- From: Phillips, Addison <addison@amazon.com>
- Date: Mon, 1 Mar 2010 17:47:57 -0500
- To: Scott Wilson <scott.bradley.wilson@gmail.com>
- CC: "marcosc@opera.com" <marcosc@opera.com>, public-webapps <public-webapps@w3.org>, "public-i18n-core@w3.org" <public-i18n-core@w3.org>
> > Thanks Addison - and yes, I think this makes a lot of sense for a > "content"-style spec like HTML, however as the Widgets P&C is a > configuration document most of which is IRIs, integers and so on > rather than text content its less of a clear case. > No, I understand and don't disagree. However, there is something to be said for making it an attribute of <widget>, for example. Then you could have an override of directionality only when a given element has a different base direction. In the example in the spec [1], consider how this might be cleaner: <widget dir="rtl"> <name short="hard to make Arabic rtl here without changing enclosing element" dir="ltr"> But ltr override here works fine. </name> <description> Some rtl text. </description> <author href="" email="">bidi authors name</author> <license> ... </license> </widget> Compared to: <widget> <!-- no base direction --> <name short="can't be rtl?" dir="rtl"> Some RTL. </name> <description dir="rtl"> Have to include dir a lot. </description> <author dir="rtl"> ... </author> <license dir="rtl"> ... </license> </widget> I'm not suggesting that 'dir' makes sense everywhere, but there is some utility in allowing direction (and maybe language/locale??) in at the outermost element? > If dir conformance is tested in relation to the Rule For Obtaining > Text Content then this already scopes its use to the four elements > mentioned as these are the only elements that the rule applies to. > I agree, but there is one more potential case. The <content> element could have a default base directionality set (each <content> target or localized equivalent might also override it). I agree that a scoped 'dir' attribute is a pain to deal with implementation-wise, so I personally would be open to not doing this. But I think it worth considering. Addison [1] http://dev.w3.org/2006/waf/widgets/#example-configuration-document
Received on Monday, 1 March 2010 22:48:46 UTC