<p>“Hello world”</p>, says HAL.
both are wrong in the perspective of xml (structured document coding):
<quotation>Hello World</quotation>, says HAL
is the way to go
Hum, yes. But for $x^2 + y^2=25$ you should write (from one of your previous post): \setupoutput[pdftex] \usemodule[mathml] % \usetypescript[palatino][texnansi] \setupbodyfont[palatino] % \usetypescript[palatino][texnansi] \setupbodyfont[times] % \usetypescript[fourier] [ec] \setupbodyfont[fourier] \starttext \startTEXpage \startXMLdata <math> <apply> <eq/> <apply> <plus/> <ci> x </ci> <apply> <power/> <apply> <sin/> <ci> x </ci> </apply> <cn> 2 </cn> </apply> <ci> y </ci> </apply> <ci> y </ci> </apply> </math> \stopXMLdata \stopTEXpage \stoptext So I think xml is an exchange format, not a human language as are LaTeX/ConTeXt or even TeX. A context2html solution is a big miss for ConTeXt tex4ht could be that solution. (if only a tex4ht power user would switch from LaTeX to ConTeXt :-) Maurice Diamantini