It looks like css2.1 has just surfaced after a series of retags. While those edits seem fine, we already have a css2 tag to cover CSS level 2; CSS2.1 is but merely CSS2 with a few (on the surface) subtle changes — the ".1" stands for "Revision 1".
Further, CSS2.1, with its changes, "is intended to replace CSS2" as the de jure CSS level 2. Vendors implementing CSS level 2 should refer to the CSS2.1 spec instead of CSS2. CSS3 itself is based on CSS2.1 as well.
From what I've seen, the only question that comes even close to differentiating the old CSS2 spec and the new CSS2.1 spec is:
It comes close only because a potential answer that I'm still working on (yes, Yi Jiang, I've been busy) would mention the old spec as an essential factor, but even then that's not in the question.
Besides that, it seems css2 and css2.1 are generally used to mean the same thing, and most Web authors aren't interested in the differences/changes between the two anyway. Is there any real purpose in having both tags instead of consolidating them? And which tag should we use?
