- From: Sylvain Galineau <galineau@adobe.com>
- Date: Tue, 9 Jul 2013 13:20:40 -0700
- To: Florian Rivoal <florian@rivoal.net>, "www-style@w3.org" <www-style@w3.org>
On 7/9/13 11:51 AM, "Florian Rivoal" <florian@rivoal.net> wrote: >On Tue, 09 Jul 2013 20:09:25 +0200, Sylvain Galineau <galineau@adobe.com> > >wrote: > >> By 'if using 1/n glyphs is not optimal' do you mean 'if *the author* >>does >> not want to use the 1/n glyphs provided by the font'? If so then yes, >> it's >> absolutely fine for them to be able to override the default behavior. >> It's >> also fine for UAs to do something interesting when no such glyphs are >> present in the specified font. I do not think any of this is really the >> issue though. >> >> The argument is about *requiring* interoperable behavior when the font >> does provides 1/n glyphs. My understanding of the resolution is that it >> does not actually do so. > >My understanding of the resolution is the same as yours. As requiring the > >use >of special glyphs when they are all available leaves the door open for >Koji's >#12 use case, I think the only question left is Elika's "MI" use case. > >In the example posted by John, I agree that MI is nicer in case (5) than >(4), >but MM is not. So this could indeed be a reason to let the UA be smart. >But should >that be by default, or opt in? Given that MI isn't the main use case, and > >that >for digits (which are), (4) is always better than (5), I must admit that >I >do >find the opt-in solution tempting. But at least now, I can see that there > >are >situations where all variant glyphs are available but using them isn't >the >ideal. > > - Florian If the opt-in model is right for the main use-case *and* it is consistent with the rest of CSS then why wouldn’t it be required?
Received on Tuesday, 9 July 2013 20:21:07 UTC