- From: <bugzilla@jessica.w3.org>
- Date: Wed, 10 Nov 2010 17:36:23 +0000
- To: public-i18n-bidi@w3.org
http://www.w3.org/Bugs/Public/show_bug.cgi?id=11211 --- Comment #11 from Ian 'Hixie' Hickson <ian@hixie.ch> 2010-11-10 17:36:23 UTC --- (In reply to comment #9) > > > he said 'PLEASE SHOW ME<br> > > THE EXAMPLE' and i did That's what <blockquote> and/or <pre> are for. I don't think <br> would be appropriate there. (In reply to comment #10) > - to control the line breaks in headlines that span multiple lines, That's presentational, and should be handled in CSS, not in the markup. > - control line breaks in advertising copy where the text has to match a certain > pattern, That's presentational also, probably an SVG issue, not HTML. > - create a line wrap without breaking the paragraph formatting - e.g indents > and paragraph spacing. That's entirely CSS (text-indent, padding, etc). > In each of these cases the user intends to insert an entity into the line that > semantically means "line break" but does not mean "paragraph break". I don't think there are any line break semantics above, it's all presentation. Can someone from the CSS working group confirm whether the LS character in content will cause a line break without a bidi paragraph break, and cite the relevant part of the relevant spec? Given that, I think we'd be good to go with just adding an attribute to <br> to use LS rather than LF (though I'm still not convinced we have any use cases for <br> _without_ this feature, so I'm tempted to make the attribute required if there's any RTL content around the <br> element). -- 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.
Received on Wednesday, 10 November 2010 17:36:25 UTC