- From: fantasai via GitHub <sysbot+gh@w3.org>
- Date: Fri, 30 Dec 2022 20:28:04 +0000
- To: public-css-archive@w3.org
This is considered normal line-breaking behavior in these languages, right? I think it would be appropriate for the CSS spec to require these behaviors, but we'd need something to cite. If Unicode or i18n can provide a definitive reference, we can cite that. Assuming it's normal line-breaking, I wouldn't call the Javanese behavior hyphenation; hyphenation is breaks within “words” that usually would otherwise stay together, is enabled only sometimes, is de-prioritized compared to regular breaks, and typically involves inserting a visual marker indicating the break. -- GitHub Notification of comment by fantasai Please view or discuss this issue at https://github.com/w3c/csswg-drafts/issues/2976#issuecomment-1368080805 using your GitHub account -- Sent via github-notify-ml as configured in https://github.com/w3c/github-notify-ml-config
Received on Friday, 30 December 2022 20:28:06 UTC