- From: fantasai <fantasai.lists@inkedblade.net>
- Date: Wed, 17 Mar 2010 18:33:42 -0700
- To: Ian Hickson <ian@hixie.ch>
- CC: Simon Montagu <smontagu@smontagu.org>, www-html@w3.org, 'WWW International' <www-international@w3.org>, "public-i18n-core@w3.org" <public-i18n-core@w3.org>, "www-style@w3.org" <www-style@w3.org>
On 03/17/2010 04:01 PM, Ian Hickson wrote: > On Mon, 18 Jan 2010, fantasai wrote: >> On 01/14/2010 12:49 AM, Simon Montagu wrote: >>> On 01/11/2010 11:35 PM, fantasai wrote: >>>> On 11/26/2009 10:54 PM, Simon Montagu wrote: >>>>> >>>>> I assume your Gecko example is using a very recent version of >>>>> Gecko, such as a nightly build or a beta of Firefox 3.6? I fixed >>>>> this issue only a few months ago. >>>>> >>>>> The HTML standard does specify what to do in this case, see >>>>> http://www.w3.org/TR/REC-html40/struct/dirlang.html#style-bidi: >>>>> >>>>> "When a block element that does not have a dir attribute is >>>>> transformed to the style of an inline element by a style sheet, >>>>> the resulting presentation should be equivalent, in terms of >>>>> bidirectional formatting, to the formatting obtained by explicitly >>>>> adding a dir attribute (assigned the inherited value) to the >>>>> transformed element." >>>>> >>>>> In practice, however, since browsers are not consistent, authors >>>>> will have to use CSS properties to achieve the expected results. >>>> >>>> Does this mean applying "unicode-bidi: embed" to all block-level >>>> elements? Because that seems like it fulfill those requirements. >>> >>> I was thinking in terms of applying "unicode-bidi: embed" ad hoc >>> whenever applying "display: inline" to a specific element, but >>> applying it wholesale to all block-level elements will also work, of >>> course. >> >> In that case, I suggest the we add it to the sample default style sheet >> for HTML 4 in the CSS2.1 appendix, and recommend the HTMLWG add some >> wording about block-level elements defining bidi embedding boundaries to >> the HTML5 spec (and perhaps using CSS's "unicode-bidi: embed" rule as an >> example). > > Can you confirm what rule should be added to the HTML5 recommended style > rules? This is an area where this has changed a lot over time (e.g. CSS2 > used to have something like this then it was removed) so I'd like to make > sure I get this exactly right and that everyone agrees it's the right > thing to do. <selector representing all HTML5 block-level elements> { display: block; /* I assume you already have this somewhere */ unicode-bidi: embed; /* This is the new rule to add. */ } <selector representing all HTML5 list-item elements> { display: list-item; /* Assumed to exist already */ unicode-bidi: embed; /* This is the new rule to add. */ } title, table, tbody, thead, tfoot, tr, td, th { unicode-bidi: embed; } If you're defaulting anything to "display: inline-block", then you probably also want "unicode-bidi: embed" there, too. ~fantasai
Received on Thursday, 18 March 2010 01:34:24 UTC