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Does Ethiopic text also get wrapped by word? #116
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This is related to CSS issue w3c/i18n-discuss#11 |
Reading the hyphenation section now and focusing on the phrase:
This is certainly the case, samples of this breaking style (arbitrary word split) can be found, but I would think has all but faded out by the end of the 90s with word processor taking over. Line breaking at a word boundary would be a best practice, and expected, in modern writing. Expected to the extent that it should be applied to the reprinting of any early works that used the split-anywhere style under white space. |
Using CSS Is that ok? Or do we need to implement rules that prevent wordspace being wrapped alone? |
This is a really nice demonstrator/tester! Thanks for creating it @r12a , I'll spend more time with it this evening. Wordspace should not be wrapped alone, so a rule would be needed. This would be true of punctuation as well. I observed another rule this past weekend while scanning a book, "ዜናዊ ፓርልማ" from 1953 (1946EC) produced by a government agency. The book uses wordspace and frequent word breaking at the end of a line. The breaking always leaves at least 2 letters at the end of the line; it so consistent and frequent that it must be deliberate. This is in contrast to handwritten manuscripts where the split can occur after a single letter. It is visually appealing, I had not picked up on it before, I'll review other works to see if this "at least two" rule is applied. |
I've reviewed a number of 20th century books (circa 1940s-1960s) and this "rule of two" appears to hold up very well. Notably in a book by Abie Gubenya who was a well respected writer. On occasion a single letter may yet be found at the end of a line, but in these exceptions the letter is usually "anchored" to the line by a visually dense/heavy punctuation the left such as « or ። . |
http://w3c.github.io/elreq/#ethiopic_line_breaking and http://w3c.github.io/elreq/#ethiopic_hyphenation indicate that languages using the Ethiopic script break character by character, regardless of whether space or the word-separator are used between words.
However, major browsers actually break on word boundaries (space or word-sep), and i'm not sure whether that might be establishing a new trend. Any thoughts on that?
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