- From: Koji Ishii <kojiishi@gluesoft.co.jp>
- Date: Sat, 22 Jan 2011 20:22:11 -0500
- To: David Clarke <w3@dragonthoughts.co.uk>
- CC: WWW Style <www-style@w3.org>, CJK discussion <public-i18n-cjk@w3.org>
Hi David, Thank you for the feedback. If you can look at the picture in the spec[1] and that looks the same way as you see in what you have there, I don't see any problems at all. If they look differently from the picture, it'd be appreciated if you can scan the materials and post to the ML. [1] http://dev.w3.org/csswg/css3-text/#text-emphasis-style Regards, Koji -----Original Message----- From: David Clarke [mailto:w3@dragonthoughts.co.uk] Sent: Friday, January 21, 2011 8:59 PM To: Koji Ishii Cc: WWW Style; CJK discussion Subject: Re: [css3-text] emphasis dots used with ruby Koji san There's one other use of Ruby, combined with emphasis marks - For people studying Japanese as a foreign language, teaching materials often include both Furigana (i.e. Ruby) as well as emphasis marks, for particular parts of a text. Would this be a problem? On 03/01/2011 18:18, Koji Ishii wrote: > Kenny, > > I talked with JLTF. From JLTF perspective, applying emphasis marks and ruby to the same characters is something editors should avoid in regular books, so they don't have clear rules for that case. If the behavior is important for Manga (Japanese comics), JLTF can agree with what you proposed. > > It is also pointed out that emphasis marks are what authors specify, while ruby for children books are usually specified by editors and/or printers. It makes sense that what authors specify wins over what editors/printers specify. > > I updated the ED, you can see the change at the end of the 'text-emphasis-style' property[1]. > > Thank you for your valuable feedback, and the effort to make the spec better. > > [1] http://dev.w3.org/csswg/css3-text/#text-emphasis-style > > > Regards, > Koji David Clarke
Received on Sunday, 23 January 2011 01:22:00 UTC