- From: Kang-Hao (Kenny) Lu <kennyluck@csail.mit.edu>
- Date: Fri, 13 Jan 2012 00:55:13 +0800
- To: Boris Zbarsky <bzbarsky@MIT.EDU>
- CC: Mathias Bynens <mathias@qiwi.be>, WWW Style <www-style@w3.org>
(12/01/13 0:25), Boris Zbarsky > Looks like WebKit treats unpaired surrogates just like mis-ordered > ones: it drops the whole declaration. I still see the grey box there so the declaration isn't droped. This is probably just how WebKit renders unpaired/mis-ordered surrogated. We might need a section in CSS3 Text (or CSS3 Fonts) on the suggested rendering of content like this. Example: data:text/html,<span></span><script>document.querySelector('span').textContent = "\udf06Test"</script> renders as "xTest" in IE, FF and "Test" in Opera but nothing on Webkit-based browser (not sure in what conditions are spaces rendered too...).
Received on Thursday, 12 January 2012 16:55:52 UTC