- From: Martin J. Dürst <duerst@it.aoyama.ac.jp>
- Date: Sun, 29 Jan 2017 17:52:32 +0900
- To: Koji Ishii <kojiishi@gmail.com>, Nat McCully <nmccully@adobe.com>
- CC: r12a <ishida@w3.org>, "CJK discussion (public-i18n-cjk@w3.org)" <public-i18n-cjk@w3.org>, "KOBAYASHI Tatsuo(FAMILY Given)" <tlk@kobysh.com>, W3C_J_Layout <member-japanese-layout-ja@w3.org>, "member-japanese-layout-en@w3.org" <member-japanese-layout-en@w3.org>, "binn@k.email.ne.jp" <binn@k.email.ne.jp>, Shinyu Murakami <murakami@vivliostyle.com>, MURATA Makoto <eb2m-mrt@asahi-net.or.jp>, Florian Rivoal <florian@rivoal.net>, Koji Ishii <kojiishi@gluesoft.co.jp>, "fantasai (fantasai@inkedblade.net)" <fantasai@inkedblade.net>
On 2017/01/27 23:02, Koji Ishii wrote: > I consider the all "Kanji one + IDEOGRAPHIC COMMA > <chrome-extension://pipjflhdnjcdflbkmoldkkpphmhcfaio/info.html#、>" style > Martin mentioned is a style of bullets list; I mean it's more like <ul> > than <ol>. That's a very good explanation, thanks! > This is quite traditional, seen in documents hundreds years ago, > but not common in modern documents as Nat said. MS Word has special rules > to handle this case since people use this style when they want to give > traditional impression to their documents. Just so that this is clear: It is still used, and should be available somehow in HTML+CSS. Regards, Martin.
Received on Sunday, 29 January 2017 10:04:05 UTC