- From: Nat McCully via GitHub <sysbot+gh@w3.org>
- Date: Wed, 12 Feb 2025 02:29:25 +0000
- To: public-css-archive@w3.org
Agree with the above concerns about using the first font to decide what the dominant script of the paragraph is. When mixing font scripts with different dominant metrics, or even the same script fonts that disagree about where their design space lies relative to the font origin, one must decide 1) what is the user's intent for the paragraph? Is it Japanese dominant (e.g. cjk embox based line height and centered baseline), or Latin-dominant (e.g. all runs align to font origin/Latin baseline, within a height defined by the font ascent/descent)? and 2) how all the subordinate runs should align to the dominant system (e.g. center the cap height of Latin-based runs in the dominant line cjk embox). It gets more complicated with other scripts not yet well-defined as to how they differ from J or Latin, but Indic or Arabic should be definable similarly to how we defined the cjk embox vs. Latin baseline/ascent/descent. -- GitHub Notification of comment by macnmm Please view or discuss this issue at https://github.com/w3c/csswg-drafts/issues/10928#issuecomment-2652504893 using your GitHub account -- Sent via github-notify-ml as configured in https://github.com/w3c/github-notify-ml-config
Received on Wednesday, 12 February 2025 02:29:26 UTC