- From: Richard Ishida <ishida@w3.org>
- Date: Wed, 21 Feb 2007 17:22:06 -0000
- To: 'François Yergeau' <francois@yergeau.com>
- Cc: "'GEO'" <public-i18n-geo@w3.org>, <public-i18n-core@w3.org>
> From: François Yergeau [mailto:francois@yergeau.com] > Sent: 20 February 2007 14:03 > To: Richard Ishida > Cc: 'GEO'; public-i18n-core@w3.org > Subject: Re: Tweaks to quicktips cards > > Richard Ishida a écrit : ... > > [2] > > Escapes. Only use escapes (e.g.     or ) in > specific circumstances. > > Escapes. Use characters rather than escapes (e.g. > &#xA0; &#160; or &nbsp;) whenever you can. > > I think the choice of this example is poor. NBSP is in fact > a case where using an escape makes sense, so that one can > distinguish normal from non-breaking spaces while editing. > Better use an accented latin letter, which is in fact where > the malady of abusing escapes is prevalent. Nobody in his > right mind would think of escaping every character in a > Japanese/Russian/Arabic/Devanagari page, but many people do > in fact escape accented latin letters in the mistaken belief > that this is required. You're right. We originally chose nbsp with the same reasoning in mind, but now we flipped the sense of the sentence. I'll use aacute. > > > > [3] > > Text authoring. Use simple, concise text. Do not compose > sentences from multiple strings using scripting. > > Text authoring. Use simple, concise text. Use care when > composing sentences from multiple strings. > > Disagree. "Do not compose" is better than "Use care", as > this is really a bad practice. The Details page can perhaps > give some rope to people to hang themselves, but the short > message should remain clear: don't. Well, not always evil. It depends on what you're doing. See http://www.w3.org/International/articles/composite-messages/ > > > > [4] > > Navigation. On each page include clearly visible navigation > to localized pages or sites. Use the target language. > > Navigation. On each page include clearly visible navigation > to localized pages or sites, using the target language. > > > > [5] > > Check your work. Validate! Use techniques, tutorials, and > articles at > > http://www.w3.org/International/ Check your work. Validate! > Use best > > practises, tutorials, and articles at > http://www.w3.org/International/ > > "practises" or "practices"? Is this an "en-GB" vs "en-US" thing? Yes. A long-standing problem of mine (dating back way before being at w3c, Martin). But I've made progress. Now, if I notice it, at least I know which one it should be ;-) > > > -- > François > -- No virus found in this outgoing message. Checked by AVG Free Edition. Version: 7.5.441 / Virus Database: 268.18.3/694 - Release Date: 20/02/2007 13:44
Received on Wednesday, 21 February 2007 17:22:13 UTC