- From: Tab Atkins Jr. <jackalmage@gmail.com>
- Date: Tue, 19 Apr 2011 16:55:34 -0700
- To: www-style list <www-style@w3.org>
- Cc: WWW International <www-international@w3.org>, public-i18n-core@w3.org
[Cross-posting between www-style, www-international, and public-i18n-core. Please maintain all three of these lists in your replies so we don't split the thread unnecessarily.] When I started working on the CSS Lists Module <http://dev.w3.org/csswg/css3-lists>, Hixie sent me the collected feedback he'd received since 2002. I've now processed the majority of that feedback into spec edits, but I've got a couple of items still left, which I'll summarize in this email. If anyone has direct feedback on these items, or can hook me up with people who might have relevant feedback, please let me know! I plan to cut a new Working Draft of the module at the end of this month, so timely responses are appreciated. 1. I need to add some south asian systems. The W3C's Indian i18n group started responding about this a little while ago, but stopped responding to my requests for clarification. I need to restart talks with them. 2. Greek styles are incomplete. I've got a big chunk of greek feedback that I haven't properly processed yet. >_< 3. Are my current arabic/persian/urdu/etc systems sufficient, or are there differences that I'm not currently capturing? 4. Apparently Koranic verse has a particular numbering scheme different from general arabic/etc numbering. Can anyone confirm this and/or describe it for me? 5. I'm told there's a Hebrew alphabetic system: "This uses the Hebrew letters without final forms, i.e. U05D0-U05EA excluding U05DA, U05DD, U05DF, U05E3 and U05E5". I'd like some confirmation that this exists and is used, along with some confirmation of the given definition. 6. Should I add more european alphabetic styles, like a german one that includes umlauts? I've heard conflicting feedback (from Hakon, I believe) saying that I should instead drop the alternate european styles that currently exist, as list numbering is typically done using just the base english alphabet. 7. Are Aegean (U+10107-10133), Shavian (U+10450-1047F), and Ugaritic (U+10380-1039D) things I should address? I dunno if these are living or dead scripts. 8. Should I allow custom negative signs to be defined? Right now all the numeric styles just use hyphen-minus. Do any languages require a different negative sign? 9. Apparently, at least some hebrew books number their pages with a simpler additive system which just uses the the characters associated with 1-9, 10-90, and 100-400, then just repeats TAV (the character for 400) repeatedly for larger numbers (so 1100 would be תתש, rather than א׳ק). Can I switch to *just* this system (allowing me to eliminate the special definition of Hebrew in favor of a simple @counter-style rule), or is there still a good case for the current definition? ~TJ
Received on Tuesday, 19 April 2011 23:58:24 UTC