- From: <bugzilla@jessica.w3.org>
- Date: Tue, 02 Nov 2010 21:45:18 +0000
- To: public-i18n-bidi@w3.org
http://www.w3.org/Bugs/Public/show_bug.cgi?id=10818 Ian 'Hixie' Hickson <ian@hixie.ch> changed: What |Removed |Added ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- Status|ASSIGNED |RESOLVED Resolution| |WONTFIX --- Comment #13 from Ian 'Hixie' Hickson <ian@hixie.ch> 2010-11-02 21:45:17 UTC --- EDITOR'S RESPONSE: This is an Editor's Response to your comment. If you are satisfied with this response, please change the state of this bug to CLOSED. If you have additional information and would like the editor to reconsider, please reopen this bug. If you would like to escalate the issue to the full HTML Working Group, please add the TrackerRequest keyword to this bug, and suggest title and text for the tracker issue; or you may create a tracker issue yourself, if you are able to do so. For more details, see this document: http://dev.w3.org/html5/decision-policy/decision-policy.html Status: Rejected Change Description: no spec change Rationale: I don't think that having an attribute for each freeform text attribute to specify its direction (and presumably another to specify its language) is a scalable solution or particularly good language design. I don't see why we'd discourage people from using bidi formatting characters in freeform (markup-free) text. Bidi named character references seem reasonable to me (but file another bug if you want them). I don't really follow why you'd need to dynamically change the direction of an "alt" attribute or why doing so is easier with an attribute than using bidi formatting characters. Also, with regard to using the latter, they don't have to be invisible if we use character references (named or numeric). The problem described also seems already solvable using nested elements. In conclusion, I maintain that the conclusion drawn in comment 3 still holds. -- 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, 2 November 2010 21:45:20 UTC