- From: Koji Ishii <kojiishi@gluesoft.co.jp>
- Date: Sat, 26 Jul 2014 17:55:50 +0000
- To: glados <apes0123@gmail.com>
- CC: CJK discussion <public-i18n-cjk@w3.org>, "public-html-ig-ko@w3.org" <public-html-ig-ko@w3.org>
- Message-ID: <1CA9C66A-57B9-4F79-9F39-0B0B452B5D81@gluesoft.co.jp>
Thank you for the information and sorry for my very late reply. On Jul 9, 2014, at 6:36 PM, glados <apes0123@gmail.com<mailto:apes0123@gmail.com>> wrote: Korean Language use two character type that Chinese Character and Korean Character(Hangul) And I think your first Question¡¯s answer is correct. There are Three documents represent Korean Language 1. ancient document at 1681<http://yoksa.aks.ac.kr/jsp/aa/VolView.jsp?mode=&page=1&fcs=s&fcsd=st&cf=&cd=&gb=&aa10up=kh2_je_a_vsu_22590_000&aa10no=kh2_je_a_vsu_22590_001&aa15no=001&aa20no=22590_001_0001&gnd1=&gnd2=&keywords=&rowcount=10> 2. Mostly Hangul, a few to some ideographic characters per a paragraph or a page.<http://yeongcheon.grandculture.net/Contents/Index?contents_id=GC05100955&local=yeongcheon> 3. Hangul Only<http://navercast.naver.com/contents.nhn?rid=214&contents_id=61057> if you want more Korean ancient document, please find Jangseogak Royal Archives documents<http://yoksa.aks.ac.kr/jsp/aa/BookList.jsp?fcs=s&fcsd=st>. i think the ratio is 10:20:70. Very interesting. Is this number in your mind the same for both web and print? i think Korean Text also expands between each Characters. This Example is W3C Requirements for hangul Text Layout and Typography's example<http://www.w3.org/TR/klreq/#characters>. <4-16.png> And if this Example is correct, Q5 ~ Q7 will resolve itself. Thanks! This case is covered by text-justify: distribute[1], assuming you want spacing between Latin letters as well in this case. [1] http://dev.w3.org/csswg/css-text/#valdef-text-justify.distribute
Received on Saturday, 26 July 2014 17:56:29 UTC