- From: Koji Ishii via GitHub <sysbot+gh@w3.org>
- Date: Sun, 20 Mar 2022 12:04:59 +0000
- To: public-css-archive@w3.org
@fantasai > My personal read on this issue is that there is a lot more research and development to be done here, and that it's premature to build this into CSS. If we just added a value to "turn this on", each implementation will break _substantially_ differently... From our point of view, what this issue is asking are: 1. Trying to show examples of "word boundaries (or phrase boundaries)" defined in [Word Boundaries] in the current CSS Text for Japanese and a few more languages, to define them more strictly and to reduce implementation differences. 2. Sharing feedback we've got so far in regards to the automatic word boundaries detection, and wish to fulfill their requests. Can I ask whether you're against the current [Word Boundaries] in the CSS Text, or you feel the current "word boundaries (or phrase boundaries)" defined in [Word Boundaries] is solid but phrase boundaries in this issue is premature? If the latter, can I ask how you see these two differently? [Word Boundaries]: https://drafts.csswg.org/css-text-4/#word-boundaries -- GitHub Notification of comment by kojiishi Please view or discuss this issue at https://github.com/w3c/csswg-drafts/issues/6730#issuecomment-1073236665 using your GitHub account -- Sent via github-notify-ml as configured in https://github.com/w3c/github-notify-ml-config
Received on Sunday, 20 March 2022 12:05:00 UTC