- From: <bugzilla@jessica.w3.org>
- Date: Tue, 26 Oct 2010 02:51:08 +0000
- To: public-i18n-bidi@w3.org
http://www.w3.org/Bugs/Public/show_bug.cgi?id=10809 --- Comment #26 from Aharon Lanin <aharon.lists.lanin@gmail.com> 2010-10-26 02:51:06 UTC --- (In reply to comment #23) > I observe that > > 1) This feature is only useful if the application is willing to do significant > work to opt in. Yes. > Using it is not trivial if the information is submitted as a > separate piece of info -- you'd have to track that extra info and store it > out-of-band somehow, which would be very intrusive. It is not intrusive if that's what the app wants to do. And if the app wants to store it by adding control characters to the input value, it can do that too - that's their business. Adding control characters is a lot easier than stripping them off. > > 2) If bug 10821 is fixed, so that JavaScript can reliably tell what the > direction of the input is (even accounting for the user manually switching the > direction), then this feature could be emulated by JavaScript. This wouldn't > take much more work than adapting an application that uses the feature to begin > with -- the JavaScript to submit the info (either as invisible characters or > out-of-band) is trivial. As explained in the proposal, this is only so when the page can use script. What if the page is being sent as HTML-mail, where script is not allowed - but forms are. -- Configure bugmail: http://www.w3.org/Bugs/Public/userprefs.cgi?tab=email ------- You are receiving this mail because: ------- You are on the CC list for the bug. You reported the bug.
Received on Tuesday, 26 October 2010 02:51:13 UTC