack of open elements, then this is a parse error; remove
            the element from the list, and abort these steps.
            Otherwise, there is a formatting element and that element is
            in the stack and is in scope. If the element is not the
            current node, this is a parse error. In any case, proceed with
            the algorithm as written in the following steps.
         2. Let the furthest block be the topmost node in the stack of
            open elements that is lower in the stack than the formatting
            element, and is not an element in the phrasing or formatting
            categories. There might not be one.
         3. If there is no furthest block, then the UA must skip the
            subsequent steps and instead just pop all the nodes from the
            bottom of the stack of open elements, from the current node up
            to and including the formatting element, and remove the
            formatting element from the list of active formatting
            elements.
         4. Let the common ancestor be the element immediately above the
            formatting element in the stack of open elements.
         5. If the furthest block has a parent node, then remove the
            furthest block from its parent node.
         6. Let a bookmark note the position of the formatting element in
            the list of active formatting elements relative to the
            elements on either side of it in the list.
         7. Let node and last node be the furthest block. Follow these
            steps:
              1. Let node be the element immediately above node in the
                 stack of open elements.
              2. If node is not in the list of active formatting elements,
                 then remove node from the stack of open elements and then
                 go back to step 1.
              3. Otherwise, if node is the formatting element, then go to
                 the next step in the overall algorithm.
              4. Otherwise, if last node is the furthest block, then move
                 the aforementioned bookmark to be immediately after the
                 node in the list of active formatting elements.
              5. If node has any children, perform a shallow clone of
                 node, replace the entry for node in the list of active
                 formatting elements with an entry for the clone, replace
                 the entry for node in the stack of open elements with an
                 entry for the clone, and let node be the clone.
              6. Insert last node into node, first removing it from its
                 previous parent node if any.
              7. Let last node be node.
              8. Return to step 1 of this inner set of steps.
         8. If the common ancestor node is a table, tbody, tfoot, thead,
            or tr element, then, foster parent whatever last node ended up
            being in the previous step.
            Otherwise, append whatever last node ended up being in the
            previous step to the common ancestor node, first removing it
            from its previous parent node if any.
         9. Perform a shallow clone of the formatting element.
        10. Take all of the child nodes of the furthest block and append
            them to the clone created in the last step.
        11. Append that clone to the furthest block.
        12. Remove the formatting element from the list of active
            formatting elements, and insert the clone into the list of
            active formatting elements at the position of the
            aforementioned bookmark.
        13. Remove the formatting element from the stack of open elements,
            and insert the clone into the stack of open elements
            immediately below the position of the furthest block in that
            stack.
        14. Jump back to step 1 in this series of steps.

          The way these steps are defined, only elements in the formatting
          category ever get cloned by this algorithm.

          Because of the way this algorithm causes elements to change
          parents, it has been dubbed the "adoption agency algorithm" (in
          contrast with other possibly algorithms for dealing with
          misnested content, which included the "incest algorithm", the
          "secret affair algorithm", and the "Heisenberg algorithm").

   A start tag whose tag name is "button"
          If the stack of open elements has a button element in scope,
          then this is a parse error; act as if an end tag with the tag
          name "button" had been seen, then reprocess the token.

          Otherwise:

          Reconstruct the active formatting elements, if any.

          Insert an HTML element for the token.

          Insert a marker at the end of the list of active formatting
          elements.

   A start tag token whose tag name is one of: "applet", "marquee",
          "object"
          Reconstruct the active formatting elements, if any.

          Insert an HTML element for the token.

          Insert a marker at the end of the list of active formatting
          elements.

   An end tag token whose tag name is one of: "applet", "button",
          "marquee", "object"
          If the stack of open elements does not have an element in scope
          with the same tag name as that of the token, then this is a
          parse error; ignore the token.

          Otherwise, run these steps:

         1. Generate implied end tags.
         2. If the current node is not an element with the same tag name
            as that of the token, then this is a parse error.
         3. Pop elements from the stack of open elements until an element
            with the same tag name as the token has been popped from the
            stack.
         4. Clear the list of active formatting elements up to the last
            marker.

   A start tag whose tag name is "xmp"
          Reconstruct the active formatting elements, if any.

          Follow the generic CDATA element parsing algorithm.

   A start tag whose tag name is "table"
          If the stack of open elements has a p element in scope, then act
          as if an end tag with the tag name "p" had been seen.

          Insert an HTML element for the token.

          Switch the insertion mode to "in table".

   A start tag whose tag name is one of: "area", "basefont", "bgsound",
          "br", "embed", "img", "input", "spacer", "wbr"
          Reconstruct the active formatting elements, if any.

          Insert an HTML element for the token. Immediately pop the
          current node off the stack of open elements.

          Acknowledge the token's self-closing flag, if it is set.

   A start tag whose tag name is one of: "param", "source"
          Insert an HTML element for the token. Immediately pop the
          current node off the stack of open elements.

          Acknowledge the token's self-closing flag, if it is set.

   A start tag whose tag name is "hr"
          If the stack of open elements has a p element in scope, then act
          as if an end tag with the tag name "p" had been seen.

          Insert an HTML element for the token. Immediately pop the
          current node off the stack of open elements.

          Acknowledge the token's self-closing flag, if it is set.

   A start tag whose tag name is "image"
          Parse error. Change the token's tag name to "img" and reprocess
          it. (Don't ask.)

   A start tag whose tag name is "isindex"
          Parse error.

          If the form element pointer is not null, then ignore the token.

          Otherwise:

          Acknowledge the token's self-closing flag, if it is set.

          Act as if a start tag token with the tag name "form" had been
          seen.

          If the token has an attribute called "action", set the action
          attribute on the resulting form element to the value of the
          "action" attribute of the token.

          Act as if a start tag token with the tag name "hr" had been
          seen.

          Act as if a start tag token with the tag name "p" had been seen.

          Act as if a start tag token with the tag name "label" had been
          seen.

          Act as if a stream of character tokens had been seen (see below
          for what they should say).

          Act as if a start tag token with the tag name "input" had been
          seen, with all the attributes from the "isindex" token except
          "name", "action", and "prompt". Set the name attribute of the
          resulting input element to the value "isindex".

          Act as if a stream of character tokens had been seen (see below
          for what they should say).

          Act as if an end tag token with the tag name "label" had been
          seen.

          Act as if an end tag token with the tag name "p" had been seen.

          Act as if a start tag token with the tag name "hr" had been
          seen.

          Act as if an end tag token with the tag name "form" had been
          seen.

          If the token has an attribute with the name "prompt", then the
          first stream of characters must be the same string as given in
          that attribute, and the second stream of characters must be
          empty. Otherwise, the two streams of character tokens together
          should, together with the input element, express the equivalent
          of "This is a searchable index. Insert your search keywords
          here: (input field)" in the user's preferred language.

   A start tag whose tag name is "textarea"

         1. Insert an HTML element for the token.
         2. If the next token is a U+000A LINE FEED (LF) character token,
            then ignore that token and move on to the next one. (Newlines
            at the start of textarea elements are ignored as an authoring
            convenience.)
         3. Switch the tokeniser's content model flag to the RCDATA state.
         4. Let the original insertion mode be the current insertion mode.
         5. Switch the insertion mode to "in CDATA/RCDATA".

   A start tag whose tag name is one of: "iframe", "noembed"
   A start tag whose tag name is "noscript", if the scripting flag is
          enabled
          Follow the generic CDATA element parsing algorithm.

   A start tag whose tag name is "select"
          Reconstruct the active formatting elements, if any.

          Insert an HTML element for the token.

          If the insertion mode is one of in table", "in caption", "in
          column group", "in table body", "in row", or "in cell", then
          switch the insertion mode to "in select in table". Otherwise,
          switch the insertion mode to "in select".

   A start tag whose tag name is one of: "optgroup", "option"
          If the stack of open elements has an option element in scope,
          then act as if an end tag with the tag name "option" had been
          seen.

          Reconstruct the active formatting elements, if any.

          Insert an HTML element for the token.

   A start tag whose tag name is one of: "rp", "rt"
          If the stack of open elements has a ruby element in scope, then
          generate implied end tags. If the current node is not then a
          ruby element, this is a parse error; pop all the nodes from the
          current node up to the node immediately before the bottommost
          ruby element on the stack of open elements.

          Insert an HTML element for the token.

   An end tag whose tag name is "br"
          Parse error. Act as if a start tag token with the tag name "br"
          had been seen. Ignore the end tag token.

   A start tag whose tag name is "math"
          Reconstruct the active formatting elements, if any.

          Adjust MathML attributes for the token. (This fixes the case of
          MathML attributes that are not all lowercase.)

          Adjust foreign attributes for the token. (This fixes the use of
          namespaced attributes, in particular XLink.)

          Insert a foreign element for the token, in the MathML namespace.

          If the token has its self-closing flag set, pop the current node
          off the stack of open elements and acknowledge the token's
          self-closing flag.

          Otherwise, let the secondary insertion mode be the current
          insertion mode, and then switch the insertion mode to "in
          foreign content".

   A start tag whose tag name is one of: "caption", "col", "colgroup",
          "frame", "frameset", "head", "tbody", "td", "tfoot", "th",
          "thead", "tr"
          Parse error. Ignore the token.

   Any other start tag
          Reconstruct the active formatting elements, if any.

          Insert an HTML element for the token.

          This element will be a phrasing element.

   Any other end tag
          Run the following steps:

         1. Initialize node to be the current node (the bottommost node of
            the stack).
         2. If node has the same tag name as the end tag token, then:
              1. Generate implied end tags.
              2. If the tag name of the end tag token does not match the
                 tag name of the current node, this is a parse error.
              3. Pop all the nodes from the current node up to node,
                 including node, then stop these steps.
         3. Otherwise, if node is in neither the formatting category nor
            the phrasing category, then this is a parse error; ignore the
            token, and abort these steps.
         4. Set node to the previous entry in the stack of open elements.
         5. Return to step 2.

      8.2.5.11 The "in CDATA/RCDATA" insertion mode

   When the insertion mode is "in CDATA/RCDATA", tokens must be handled as
   follows:

   A character token
          Insert the token's character into the current node.

   An end-of-file token
          Parse error.

          If the current node is a script element, mark the script element
          as "already executed".

          Pop the current node off the stack of open elements.

          Switch the insertion mode to the original insertion mode and
          reprocess the current token.

   An end tag whose tag name is "script"
          Let script be the current node (which will be a script element).

          Pop the current node off the stack of open elements.

          Switch the insertion mode to the original insertion mode.

          Let the old insertion point have the same value as the current
          insertion point. Let the insertion point be just before the next
          input character.

          Increment the parser's script nesting level by one.

          Run the script. This might cause some script to execute, which
          might cause new characters to be inserted into the tokeniser,
          and might cause the tokeniser to output more tokens, resulting
          in a reentrant invocation of the parser.

          Decrement the parser's script nesting level by one. If the
          parser's script nesting level is zero, then set the parser pause
          flag to false.

          Let the insertion point have the value of the old insertion
          point. (In other words, restore the insertion point to the value
          it had before the previous paragraph. This value might be the
          "undefined" value.)

          At this stage, if there is a pending external script, then:

        If the tree construction stage is being called reentrantly, say
                from a call to document.write():
                Set the parser pause flag to true, and abort the
                processing of any nested invocations of the tokeniser,
                yielding control back to the caller. (Tokenization will
                resume when the caller returns to the "outer" tree
                construction stage.)

        Otherwise:
                Follow these steps:

              1. Let the script be the pending external script. There is
                 no longer a pending external script.
              2. Pause until the script has completed loading.
              3. Let the insertion point be just before the next input
                 character.
              4. Execute the script.
              5. Let the insertion point be undefined again.
              6. If there is once again a pending external script, then
                 repeat these steps from step 1.

   Any other end tag
          Pop the current node off the stack of open elements.

          Switch the insertion mode to the original insertion mode.

      8.2.5.12 The "in table" insertion mode

   When the insertion mode is "in table", tokens must be handled as
   follows:

   A character token that is one of one of U+0009 CHARACTER TABULATION,
          U+000A LINE FEED (LF), U+000C FORM FEED (FF), or U+0020 SPACE
          If the current table is tainted, then act as described in the
          "anything else" entry below.

          Otherwise, insert the character into the current node.

   A comment token
          Append a Comment node to the current node with the data
          attribute set to the data given in the comment token.

   A DOCTYPE token
          Parse error. Ignore the token.

   A start tag whose tag name is "caption"
          Clear the stack back to a table context. (See below.)

          Insert a marker at the end of the list of active formatting
          elements.

          Insert an HTML element for the token, then switch the insertion
          mode to "in caption".

   A start tag whose tag name is "colgroup"
          Clear the stack back to a table context. (See below.)

          Insert an HTML element for the token, then switch the insertion
          mode to "in column group".

   A start tag whose tag name is "col"
          Act as if a start tag token with the tag name "colgroup" had
          been seen, then reprocess the current token.

   A start tag whose tag name is one of: "tbody", "tfoot", "thead"
          Clear the stack back to a table context. (See below.)

          Insert an HTML element for the token, then switch the insertion
          mode to "in table body".

   A start tag whose tag name is one of: "td", "th", "tr"
          Act as if a start tag token with the tag name "tbody" had been
          seen, then reprocess the current token.

   A start tag whose tag name is "table"
          Parse error. Act as if an end tag token with the tag name
          "table" had been seen, then, if that token wasn't ignored,
          reprocess the current token.

          The fake end tag token here can only be ignored in the fragment
          case.

   An end tag whose tag name is "table"
          If the stack of open elements does not have an element in table
          scope with the same tag name as the token, this is a parse
          error. Ignore the token. (fragment case)

          Otherwise:

          Pop elements from this stack until a table element has been
          popped from the stack.

          Reset the insertion mode appropriately.

   An end tag whose tag name is one of: "body", "caption", "col",
          "colgroup", "html", "tbody", "td", "tfoot", "th", "thead", "tr"
          Parse error. Ignore the token.

   A start tag whose tag name is one of: "style", "script"
          If the current table is tainted then act as described in the
          "anything else" entry below.

          Otherwise, process the token using the rules for the "in head"
          insertion mode.

   A start tag whose tag name is "input"
          If the token does not have an attribute with the name "type", or
          if it does, but that attribute's value is not an ASCII
          case-insensitive match for the string "hidden", or, if the
          current table is tainted, then: act as described in the
          "anything else" entry below.

          Otherwise:

          Parse error.

          Insert an HTML element for the token.

          Pop that input element off the stack of open elements.

   An end-of-file token
          If the current node is not the root html element, then this is a
          parse error.

          It can only be the current node in the fragment case.

          Stop parsing.

   Anything else
          Parse error. Process the token using the rules for the "in body"
          insertion mode, except that if the current node is a table,
          tbody, tfoot, thead, or tr element, then, whenever a node would
          be inserted into the current node, it must instead be foster
          parented.

   When the steps above require the UA to clear the stack back to a table
   context, it means that the UA must, while the current node is not a
   table element or an html element, pop elements from the stack of open
   elements.

   The current node being an html element after this process is a fragment
   case.

      8.2.5.13 The "in caption" insertion mode

   When the insertion mode is "in caption", tokens must be handled as
   follows:

   An end tag whose tag name is "caption"
          If the stack of open elements does not have an element in table
          scope with the same tag name as the token, this is a parse
          error. Ignore the token. (fragment case)

          Otherwise:

          Generate implied end tags.

          Now, if the current node is not a caption element, then this is
          a parse error.

          Pop elements from this stack until a caption element has been
          popped from the stack.

          Clear the list of active formatting elements up to the last
          marker.

          Switch the insertion mode to "in table".

   A start tag whose tag name is one of: "caption", "col", "colgroup",
          "tbody", "td", "tfoot", "th", "thead", "tr"

   An end tag whose tag name is "table"
          Parse error. Act as if an end tag with the tag name "caption"
          had been seen, then, if that token wasn't ignored, reprocess the
          current token.

          The fake end tag token here can only be ignored in the fragment
          case.

   An end tag whose tag name is one of: "body", "col", "colgroup", "html",
          "tbody", "td", "tfoot", "th", "thead", "tr"
          Parse error. Ignore the token.

   Anything else
          Process the token using the rules for the "in body" insertion
          mode.

      8.2.5.14 The "in column group" insertion mode

   When the insertion mode is "in column group", tokens must be handled as
   follows:

   A character token that is one of one of U+0009 CHARACTER TABULATION,
          U+000A LINE FEED (LF), U+000C FORM FEED (FF), or U+0020 SPACE
          Insert the character into the current node.

   A comment token
          Append a Comment node to the current node with the data
          attribute set to the data given in the comment token.

   A DOCTYPE token
          Parse error. Ignore the token.

   A start tag whose tag name is "html"
          Process the token using the rules for the "in body" insertion
          mode.

   A start tag whose tag name is "col"
          Insert an HTML element for the token. Immediately pop the
          current node off the stack of open elements.

          Acknowledge the token's self-closing flag, if it is set.

   An end tag whose tag name is "colgroup"
          If the current node is the root html element, then this is a
          parse error; ignore the token. (fragment case)

          Otherwise, pop the current node (which will be a colgroup
          element) from the stack of open elements. Switch the insertion
          mode to "in table".

   An end tag whose tag name is "col"
          Parse error. Ignore the token.

   An end-of-file token
          If the current node is the root html element, then stop parsing.
          (fragment case)

          Otherwise, act as described in the "anything else" entry below.

   Anything else
          Act as if an end tag with the tag name "colgroup" had been seen,
          and then, if that token wasn't ignored, reprocess the current
          token.

          The fake end tag token here can only be ignored in the fragment
          case.

      8.2.5.15 The "in table body" insertion mode

   When the insertion mode is "in table body", tokens must be handled as
   follows:

   A start tag whose tag name is "tr"
          Clear the stack back to a table body context. (See below.)

          Insert an HTML element for the token, then switch the insertion
          mode to "in row".

   A start tag whose tag name is one of: "th", "td"
          Parse error. Act as if a start tag with the tag name "tr" had
          been seen, then reprocess the current token.

   An end tag whose tag name is one of: "tbody", "tfoot", "thead"
          If the stack of open elements does not have an element in table
          scope with the same tag name as the token, this is a parse
          error. Ignore the token.

          Otherwise:

          Clear the stack back to a table body context. (See below.)

          Pop the current node from the stack of open elements. Switch the
          insertion mode to "in table".

   A start tag whose tag name is one of: "caption", "col", "colgroup",
          "tbody", "tfoot", "thead"

   An end tag whose tag name is "table"
          If the stack of open elements does not have a tbody, thead, or
          tfoot element in table scope, this is a parse error. Ignore the
          token. (fragment case)

          Otherwise:

          Clear the stack back to a table body context. (See below.)

          Act as if an end tag with the same tag name as the current node
          ("tbody", "tfoot", or "thead") had been seen, then reprocess the
          current token.

   An end tag whose tag name is one of: "body", "caption", "col",
          "colgroup", "html", "td", "th", "tr"
          Parse error. Ignore the token.

   Anything else
          Process the token using the rules for the "in table" insertion
          mode.

   When the steps above require the UA to clear the stack back to a table
   body context, it means that the UA must, while the current node is not
   a tbody, tfoot, thead, or html element, pop elements from the stack of
   open elements.

   The current node being an html element after this process is a fragment
   case.

      8.2.5.16 The "in row" insertion mode

   When the insertion mode is "in row", tokens must be handled as follows:

   A start tag whose tag name is one of: "th", "td"
          Clear the stack back to a table row context. (See below.)

          Insert an HTML element for the token, then switch the insertion
          mode to "in cell".

          Insert a marker at the end of the list of active formatting
          elements.

   An end tag whose tag name is "tr"
          If the stack of open elements does not have an element in table
          scope with the same tag name as the token, this is a parse
          error. Ignore the token. (fragment case)

          Otherwise:

          Clear the stack back to a table row context. (See below.)

          Pop the current node (which will be a tr element) from the stack
          of open elements. Switch the insertion mode to "in table body".

   A start tag whose tag name is one of: "caption", "col", "colgroup",
          "tbody", "tfoot", "thead", "tr"

   An end tag whose tag name is "table"
          Act as if an end tag with the tag name "tr" had been seen, then,
          if that token wasn't ignored, reprocess the current token.

          The fake end tag token here can only be ignored in the fragment
          case.

   An end tag whose tag name is one of: "tbody", "tfoot", "thead"
          If the stack of open elements does not have an element in table
          scope with the same tag name as the token, this is a parse
          error. Ignore the token.

          Otherwise, act as if an end tag with the tag name "tr" had been
          seen, then reprocess the current token.

   An end tag whose tag name is one of: "body", "caption", "col",
          "colgroup", "html", "td", "th"
          Parse error. Ignore the token.

   Anything else
          Process the token using the rules for the "in table" insertion
          mode.

   When the steps above require the UA to clear the stack back to a table
   row context, it means that the UA must, while the current node is not a
   tr element or an html element, pop elements from the stack of open
   elements.

   The current node being an html element after this process is a fragment
   case.

      8.2.5.17 The "in cell" insertion mode

   When the insertion mode is "in cell", tokens must be handled as
   follows:

   An end tag whose tag name is one of: "td", "th"
          If the stack of open elements does not have an element in table
          scope with the same tag name as that of the token, then this is
          a parse error and the token must be ignored.

          Otherwise:

          Generate implied end tags.

          Now, if the current node is not an element with the same tag
          name as the token, then this is a parse error.

          Pop elements from this stack until an element with the same tag
          name as the token has been popped from the stack.

          Clear the list of active formatting elements up to the last
          marker.

          Switch the insertion mode to "in row". (The current node will be
          a tr element at this point.)

   A start tag whose tag name is one of: "caption", "col", "colgroup",
          "tbody", "td", "tfoot", "th", "thead", "tr"
          If the stack of open elements does not have a td or th element
          in table scope, then this is a parse error; ignore the token.
          (fragment case)

          Otherwise, close the cell (see below) and reprocess the current
          token.

   An end tag whose tag name is one of: "body", "caption", "col",
          "colgroup", "html"
          Parse error. Ignore the token.

   An end tag whose tag name is one of: "table", "tbody", "tfoot",
          "thead", "tr"
          If the stack of open elements does not have an element in table
          scope with the same tag name as that of the token (which can
          only happen for "tbody", "tfoot" and "thead", or, in the
          fragment case), then this is a parse error and the token must be
          ignored.

          Otherwise, close the cell (see below) and reprocess the current
          token.

   Anything else
          Process the token using the rules for the "in body" insertion
          mode.

   Where the steps above say to close the cell, they mean to run the
   following algorithm:
    1. If the stack of open elements has a td element in table scope, then
       act as if an end tag token with the tag name "td" had been seen.
    2. Otherwise, the stack of open elements will have a th element in
       table scope; act as if an end tag token with the tag name "th" had
       been seen.

   The stack of open elements cannot have both a td and a th element in
   table scope at the same time, nor can it have neither when the
   insertion mode is "in cell".

      8.2.5.18 The "in select" insertion mode

   When the insertion mode is "in select", tokens must be handled as
   follows:

   A character token
          Insert the token's character into the current node.

   A comment token
          Append a Comment node to the current node with the data
          attribute set to the data given in the comment token.

   A DOCTYPE token
          Parse error. Ignore the token.

   A start tag whose tag name is "html"
          Process the token using the rules for the "in body" insertion
          mode.

   A start tag whose tag name is "option"
          If the current node is an option element, act as if an end tag
          with the tag name "option" had been seen.

          Insert an HTML element for the token.

   A start tag whose tag name is "optgroup"
          If the current node is an option element, act as if an end tag
          with the tag name "option" had been seen.

          If the current node is an optgroup element, act as if an end tag
          with the tag name "optgroup" had been seen.

          Insert an HTML element for the token.

   An end tag whose tag name is "optgroup"
          First, if the current node is an option element, and the node
          immediately before it in the stack of open elements is an
          optgroup element, then act as if an end tag with the tag name
          "option" had been seen.

          If the current node is an optgroup element, then pop that node
          from the stack of open elements. Otherwise, this is a parse
          error; ignore the token.

   An end tag whose tag name is "option"
          If the current node is an option element, then pop that node
          from the stack of open elements. Otherwise, this is a parse
          error; ignore the token.

   An end tag whose tag name is "select"
          If the stack of open elements does not have an element in table
          scope with the same tag name as the token, this is a parse
          error. Ignore the token. (fragment case)

          Otherwise:

          Pop elements from the stack of open elements until a select
          element has been popped from the stack.

          Reset the insertion mode appropriately.

   A start tag whose tag name is "select"
          Parse error. Act as if the token had been an end tag with the
          tag name "select" instead.

   A start tag whose tag name is one of: "input", "textarea"
          Parse error. Act as if an end tag with the tag name "select" had
          been seen, and reprocess the token.

   A start tag token whose tag name is "script"
          Process the token using the rules for the "in head" insertion
          mode.

   An end-of-file token
          If the current node is not the root html element, then this is a
          parse error.

          It can only be the current node in the fragment case.

          Stop parsing.

   Anything else
          Parse error. Ignore the token.

      8.2.5.19 The "in select in table" insertion mode

   When the insertion mode is "in select in table", tokens must be handled
   as follows:

   A start tag whose tag name is one of: "caption", "table", "tbody",
          "tfoot", "thead", "tr", "td", "th"
          Parse error. Act as if an end tag with the tag name "select" had
          been seen, and reprocess the token.

   An end tag whose tag name is one of: "caption", "table", "tbody",
          "tfoot", "thead", "tr", "td", "th"
          Parse error.

          If the stack of open elements has an element in table scope with
          the same tag name as that of the token, then act as if an end
          tag with the tag name "select" had been seen, and reprocess the
          token. Otherwise, ignore the token.

   Anything else
          Process the token using the rules for the "in select" insertion
          mode.

      8.2.5.20 The "in foreign content" insertion mode

   When the insertion mode is "in foreign content", tokens must be handled
   as follows:

   A character token
          Insert the token's character into the current node.

   A comment token
          Append a Comment node to the current node with the data
          attribute set to the data given in the comment token.

   A DOCTYPE token
          Parse error. Ignore the token.

   A start tag whose tag name is neither "mglyph" nor "malignmark", if the
          current node is an mi element in the MathML namespace.

   A start tag whose tag name is neither "mglyph" nor "malignmark", if the
          current node is an mo element in the MathML namespace.

   A start tag whose tag name is neither "mglyph" nor "malignmark", if the
          current node is an mn element in the MathML namespace.

   A start tag whose tag name is neither "mglyph" nor "malignmark", if the
          current node is an ms element in the MathML namespace.

   A start tag whose tag name is neither "mglyph" nor "malignmark", if the
          current node is an mtext element in the MathML namespace.

   A start tag, if the current node is an element in the HTML namespace.
   An end tag
          Process the token using the rules for the secondary insertion
          mode.

          If, after doing so, the insertion mode is still "in foreign
          content", but there is no element in scope that has a namespace
          other than the HTML namespace, switch the insertion mode to the
          secondary insertion mode.

   A start tag whose tag name is one of: "b", "big", "blockquote", "body",
          "br", "center", "code", "dd", "div", "dl", "dt", "em", "embed",
          "h1", "h2", "h3", "h4", "h5", "h6", "head", "hr", "i", "img",
          "li", "listing", "menu", "meta", "nobr", "ol", "p", "pre",
          "ruby", "s", "small", "span", "strong", "strike", "sub", "sup",
          "table", "tt", "u", "ul", "var"

   A start tag whose tag name is "font", if the token has any attributes
          named "color", "face", or "size"

   An end-of-file token
          Parse error.

          Pop elements from the stack of open elements until the current
          node is in the HTML namespace.

          Switch the insertion mode to the secondary insertion mode, and
          reprocess the token.

   Any other start tag
          If the current node is an element in the MathML namespace,
          adjust MathML attributes for the token. (This fixes the case of
          MathML attributes that are not all lowercase.)

          Adjust foreign attributes for the token. (This fixes the use of
          namespaced attributes, in particular XLink in SVG.)

          Insert a foreign element for the token, in the same namespace as
          the current node.

          If the token has its self-closing flag set, pop the current node
          off the stack of open elements and acknowledge the token's
          self-closing flag.

      8.2.5.21 The "after body" insertion mode

   When the insertion mode is "after body", tokens must be handled as
   follows:

   A character token that is one of one of U+0009 CHARACTER TABULATION,
          U+000A LINE FEED (LF), U+000C FORM FEED (FF), or U+0020 SPACE
          Process the token using the rules for the "in body" insertion
          mode.

   A comment token
          Append a Comment node to the first element in the stack of open
          elements (the html element), with the data attribute set to the
          data given in the comment token.

   A DOCTYPE token
          Parse error. Ignore the token.

   A start tag whose tag name is "html"
          Process the token using the rules for the "in body" insertion
          mode.

   An end tag whose tag name is "html"
          If the parser was originally created as part of the HTML
          fragment parsing algorithm, this is a parse error; ignore the
          token. (fragment case)

          Otherwise, switch the insertion mode to "after after body".

   An end-of-file token
          Stop parsing.

   Anything else
          Parse error. Switch the insertion mode to "in body" and
          reprocess the token.

      8.2.5.22 The "in frameset" insertion mode

   When the insertion mode is "in frameset", tokens must be handled as
   follows:

   A character token that is one of one of U+0009 CHARACTER TABULATION,
          U+000A LINE FEED (LF), U+000C FORM FEED (FF), or U+0020 SPACE
          Insert the character into the current node.

   A comment token
          Append a Comment node to the current node with the data
          attribute set to the data given in the comment token.

   A DOCTYPE token
          Parse error. Ignore the token.

   A start tag whose tag name is "html"
          Process the token using the rules for the "in body" insertion
          mode.

   A start tag whose tag name is "frameset"
          Insert an HTML element for the token.

   An end tag whose tag name is "frameset"
          If the current node is the root html element, then this is a
          parse error; ignore the token. (fragment case)

          Otherwise, pop the current node from the stack of open elements.

          If the parser was not originally created as part of the HTML
          fragment parsing algorithm (fragment case), and the current node
          is no longer a frameset element, then switch the insertion mode
          to "after frameset".

   A start tag whose tag name is "frame"
          Insert an HTML element for the token. Immediately pop the
          current node off the stack of open elements.

          Acknowledge the token's self-closing flag, if it is set.

   A start tag whose tag name is "noframes"
          Process the token using the rules for the "in head" insertion
          mode.

   An end-of-file token
          If the current node is not the root html element, then this is a
          parse error.

          It can only be the current node in the fragment case.

          Stop parsing.

   Anything else
          Parse error. Ignore the token.

      8.2.5.23 The "after frameset" insertion mode

   When the insertion mode is "after frameset", tokens must be handled as
   follows:

   A character token that is one of one of U+0009 CHARACTER TABULATION,
          U+000A LINE FEED (LF), U+000C FORM FEED (FF), or U+0020 SPACE
          Insert the character into the current node.

   A comment token
          Append a Comment node to the current node with the data
          attribute set to the data given in the comment token.

   A DOCTYPE token
          Parse error. Ignore the token.

   A start tag whose tag name is "html"
          Process the token using the rules for the "in body" insertion
          mode.

   An end tag whose tag name is "html"
          Switch the insertion mode to "after after frameset".

   A start tag whose tag name is "noframes"
          Process the token using the rules for the "in head" insertion
          mode.

   An end-of-file token
          Stop parsing.

   Anything else
          Parse error. Ignore the token.

   This doesn't handle UAs that don't support frames, or that do support
   frames but want to show the NOFRAMES content. Supporting the former is
   easy; supporting the latter is harder.

      8.2.5.24 The "after after body" insertion mode

   When the insertion mode is "after after body", tokens must be handled
   as follows:

   A comment token
          Append a Comment node to the Document object with the data
          attribute set to the data given in the comment token.

   A DOCTYPE token
   A character token that is one of one of U+0009 CHARACTER TABULATION,
          U+000A LINE FEED (LF), U+000C FORM FEED (FF), or U+0020 SPACE

   A start tag whose tag name is "html"
          Process the token using the rules for the "in body" insertion
          mode.

   An end-of-file token
          Stop parsing.

   Anything else
          Parse error. Switch the insertion mode to "in body" and
          reprocess the token.

      8.2.5.25 The "after after frameset" insertion mode

   When the insertion mode is "after after frameset", tokens must be
   handled as follows:

   A comment token
          Append a Comment node to the Document object with the data
          attribute set to the data given in the comment token.

   A DOCTYPE token
   A character token that is one of one of U+0009 CHARACTER TABULATION,
          U+000A LINE FEED (LF), U+000C FORM FEED (FF), or U+0020 SPACE

   A start tag whose tag name is "html"
          Process the token using the rules for the "in body" insertion
          mode.

   An end-of-file token
          Stop parsing.

   A start tag whose tag name is "noframes"
          Process the token using the rules for the "in head" insertion
          mode.

   Anything else
          Parse error. Ignore the token.

    8.2.6 The end

   Once the user agent stops parsing the document, the user agent must
   follow the steps in this section.

   First, the current document readiness must be set to "interactive".

   Then, the rules for when a script completes loading start applying
   (script execution is no longer managed by the parser).

   If any of the scripts in the list of scripts that will execute as soon
   as possible have completed loading, or if the list of scripts that will
   execute asynchronously is not empty and the first script in that list
   has completed loading, then the user agent must act as if those scripts
   just completed loading, following the rules given for that in the
   script element definition.

   Then, if the list of scripts that will execute when the document has
   finished parsing is not empty, and the first item in this list has
   already completed loading, then the user agent must act as if that
   script just finished loading.

   By this point, there will be no scripts that have loaded but have not
   yet been executed.

   The user agent must then fire a simple event called DOMContentLoaded at
   the Document.

   Once everything that delays the load event has completed, the user
   agent must set the current document readiness to "complete", and then
   fire a load event at the body element.

   delaying the load event for things like image loads allows for intranet
   port scans (even without javascript!). Should we really encode that
   into the spec?

    8.2.7 Coercing an HTML DOM into an infoset

   When an application uses an HTML parser in conjunction with an XML
   pipeline, it is possible that the constructed DOM is not compatible
   with the XML tool chain in certain subtle ways. For example, an XML
   toolchain might not be able to represent attributes with the name
   xmlns, since they conflict with the Namespaces in XML syntax. There is
   also some data that the HTML parser generates that isn't included in
   the DOM itself. This section specifies some rules for handling these
   issues.

   If the XML API being used doesn't support DOCTYPEs, the tool may drop
   DOCTYPEs altogether.

   If the XML API doesn't support attributes in no namespace that are
   named "xmlns", attributes whose names start with "xmlns:", or
   attributes in the XMLNS namespace, then the tool may drop such
   attributes.

   The tool may annotate the output with any namespace declarations
   required for proper operation.

   If the XML API being used restricts the allowable characters in the
   local names of elements and attributes, then the tool may map all
   element and attribute local names that the API wouldn't support to a
   set of names that are allowed, by replacing any character that isn't
   supported with the uppercase letter U and the five digits of the
   character's Unicode codepoint when expressed in hexadecimal, using
   digits 0-9 and capital letters A-F as the symbols, in increasing
   numeric order.

   For example, the element name foo<bar, which can be output by the HTML
   parser, though it is neither a legal HTML element name nor a
   well-formed XML element name, would be converted into fooU0003Cbar,
   which is a well-formed XML element name (though it's still not legal in
   HTML by any means).

   As another example, consider the attribute xlink:href. Used on a MathML
   element, it becomes, after being adjusted, an attribute with a prefix
   "xlink" and a local name "href". However, used on an HTML element, it
   becomes an attribute with no prefix and the local name "xlink:href",
   which is not a valid NCName, and thus might not be accepted by an XML
   API. It could thus get converted, becoming "xlinkU0003Ahref".

   The resulting names from this conversion conveniently can't clash with
   any attribute generated by the HTML parser, since those are all either
   lowercase or those listed in the adjust foreign attributes algorithm's
   table.

   If the XML API restricts comments from having two consecutive U+002D
   HYPHEN-MINUS characters (--), the tool may insert a single U+0020 SPACE
   character between any such offending characters.

   If the XML API restricts comments from ending in a U+002D HYPHEN-MINUS
   character (-), the tool may insert a single U+0020 SPACE character at
   the end of such comments.

   If the XML API restricts allowed characters in character data, the tool
   may replace any U+000C FORM FEED (FF) character with a U+0020 SPACE
   character, and any other literal non-XML character with a U+FFFD
   REPLACEMENT CHARACTER.

   If the tool has no way to convey out-of-band information, then the tool
   may drop the following information:
     * Whether the document is set to no quirks mode, limited quirks mode,
       or quirks mode
     * The association between form controls and forms that aren't their
       nearest form element ancestor (use of the form element pointer in
       the parser)

   The mutations allowed by this section apply after the HTML parser's
   rules have been applied. For example, a <a::> start tag will be closed
   by a </a::> end tag, and never by a </aU0003AU0003A> end tag, even if
   the user agent is using the rules above to then generate an actual
   element in the DOM with the name aU0003AU0003A for that start tag.

  8.3 Namespaces

   The HTML namespace is: http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml

   The MathML namespace is: http://www.w3.org/1998/Math/MathML

   The SVG namespace is: http://www.w3.org/2000/svg

   The XLink namespace is: http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink

   The XML namespace is: http://www.w3.org/XML/1998/namespace

   The XMLNS namespace is: http://www.w3.org/2000/xmlns/