- From: Richard Ishida <ishida@w3.org>
- Date: Thu, 02 Jun 2011 09:22:32 +0100
- To: Chris Lilley <chris@w3.org>
- CC: public-i18n-core@w3.org, www-font@w3.org
The i18n WG is happy with your response to this comment. Thank you. For the i18n WG, RI On 01/06/2011 14:52, Chris Lilley wrote: > Hello public-i18n-core, > > Just to update you on this issue, your proposal to add block-level and > inline-level attributes was accepted by the WebFonts WG. The elements > are called 'div' and 'span' respectively, and they have @xml:lang and > @dir. They use a mixed content model, div can be nested inside div and > span inside span; div can't be a child of span. > > The editors draft has been updated. The RNG is not updated yet but > will be soon. The text is as follows: > > Where text elements are used to contain (localizable) content, > further structure MAY also be provided using div and span child > elements similar to those used in HTML: > > div element > > A block-level element used, for example, to contain a paragraph. > > attributes > > dir > > The text direction, either ltr (for "left to right") or rtl (for > "right to left"). This attribute is OPTIONAL and, if omitted, > defaults to ltr. class An arbitrary set of space-separated tokens. > This attribute is OPTIONAL. > > span element > > An inline element used, for example, to indicate a run of text > with a different text direction, or in a different language. > attributes > > dir > > The text direction, either ltr (for "left to right") or rtl (for > "right to left"). This attribute is OPTIONAL and, if omitted, > defaults to ltr. > > class > > An arbitrary set of space-separated tokens. This attribute is > OPTIONAL. > > The text elements used to hold (localizable) text for a number of > the individual pieces of metadata have a mixed content model > consisting of text content, div and span elements; div elements have > a mixed content model of text content, div and span elements; and > span elements have a mixed content model of text content and span > elements. In other words, div can contain other div elements; span > can contain other span elements; span does not require a containing > div. > > http://dev.w3.org/webfonts/WOFF/spec/#Metadata > > It would be great if you could send an email message to www-font > acknowledging that this responds to your comment (for our last call > tracking purposes). We are now under some time pressure to close out > last call. > -- Richard Ishida Internationalization Activity Lead W3C (World Wide Web Consortium) http://www.w3.org/International/ http://rishida.net/
Received on Thursday, 2 June 2011 08:24:55 UTC