- From: John Cowan <cowan@mercury.ccil.org>
- Date: Sat, 25 Oct 2014 11:44:25 -0400
- To: Sangwhan Moon <sangwhan@iki.fi>
- Cc: 조은 <apes0123@gmail.com>, Koji Ishii <kojiishi@gluesoft.co.jp>, fantasai <fantasai.lists@inkedblade.net>, "Jungshik SHIN (신정식)" <jshin1987@gmail.com>, KIG HTML <public-html-ig-ko@w3.org>, CJK discussion <public-i18n-cjk@w3.org>, hyunyoung kim <corolla.kim@gmail.com>, "www-style@w3.org" <www-style@w3.org>, Daniel Glazman <daniel.glazman@disruptive-innovations.com>
Sangwhan Moon scripsit: > [1] Wikipedia in Korean has a lot of these polyglot pages and I don't think it should/will change in the future. > To this day, [2] polyglot notation in news headlines is still common. National laws are packed with this kind > of notation and any document that contains legal citation will effectively be affected. But this is true *only if* there are runs of hanja, not just single isolated hanja, *and* the document is not tagged for Korean language. Any problems with kr.Wikipedia can be resolved just by ensuring that all pages are language-tagged. -- John Cowan http://www.ccil.org/~cowan cowan@ccil.org "Make a case, man; you're full of naked assertions, just like Nietzsche." "Oh, i suffer from that, too. But you know, naked assertions or GTFO." --heard on #scheme, sorta
Received on Saturday, 25 October 2014 15:45:12 UTC