- From: Ehsan Akhgari <ehsan@mozilla.com>
- Date: Fri, 24 Feb 2012 12:28:17 -0500
- To: "Aharon (Vladimir) Lanin" <aharon@google.com>
- Cc: public-i18n-bidi@w3.org, Martin J. Dürst <duerst@it.aoyama.ac.jp>
- Message-ID: <CANTur_6bDr9-Q8-FpQOSk7qpTo_s1nG9dzHx8jfK--FRSfGD2w@mail.gmail.com>
I'm fine with attribsdir as you proposed, although I'm not quite sure about the more complex syntax, since it's so different to the way other attributes in HTML work. Let's hear what others think. Cheers, -- Ehsan <http://ehsanakhgari.org/> On Thu, Feb 23, 2012 at 11:53 PM, Aharon (Vladimir) Lanin <aharon@google.com > wrote: > Good example. > > In the past, Ian has already rejected titledir etc. > > Perhaps they will be more receptive to attribsdir, since it's just one > attribute and tackles some serious problems. > > Your example could be handled by also allowing syntax like > "title:rtl;placeholder:ltr". Even just " placeholder:ltr" could do if the > other attributes then follow the default (which in this case would > presumably be rtl despite dir=ltr on the <input>). Since it does not > inherit, there would not be too much difficulty supporting the complex > syntax. > > But attribsdir would still be useful even if it only allowed a simple > value. > > Aharon > On Feb 23, 2012 6:11 PM, "Ehsan Akhgari" <ehsan@mozilla.com> wrote: > >> How about something like: >> >> <input name="phone" title="TELEPHONE" placeholder="(123) 456-7890"> >> >> If we introduce an attribsdir attribute, I can see people asking to >> differentiate between different attributes, such as the example above. >> From a bidi perspective, the ultimate solution is to have a directional >> attribute for every user visible attribute, such as titledir, >> placeholderdir, etc. But honestly I don't expect such a proposal to be >> easily accepted in WHATWG, given the recent resistance towards >> placeholderdir. >> >> -- >> Ehsan >> <http://ehsanakhgari.org/> >> >> >> On Thu, Feb 23, 2012 at 6:49 AM, Aharon (Vladimir) Lanin < >> aharon@google.com> wrote: >> >>> Well, I, for one, am not so happy with my proposal :-). >>> >>> Its solution is to apply dir=auto to the individual user-visible >>> attributes, even though in most cases the values of such attributes are not >>> dynamic, but localized to the page locale, e.g. (in an English page) <input >>> dir="auto" name="purpose" placeholder="The purpose of your visit.">. Using >>> estimation for them is not just wasteful, but bound to reach the wrong >>> conclusion occasionally. >>> >>> And it does not address the long-standing issue of no way to set the >>> directionality of an attribute (other than using formatting >>> characters). The canonical examples are: >>> >>> - <input dir="ltr" name="telephone" title="PHONE NUMBER.">, which has to >>> be worked around as <span title="PHONE NUMBER."><input dir="ltr" >>> name="telephone"></span> >>> - <input dir="ltr" name="telephone" placeholder="PHONE NUMBER.">, which >>> has no workaround other than RLE + PDF. >>> >>> What if we could instead have a new attribute, >>> attribsdir="ltr|rtl|auto", which would determine the directionality in >>> which the element's user-visible attributes must be displayed. A very >>> important part of this would be the default value. IMO, it would be best if >>> it could default to the dir attribute value of the closest ancestor - or >>> the element itself unless it is <input> or <textarea> - that has an >>> explicit dir attribute with a value other than "auto". If there is no such >>> ancestor, the default is "ltr". Thus: >>> >>> - the only way to get attribsdir=auto is to specify it explicitly >>> - the explicit dir attribute value of <input> and <textarea>, which is >>> presumably meant to correspond to the directionality of their content, not >>> their user-visible attributes, does not affect their default attribsdir. >>> - with the exceptions of <input dir="...">, <textarea dir="...">, and >>> <whatever dir=auto>, the result is backward-compatible. >>> >>> Examples: >>> >>> 1. <html><body><div title="?">: ltr >>> >>> 2. <html dir=rtl><body><div title="?">: rtl >>> >>> 3. <html><body><div dir=rtl title="?">: rtl >>> >>> 4. <html><body><div><div dir=rtl><div><div title="?">: rtl >>> >>> 5. <html dir=rtl><body><div><input dir=ltr title="?"> : rtl >>> >>> 6. <html><body><div dir=rtl><div dir="auto" title="?">hello</div>: rtl >>> >>> 7. <html><body><div dir=rtl><div dir="auto">ltr content<div title="?">: >>> rtl >>> >>> 8. <html dir=rtl><body><div title="?" attribsdir="ltr">: ltr >>> >>> 9. <html dir=rtl><body><div title="?" attribsdir="auto">: auto >>> >>> Even if we couldn't get the <input> and <textarea> exception, we would >>> still be ok - the page would just have to specify attribsdir explicitly on >>> the problematic inputs. >>> >>> Aharon >>> >>> On Thu, Feb 23, 2012 at 11:32 AM, "Martin J. Dürst" < >>> duerst@it.aoyama.ac.jp> wrote: >>> >>>> On 2012/02/23 1:11, Ehsan Akhgari wrote: >>>> >>>>> On Wed, Feb 22, 2012 at 10:04 AM, Aharon (Vladimir) Lanin< >>>>> aharon@google.com >>>>> >>>>>> wrote: >>>>>> >>>>> >>>> One possibility is to divorce user-visible attributes from their >>>>>> elements' >>>>>> directionality completely, always estimating the directionality of >>>>>> each >>>>>> attribute by its content. This suffers from backwards compatibility >>>>>> problems (since estimation is a heuristic that sometimes gives the >>>>>> wrong >>>>>> answer). >>>>>> >>>>>> A better possibility is to divorce it only for elements under the >>>>>> influence of dir=auto. Thus, if an element has dir=auto (explicitly or >>>>>> implicitly, the latter being the case for<bdi>), each of the >>>>>> attributes in >>>>>> the subrtree rooted at that element, with the exception of elements >>>>>> specifying dir="ltr" or dir="rtl" and their descendants, must be >>>>>> displayed >>>>>> to the user as if they had a dir=auto of heir own. >>>>>> >>>>>> >>>>> I like the second proposal better. Although I have to say that it has >>>>> been >>>>> worded a bit vaguely. What I have in mind is for the title attribute >>>>> in >>>>> the following example to have a resolved RTL direction: >>>>> >>>>> <p dir="auto" title="RTL TEXT followed by ltr text">ltr text FOLLOWED >>>>> BY >>>>> RTL TEXT</p> >>>>> >>>> >>>> I agree with Ehsan that the second proposal is better. It's something >>>> that comes quite naturally once one gets used to it. >>>> >>>> Regards, Martin. >>>> >>> >>> >>
Received on Friday, 24 February 2012 17:29:29 UTC