- From: Aharon (Vladimir) Lanin <aharon@google.com>
- Date: Mon, 27 Sep 2010 13:14:46 +0200
- To: fantasai <fantasai.lists@inkedblade.net>
- Cc: public-i18n-bidi@w3.org, W3C style mailing list <www-style@w3.org>
- Message-ID: <AANLkTi=qiO5Ao43RUjeoZFG_fZ_oko1VoA+uzE_mDh6b@mail.gmail.com>
The spec says "uninterrupted by a forced (bidi class B) line break or block boundary". According to the proposal (sections 3.1 and 3.3), <br> (by default) and <div>...</div> form UBA paragraph breaks, i.e. those bidi class B line breaks and block boundaries. But unicode-bidi:isolate says that when it's applied to an element, it acts as U+FFFC, an ON in its surrounding paragraph. So, is <br ubi> or a <div ubi /> a B or an ON? It is quite easy to think that it is in fact an ON. However, during the f2f, we explicitly said ubi does not have any effect on non-inline elements. Aharon On Mon, Sep 27, 2010 at 11:06 AM, fantasai <fantasai.lists@inkedblade.net>wrote: > On 09/26/2010 08:43 AM, Aharon (Vladimir) Lanin wrote: > > > The spec says > > > > > > # User agents that support bidirectional text must apply the Unicode > > > # bidirectional algorithm to every sequence of inline boxes > > > # uninterrupted by a forced (bidi class B) line break or block > boundary. > > > # This sequence forms the "paragraph" unit in the bidirectional > algorithm. > > > > > > In what way is this not sufficient to address your concerns? > > > > Taken by itself, it is perfectly explicit and sufficient. > > > > The problem is that the unicode-bidi:isolate spec is also perfectly > > explicit and sufficient, and, it seems to me, conflicts with the above: > > > > for the purpose of bidi resolution in its containing > > paragraph (if any), the [unicode-bidi:isolate] element itself is treated > > as if it were an Object Replacement Character (U+FFFC). > > > > When both specs apply, I think it should be either implicitly obvious or > > explicitly stated which one wins. I do not think it is implicitly > > obvious, so I would like to state it explicitly. > > I'm not seeing the conflict. > > ~fantasai >
Received on Monday, 27 September 2010 11:16:03 UTC