Within the standards that W3C create, do they have a set of states they go through before they are a standard and what are those states?
For example HTML 5.1 currently is in Working Draft.
Within the standards that W3C create, do they have a set of states they go through before they are a standard and what are those states?
For example HTML 5.1 currently is in Working Draft.
The process is typically linked in the section "Status of This Document".
For HTML 5.1, it says:
This document is governed by the 1 August 2014 W3C Process Document.
This links to the World Wide Web Consortium Process Document from 2014-08-01 (the latest version is always accessible from http://www.w3.org/Consortium/Process/).
For technical reports that should become Recommendations, this is the process:
- Publication of the First Public Working Draft,
- Publication of zero or more revised Public Working Drafts.
- Publication of a Candidate Recommendation.
- Publication of a Proposed Recommendation.
- Publication as a W3C Recommendation.
- Possibly, Publication as an Edited Recommendation
However, it’s also possible to go steps back:
The Director […] may require the specification to return to a lower maturity level.
Ahh I think I literally just found the answer on Consortium/Process, too many tabs open!
The W3C Recommendation track:
Working Draft
A Working Draft generally represents work in progress and a commitment by W3C to pursue work in a particular area. The label "Working Draft" does not imply consensus within W3C about the document.Candidate Recommendation
A Candidate Recommendation is a stable Working Draft that the Director has proposed to the community for implementation experience and feedback.Proposed Recommendation
A Proposed Recommendation is a Candidate Recommendation that has benefitted from implementation experience and has been sent to the Advisory Committee for review.Recommendation
A Recommendation reflects consensus within W3C, as represented by the Director's approval. W3C considers that the ideas or technology specified by a Recommendation are appropriate for widespread deployment and promote W3C's mission.