- From: François Yergeau <francois@yergeau.com>
- Date: Thu, 09 Feb 2006 14:25:04 -0800
- To: Bjoern Hoehrmann <derhoermi@gmx.net>
- Cc: Felix Sasaki <fsasaki@w3.org>, public-cdf@w3.org, public-i18n-core@w3.org
Bjoern Hoehrmann a écrit : > It seems what you want is that the document element in SVG documents > inherits language information from referencing elements if no other > language information is available. So if you have a graphic without > any language information referenced from a german XHTML document, the > graphic should be considered a german graphic. Yes. The scenario I have in mind is the following: I have an XHTML doc containing an SVG image. There is an xml:lang="de" somewhere in the XHTML, which applies to the SVG image by virtue of being "above" it in the tree; there is no xml:lang in the SVG. And there is something observable (styling, behaviour, whatever) in the image or in script that depends on language. In this state of affairs the language is German and I observe proper German styling/behaviour/whatever. Now I edit the document and externalize the image (perhaps because I reuse it several times in the document). It is my strong sentiment that the mere fact of externalizing the image should not change its styling or behaviour, which would happen if the language information is lost in the process. The CDR framework seems to go to quite some length to make sure that the separate DOMs can communicate and that e.g. events propagate properly after externalization. What we are requesting here is that this also be the case for the basic XML inheritable attributes (of course we i18n folks are mostly interested in xml:lang, but in principle it is the same for xml:space). Externalizing the image does add a new possible authoritative source of language information: the HTTP Content-Language header. So be it. If there is authoritative information, use it; but if there is none, then I think that the xml:lang that applied before externalization should still apply after. There is nothing new about having multiple sources of language information with different priorities, see for instance 8.1.2 in the HTML 4 spec. > If that's desired here, could you elaborate whether this is specific > to SVG or should apply to other formats aswell Nothing specific to (X)HTML or SVG here, it's just the first example that came to mind. Anything XML has xml:lang, and HTML has lang. Since CDR seems to be heavily DOM-based, I would say "anything that can have a DOM". > Could you also elaborate on why such a requirement or recommendation > would be better than simply to allow implementations to apply heuristics > (which may or may not include what you propose) to determine the > language? "allow implementations to apply heuristics" sounds like a blank check to me, and antinomic to interoperability. You don't want CDR browsers to behave randomly, do you? Regards, -- François Yergeau
Received on Thursday, 9 February 2006 22:25:48 UTC