29 Nov 22:28
Re: RSS and diacritics
From: Andrew Cunningham <andrewc@...>
Subject: Re: RSS and diacritics
Newsgroups: gmane.education.web4lib
Date: 2007-11-29 21:28:05 GMT
Subject: Re: RSS and diacritics
Newsgroups: gmane.education.web4lib
Date: 2007-11-29 21:28:05 GMT
Thomas Dowling wrote: > Jonathan Gorman wrote: . > > CSS2 requires that browsers work their way down the list of specified > fonts to find the right glyph, not just find a matching font name. > IIRC, Gecko-based browsers and Opera go beyond that to find any system > font with the right glyph. > not that simple. When using combining diacritics you need to treat Latin script as a complex script. choping and changing fonts is more likely to break complex rendering. And such an approach assumes that each codepoint is represented by a single glyph. The reality in some OpenType fonts is that each codepoint may have multiple glyphs, one of which is a default. And all this is irrelevant. If the web developer wrote the page properly, then appropriate fonts would be referenced and if necessary help or support files would point to none core fonts required. The ransom note effect in gecko browsers shouldn't be necessary. just my two cents worth, although that's no longer legal tender here ;) As far as i'm concerned we're talking about poor web internationalization and poor web design practice. The weak point has been and remains at the vendors/servers end, not the web clients end. Andrew -- -- Andrew Cunningham Research and Development Coordinator (Vicnet) State Library of Victoria 328 Swanston Street Melbourne VIC 3000 Australia Email: andrewc+AEA-vicnet.net.au Alt. email: lang.support+AEA-gmail.com Ph: +613-8664-7430 Fax:+613-9639-2175 Mob: 0421-450-816 http://www.slv.vic.gov.au/ http://www.vicnet.net.au/ http://www.openroad.net.au/ http://www.mylanguage.gov.au/ http://home.vicnet.net.au/~andrewc/
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