- From: Liam R E Quin <liam@w3.org>
- Date: Fri, 04 Jun 2010 17:48:13 -0400
- To: Sylvain Galineau <sylvaing@microsoft.com>
- Cc: "www-font@w3.org" <www-font@w3.org>, "public-webfonts-wg@w3.org" <public-webfonts-wg@w3.org>
On Thu, 2010-06-03 at 17:05 +0000, Sylvain Galineau wrote:
> [...] I very much doubt
> that your average font shop can or will take advantage of the ability to optimize
> name/value pair combinations as they'd have to test the mismatched name/value sets
> against a number of possible user language preferences to make sure the results
> always make sense. That doesn't sound like making their lives any easier.
Sometimes it's better to avoid a possible error situation altogether, I
agree.
<property xml:lang="en">
<name>The displayed name here</name>
<value>The displayed value</value>
</property>
This can be augmented further, e.g.
<property xml:lang="en" name="animaltesting">
<label>Animal testing</name>
<value>No animals were eaten during development of this font.</value>
</property>
The display rule is,
* if the name attribute is given, the first matching label/value pair
should be displayed, as determined by xml:lang
* if the name is absent, the property is displayed if the xml:lang value
matches the user's setting (or locale)
The name attribute itself is not intended to be displayed.
A more deeply nested structure would have a containter element around
all properties that have the same name,
<property name="eye-style">
<name>Eyes</name>
<value>Eyes of unruly beasts</value>
<alternate xml:lang="fr">
<name>La Poissonnerie</name>
<value>Il faut toujours s'attendre à être étrillé dans les
auberges.</value>
</alternate>
<alternate xml:lang="nl">
<name>Wakkere duuw</name>
<value>Het doet mij leed dat ik hem zulke sterke dúwen geef</value>
</alternate>
. . .
</property>
This might be harder to author, and easier to process. The name
attribute is then not needed, although might still be useful for
automated processing, e.g. a font foundry's test harness.
Hope this helps!
Liam
--
Liam Quin - XML Activity Lead, W3C, http://www.w3.org/People/Quin/
Pictures from old books: http://fromoldbooks.org/
Ankh: irc.sorcery.net irc.gnome.org www.advogato.org
Received on Friday, 4 June 2010 21:48:18 UTC