- From: Jeni Tennison <jeni@jenitennison.com>
- Date: Wed, 10 Jun 2015 09:50:22 +0100
- To: www-international@w3.org, Steven Atkin <atkin@us.ibm.com>
- Cc: public-csv-wg@w3.org
Hi Steven, Thank you for raising this issue which we turned into https://github.com/w3c/csvw/issues/576 We have added text in the definition of the tabular data model (http://w3c.github.io/csvw/syntax/#model) to make it clear that all string values it contains are Unicode strings: String values within the tabular data model (such as column titles or cell string values) MUST contain only Unicode characters. We have also added text in step 5 of the non-normative parsing algorithm for CSV at http://w3c.github.io/csvw/syntax/#parsing which describes how to create a model from CSV and now says: 5. Read the file using the encoding, as specified in [encoding], using the replacement error mode. If the encoding is not a Unicode encoding, use a normalizing transcoder to normalize into Unicode Normal Form C as defined in [UAX15]. NOTE The replacement error mode ensures that any non-Unicode characters within the CSV file are replaced by U+FFFD, ensuring that strings within the tabular data model such as column titles and cell string values only contain valid Unicode characters. We have changed the rules on comparisons of titles to ensure that these are always case-sensitive (http://w3c.github.io/csvw/metadata/#schema-compatibility): Column descriptions are compatible under the following conditions: 1. If either column description has neither name nor titles properties. 2. If there is a case-sensitive match between the name properties of the columns. 3. If there is a non-empty case-sensitive intersection between the titles values, where matches must have a matching language; und matches any language, and languages match if they are equal when truncated, as defined in [BCP47], to the length of the shortest language tag. 4. If not validating, and one schema has a name property but not a titles property, and the other has a titles property but not a name property. Please can you confirm that these changes satisfy this comment? Thanks, Jeni -- Jeni Tennison http://www.jenitennison.com/ On 1 June 2015 at 17:45:42, Steven Atkin (atkin@us.ibm.com) wrote: > > > 7.2 Example with single table and rich annotations > http://www.w3.org/TR/2015/WD-csv2rdf-20150416/#example-tree-ops-ext > > When the names of the columns in the CSV data are compared with the names > of the columns in the annotations what is the rule for determining if they > are the same? For example, is equality based solely on the UTF-8 raw byte > sequence or is some form of Unicode Normalization applied first and does > case matter when making comparisons? > > It is recommended that Unicode text not be normalized if it is already in a > Unicode encoding. If text needs to be converted into Unicode, then a > normalizing transcoder should be used and text be normalized into Unicode > Normal Form C. > > It is recommended that case sensitive matching be used when making > comparisons. > > > > Steven Atkin, Ph.D. > STSM - Chief Globalization Architect > IBM Globalization Center of Competency > atkin@us.ibm.com > http://www-3.ibm.com/software/globalization/index.jsp
Received on Wednesday, 10 June 2015 08:50:49 UTC