- From: Richard Ishida <ishida@w3.org>
- Date: Wed, 30 Oct 2013 12:38:51 +0000
- To: Aryeh Gregor <ayg@aryeh.name>, "Tab Atkins Jr." <jackalmage@gmail.com>
- CC: W3C Style <www-style@w3.org>, www International <www-international@w3.org>
Perhaps it would also make sense to change the range from range: 1 infinite; to something more indicative of expectations for use. RI On 30/10/2013 11:50, Aryeh Gregor wrote: > On Wed, Oct 30, 2013 at 3:41 AM, Tab Atkins Jr. <jackalmage@gmail.com> wrote: >> >> The Hebrew system was originally defined this way, as a custom system, >> as it can't be reasonably represented in the current algorithms the >> way you describe. I was told by another Hebrew speaker (Aryeh Gregor) >> that the form the spec currently specifies, with repeated tavs, is >> acceptable. > > I don't recall what exactly I said in the past, but to clarify: the > form currently specified is fine for any sane list, since it works > fine up to 1000. It's also fine even for numbers that go somewhat > beyond that point, such as page numbers in long books -- just a few > days ago I saw a page number in a book that was something like תתתרחצ > (= 1498). I think this is probably what the CSS spec's numbering > system will be used for, so I do think it's acceptable. (I wouldn't > even call א'תצח correct for 1498 as a page number. I've never seen > that convention used for page numbering.) > > The system described by the spec is not acceptable for encoding > arbitrary numbers in arbitrary contexts, but there are other problems > with that anyway. For instance, a number in running text has an extra > geresh (single apostrophe) or gershayyim (double apostrophe) inserted, > like כ"ו for 26 and נ' for 50. Only in a context like a page number > or list number where a number is the only expected thing do you drop > the geresh/gershayyim -- otherwise the extra mark is needed to alert > you to the fact that it's a number and not a word. Also, the > convention for year numbers (the most common large numbers you find) > is most often to drop the thousands place entirely, so 5776 is > typically תשע"ד rather than ה'תשעד, except in historical contexts that > actually go back to the 4000s. > > So the spec does not deal with Hebrew numbering perfectly, but I think > it's perfectly reasonable for the intended use-cases. A one-line note > might be worth adding so people are aware this has been considered. >
Received on Wednesday, 30 October 2013 12:39:22 UTC