- From: Philippe Verdy <verdy_p@wanadoo.fr>
- Date: Thu, 21 Apr 2011 01:47:04 +0200
- To: CE Whitehead <cewcathar@hotmail.com>
- Cc: fantasai.lists@inkedblade.net, public-i18n-core@w3.org, public-i18n-indic@w3.org, public-i18n-cjk@w3.org, unicode@unicode.org
"7.2. Emergency Wrapping: the ‘word-wrap’ property [...] break-word An unbreakable "word" may be broken at an arbitrary point if there are no otherwise-acceptable break points in the line. Shaping characters are still shaped as if the word were not broken, and grapheme clusters must together stay as one unit.[...]" Here I also suggest that contextually shaped characters should not just keep their normal shaping, but the joining types should be taken into account, to avoid breaking between joined character pairs, with a higher precedence for disjoined characters. Joining types here are what is currently standardized for Arabic, but it could also apply to any script using a joined cursive style (including Latin, Greek, Cyrillic). A problem appears : not all scripts that can be rendered in a joined cursive style have joining types defined, and the actual source for specifying such joining may be found in fact within fonts, as substitution&positioning entries ; however many fonts still use the same feature only to adjust the kerning, without creating any junction or ligature, e.g. between "AV", and many optional ligatures are still breakable, reversing the effect of contextual shaping of its constituant characters. One good decision would be to list only the scripts that are naturally joining. Are there other scripts than Arabic to consider ? Also for Latin, at least, the shaping of characters in a joined cursive style is not preserved when wrord-wraps are occuring : the hyphen is effectively inserted and letters on each side are shaped by forcing them to their disjoined shaping. Consider for example the shape of letter "j" when it joins with the following letter (most often a vowel) or when it occurs at the begining (leading tip or not) or end (closed curl or not) of word slice. Consider the shape of "r" (its leading junction) after either "o" or after "a" or "t" or "l". So I think that the current sentence is wrong : the presence or not of the wrap affects the shaping and does not necessarily preserve it as if there was no wrap. Philippe.
Received on Wednesday, 20 April 2011 23:53:20 UTC