- From: Richard Ishida <ishida@w3.org>
- Date: Fri, 30 Apr 2004 18:55:57 +0100
- To: "'Jungshik Shin'" <jshin@i18nl10n.com>
- Cc: "'GEO'" <public-i18n-geo@w3.org>
Thanks for that, Jungshik. I downloaded the latest version and see that it does indeed work. Cheers, RI ============ Richard Ishida W3C contact info: http://www.w3.org/People/Ishida/ W3C Internationalization: http://www.w3.org/International/ > -----Original Message----- > From: Jungshik Shin [mailto:jshin@i18nl10n.com] > Sent: 30 April 2004 12:27 > To: Richard Ishida > Cc: 'GEO' > Subject: RE: Authoring Techniques Document > > On Wed, 28 Apr 2004, Richard Ishida wrote: > > > > > 4. No mention is made of the technique of using <link > > > rel="alternate" > > > > hreflang="xx" ... > > > > > > > > The link element is now widely implemented in browsers > (Internet > > > > Explorer and Safari are the only two reasonably well-known > > > > browsers that don't implement it), and as a backup for language > > > > negotitation (analagous to including charset > > > > metadata) it seems worthwhile. It would also enable easier > > > > I just implemented this for the following pages: > > http://www.w3.org/International/questions/qa-when-lang-neg.fr > > http://www.w3.org/International/questions/qa-when-lang-neg.en > > > > I see that in Firebird at the bottom of my screen it now > says "More". > > Clicking on that pops up "Other versions >", and clicking > on that pops > > up > .... > > I don't see any support in my latest versions of Mozilla or > Netscape > > (other than looking in the Page Info - which is not very > helpful). Nor in Opera. > > Actually, Mozilla (1.6) supports it. If there are '<link > rel="xxxx"...>'s, Mozilla adds just above the page rendering > area a new menu bar(?) consisting of 'Top Up First Previous > Next Last Document More'. > > Jungshik >
Received on Friday, 30 April 2004 13:56:04 UTC