- From: Koji Ishii <kojiishi@gluesoft.co.jp>
- Date: Sat, 10 May 2014 20:04:40 +0000
- To: "Phillips, Addison" <addison@lab126.com>
- CC: "CSS WWW Style (www-style@w3.org)" <www-style@w3.org>, www International <www-international@w3.org>
fantasai and I worked on this and re-worded, please let us know if any. Thank you for the feedback. /koji On Jan 24, 2014, at 10:26, Phillips, Addison <addison@lab126.com> wrote: > State: > OPEN WG Comment > Product: > CSS3-text > Raised by: > Richard Ishida > Opened on: > 2013-12-11 > Description: > 7.3. Justification Method: the ‘text-justify’ property > http://www.w3.org/TR/2013/WD-css-text-3-20131010/#text-justify-property > > "One possible algorithm is to choose the appropriate justification behavior based on the language of the paragraph e.g. following [JLREQ] for Japanese, using cursive elongation for Arabic, using ‘inter-word’ for English, etc. Another possibility is to use a justification method that is a simple universal compromise for all writing systems, such as primarily expanding word separators along with secondarily expanding between CJK and Southeast Asian letters." > > Rather than just throw out international variations in justification as an idea of something implementers may like to work on, I think we should recommend that implementers try to take into account international needs as far as possible. > > I think we also need to add something about handling complex script syllables. > > I would reword this paragraph as follows: > > "Implementers are expected, to the extent possible, to make available appropriate justification behaviours based on the language of the paragraph e.g. character-dependent expansion rules for Japanese, using cursive elongation for Arabic, using ‘inter-word’ for English, keeping typographic syllables together in complex scripts, etc. Only where such linguistic tailorings have not yet been implemented should the browser use a justification method that is a simple universal compromise for all writing systems, such as primarily expanding word separators along with secondarily expanding between CJK and Southeast Asian letters."
Received on Saturday, 10 May 2014 20:05:13 UTC