- From: Richard Ishida <ishida@w3.org>
- Date: Tue, 18 Mar 2003 12:36:28 -0000
- To: <w3c-i18n-ig@w3.org>, <public-i18n-geo@w3.org>
- Cc: <w3c-wai-gl@w3.org>
> The risk depends on how the items are matched. In Chales' > examples, if the author of that page edits the title, the > annotation still starts at character 19, but no longer at the > right word. Note that using pointers that rely on the character position of a word in a sentence means that localisation of the data potentially becomes a nightmare. As the text changes, every single pointer will need to be changed for every single language involved - in a moderately to heavily annotated site this could introduce a huge overhead in schedule and cost that equates to a serious barrier to international deployment. RI ============ Richard Ishida W3C tel: +44 1753 480 292 http://www.w3.org/International/ http://www.w3.org/People/Ishida/ > -----Original Message----- > From: Martin Duerst [mailto:duerst@w3.org] > Sent: 14 March 2003 20:09 > To: Al Gilman; ishida@w3.org; w3c-i18n-ig@w3.org; > public-i18n-geo@w3.org > Cc: w3c-wai-gl@w3.org > Subject: Re[2]: FW: acronym in title... > > > At 18:07 03/03/13 -0500, Al Gilman wrote: > > >At 04:37 PM 2003-03-13, Martin Duerst wrote: > >>At 09:57 03/03/13 -0500, Al Gilman wrote: > > >>>I think that the one thing I should add right away is that > there is > >>>an option using "annotation" techniques to leave the > attribute as is > >>>and introduce a higher-quality equivalent through a > structure which > >>>refers to the attribute. > >> > >>I agree that this is an option in principle, but for the > things we are > >>considering (<span xml:lang='...'>, ruby,...), it seems like an > >>enormous overhead. > > > >And there are more things that need doing than you are considering. > >And somewhere along that line the preference for how to do > it may flop > >over. > > Yes, definitely. The more something applies in more than one > place, for example, and the more it is part of one specific > rendering rather than the 'original' text, the more sense it > makes to put it offline rather than inline. > > > >It's not clear which way the overhead is greater. A 'span' on each > >instance could be much more size overhead when compared with > a single > >glossary entry. But the latter is more risky because it is more > >indirect. > > The risk depends on how the items are matched. In Chales' > examples, if the author of that page edits the title, the > annotation still starts at character 19, but no longer at the > right word. > > > >I am trying very hard not to prejudge the choice, here, because in a > >migration strategy for an incompatible change I believe that > there is a > >place for more than one way of doing things, and that we should not > >rush to judgement on how it is to be done. > > My current judgement is that we need both: > - Better ways for inline annotation, not limited due to the fact that > some things are in attributes when they shouldn't. > - New (or better established) ways to link to glossaries and similar > stuff. > > > >As I said at the end of the day Wednesday, what I am hoping the > >community will develop is better discernment about when to use which > >manner of annotation, inline and offline. Markup is inline > annotation. > > I think the community implicitly already has quite a good > understanding of that distinction. On average, and for purely > practical (but very > important) reasons, inline markup seem to have performed much > better in most cases, but there are good cases for offline > stuff, too (in particular stylesheets). > > Regards, Martin. > > > > >
Received on Tuesday, 18 March 2003 07:37:33 UTC