- From: Addison Phillips via GitHub <sysbot+gh@w3.org>
- Date: Sun, 15 Jul 2018 19:03:03 +0000
- To: public-i18n-archive@w3.org
@asmusf You're right, the text does imply that. I have tried to fix it. @Richard57 I agree. I actually went further with a rewrite to ensure clarity. Here's the full quote: > Finally, most scripts, when written horizontally, proceed from left-to-right. However, some scripts, such as Arabic and Hebrew, are written predominently from right-to-left. Texts can be written in a mix of these scripts or include character sequences, such as numbers or quotes in another script, that run in the opposite direction to other parts of the text. This intermixing of text direction is called bidirectional text or "bidi" for short. The Unicode Bidirectional Algorithm [UAX9] describes how such mixed-direction text is processed for display. For most text, the directional handling can be derived from the text itself. However, there are many cases in which the algorithm needs additional information in order to present text correctly. For more examples, see [html-bidi]. @Richard57 How do you want to be credited in the acknowledgements section btw? I currently have you as `@Richard57`. -- GitHub Notification of comment by aphillips Please view or discuss this issue at https://github.com/w3c/charmod-norm/issues/171#issuecomment-405110975 using your GitHub account
Received on Sunday, 15 July 2018 19:03:06 UTC