Hello Abdulhaq,

>I agree. An important factor is being able to render the quran as it is 
>usually rendered, and using current technology. Injecting XML into that would 
>mean that the encoding could not be displayed in everyday software.

Well, injecting the kind of XML elements we are talking about into the text is 
not meant to affect the rendering of the text since the rendering is solely 
dependent on the sequence of Unicode codepoints in the text regardsless of 
these XML elements. These XML elements I was referring to do not have any style 
changes, i.e. they are not style or presentation oriented XML elements. Rather 
they are meant to capture the semantic of the text. Although an XSL stylesheet 
could be used to add style as well. Since XSL is supported in browsers now such 
style should be viewable as well.

The thing is that the contemporary Qur'an printings are almost completely 
render-able today with Unicode using a character-based (not glyph based) 
encoding scheme, only a few mode codepoints need to be addded that's it. The 
XML elements and other such high level semantics we are talking about address 
what is beyond the rendering, i.e. text analysis. So the rendering problem is 
almost solved, IMHO.

Kind regards,
Mete

--
Mete Kural
Touchtone Corporation
714-755-2810
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