- From: Albert Lunde <Albert-Lunde@nwu.edu>
- Date: Fri, 3 Feb 1995 07:58:28 +0100
- To: Multiple recipients of list <www-html@www0.cern.ch>
> Show me where in HTML or in HTML applications that either of these > requirements exist and I will agree with you that a language tag is > needed; however, I think that you are going to have a difficult time > showing where these are actually required, in which case your argument > (and others of the same ilk) is simply a red herring. This (and related issues) were discussed a week or two ago on the html-wg list. As I recall several people offered reasons for distingushing text in different languages, ranging from distingushing glyphs (especially for Asian languages under Unicode), to language specific spell-checking or indexing. Wheither this is done with a html tag or another mechanism may be an open question. This is not really a far-future issue any more. To protect me from deja vu ;), I'd appreciate it if people with something constuctive to say on this issue would consider: 1) reading the archive of the html-wg list to see if it has already been said 2) joining the html-wg list and contributing to the standards process. (I speak as a person with no particular authority. I dislike seeing a heated discussion repeated needlessly. On the other hand, some more people with experience with multilingual SGML or other multilingual information systems most likely would not hurt the working group.) Pointers to the archives can be found in the IETF Web or via my bookmark file at: <URL:http://www.mcs.com/%7elunde/web/aboutwww.html> -- Albert Lunde Albert-Lunde@nwu.edu
Received on Thursday, 2 February 1995 23:04:33 UTC