On Sat, Mar 3, 2012 at 12:13 AM, Hans Hagen <pra...@wxs.nl> wrote: > On 2-3-2012 22:34, Mojca Miklavec wrote: > >> On Fri, Mar 2, 2012 at 17:28, luigi scarso wrote: >> > On Fri, Mar 2, 2012 at 5:20 PM, Hans Hagen wrote: >> >> >> >> On 2-3-2012 11:39, luigi scarso wrote: >> >>> >> >>> Errata >> >>> itemgroup[symbol="5"] { list-style-type : circ ; } >> >>> itemgroup[symbol="A"] { list-style-type : alpha ; } >> >>> itemgroup[symbol="G"] { list-style-type : upper-greek ; } >> >>> >> >>> Corrige >> >>> itemgroup[symbol="5"] { list-style-type : circle ; } >> >>> itemgroup[symbol="A"] { list-style-type : upper-alpha ; } >> >>> itemgroup[symbol="G"] { list-style-type : upper-roman ; } >> >>> >> >>> Note >> >>> upper-greek doesn't exist >> >> >> >> >> >> hm, I is upper-roman ... is there no way to get greek? >> >> >> >> Hans >> > >> > Not with list-style-type --- maybe list-style-image as svg ? >> > >> > >> http://www.w3.org/TR/CSS2/**generate.html#propdef-list-**style-type<http://www.w3.org/TR/CSS2/generate.html#propdef-list-style-type> >> >> From http://www.w3.org/TR/css3-**lists/<http://www.w3.org/TR/css3-lists/> >> : >> >> Issue: According to a native Greek speaker, the lower-greek and >> upper-greek styles aren't actually used. I've removed upper-greek for >> now, but kept lower-greek because CSS2.1 included the keyword. Do >> these have actual use-cases? >> >> @counter-style lower-greek { >> type: alphabetic; >> glyphs: '\3B1' '\3B2' '\3B3' '\3B4' '\3B5' '\3B6' '\3B7' '\3B8' >> '\3B9' '\3BA' '\3BB' '\3BC' '\3BD' '\3BE' '\3BF' '\3C0' '\3C1' '\3C3' >> '\3C4' '\3C5' '\3C6' '\3C7' '\3C8' '\3C9'; >> /* 'α' 'β' 'γ' 'δ' 'ε' 'ζ' 'η' 'θ' 'ι' 'κ' 'λ' 'μ' 'ν' 'ξ' 'ο' >> 'π' 'ρ' 'σ' 'τ' 'υ' 'φ' 'χ' 'ψ' 'ω' */ >> /* This style is only defined because CSS2.1 has it. It >> doesn't appear to actually be used in Greek texts. */ >> } >> >> (However there is lower-serbo-croatian and upper-serbo-croation, >> lower-macedonian and upper-macedonian. I should ask for >> lower-slovenian and upper-slovenian ;) >> > > I have no problem adding them but you have to key them in. > > > You need to ask Thomas about his opinion, but I see no reason for not >> using lowercase greek for mathematical purposes. >> > > indeed. also, it's in context because someone asked for it (mkii times) > > In css3 we can define our style: so for example @counter-style upper-greek { type: non-repeating; glyphs: 'Α','Γ','Δ','Ε','Ζ','Η','Θ','Ι','Κ','Λ','Μ','Ν','Ξ','Ο','Π','Ρ','Σ','Τ','Υ','Φ','Χ','Ψ','Ω' ; suffix: '.'; } (not sure if the sequence is correct.)
-- luigi
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