- From: fantasai <fantasai.lists@inkedblade.net>
- Date: Fri, 08 Oct 2010 10:00:47 -0700
- To: Somnath Chandra <schandra@mit.gov.in>
- CC: style <www-style@w3.org>, wwwintl <www-international@w3.org>, intlcore <public-i18n-core@w3.org>, indic <public-i18n-indic@w3.org>, Richard Ishida <ishida@w3.org>
On 10/08/2010 08:19 AM, Somnath Chandra wrote: > Hello Fantasai & Richards, > > Kindly find the draft inputs indicating the indic language styling > requirements. Kindly visit the following link. > > http://w3cindia.in/cssdocument.html Hi Somnath, Many of these are browser bugs and not problems with the spec. So while I would encourage you to file them against the appropriate implementers, there isn't much we can do about e.g. underlining bugs or certain characters not displaying correctly. I would, however, appreciate some guidance on how justification and letter-spacing should work (and if they should indeed interact), as these are areas where the spec needs more detail. However, the section on justification in your document has almost no detail right now, and the one on letter-spacing tells me only enough to indicate that the CSS3 draft does not handle Indic scripts--not enough to tell me how to handle them correctly. :( With regards to vertical layout of glyphs -- there are two different ways to lay out horizontal scripts in vertical text. One is to keep each character upright. The other is to rotate them. There will be a control for this in the spec that defines vertical text, in which case upright Indic like you have indicated there could be explicitly chosen along with upright Latin. The default vertical rendering for Indic scripts should be whatever is most appropriate for inlining inside a vertical script -- e.g. the appropriate way to render a name or quote inside a vertical Japanese book. I haven't seen any cases of mixed Indic-CJK recently, so I don't really have a good answer for that. But please think about this question in that context. A related question would be how vertically-oriented table headers are handled, and whether they are the same or different from the CJK case. And whether Latin or digits are handled the same way in such headers, or differently. ~fantasai
Received on Friday, 8 October 2010 17:01:27 UTC