As I said before and got no response, we could take the "A" samples and
dinamically modify the contents of the <tspan> tag according to the
language, since SVG is XML-based.

2012/3/16 Sabin Densmore <[email protected]>

> Good point, sorry about that.
>
> At any rate, I'm not convinced that a single letter -- upper- or
> lowercase -- is clear enough for a couple of reasons:
> 1. Iconography -- which is what an abstract uppercase "A" really is --
> can be more confusing than language unless that icon is really clear.
> 2. The difference between the "A" when capitalized & bolded is not clear
> enough in most fonts that would look good on an interface. It's a really
> subtle change.
>
> That said, consistent order in the placement of the images, immediate
> feedback, and familiarity with the system(s) will probably be enough to
> override the above, but I think it's worth noting just for the sake of
> discussion, anyhow.
>
> Whatever font is currently used for international symbols and signs,
> though, might be the place to start.
>
> - sabin
>
> On 3/15/2012 3:56 AM, Sveinn í Felli wrote:
> > Þann fim 15.mar 2012 03:55, skrifaði King Duck:
> >> I think it's because the words for bold and italic change depending on
> the
> >> language. If you just use a character and show the effect, it tells the
> >> user what it does without having to refer to a specific word.
> >>
> >> ~ Maggie
> >>
> >> On Mon, Mar 12, 2012 at 7:01 PM, Sabin Densmore <[email protected]>
> wrote:
> >>
> >>> Just out of curiosity, is there a particular reason we're not using "B"
> >>> and "I" to indicate Bold and Italic? I don't care either way, but am
> >>> curious as to why.
> >>>
> >>> For what it's worth, Thunderbird (what I'm using now) uses a capital
> >>> letter "A". It's just hard to tell the difference between an italic "A"
> >>> and a non-italic "A".
> >>>
> >>> - sd
> > I've responded to a similar question before:
> > <http://www.mail-archive.com/[email protected]/msg03712.html
> >
> >
> > Saw also that someone asked why not use lowercase letters. It's the
> > same principle; uppercase *A*, /A/ and _A_ should be recognisable as
> > *pictograms* representing the first letter of the Latin alphabet.
> > There is a reason why signs read "EXIT" and not "Exit" at
> > international airports - and also why those are progressively being
> > replaced by symbolised person/arrow/door.
> >
> > Just thoughts.
> >
> > Sveinn
> >
>
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