Hi,

Miklos Vajna <vmik...@collabora.com> 於 2022年11月16日 週三 下午4:05寫道:

> Hi,
>
> On Tue, Nov 15, 2022 at 01:04:12AM +0100, Regina Henschel <
> rb.hensc...@t-online.de> wrote:
> > How are tables in text documents usually organized in East Asian vertical
> > writing mode? I mean: Where are column headers? Where are row headers?
> What
>

It's not so common to see a table in a vertically formatted text. I've
tried to find the definition first from "Requirements for Chinese Text
Layouts."
Unfortunately there is nothing about it there. I've found a physical book
and a document to see how the tables are used. Both have headers on the
right side of the page. I think that Writer performs correctly. Tables are
rotated 90 degrees clockwise. ( i.e. the second row is at the left of the
first row, the second column is below the first column. )

Contrarily, MS Word is awkward. If you set the text flow to vertical,
insert a table,  change the design of the table so that it paints the
background of the header, the top most part ( can't be sure if it's a row
or a column ) is painted. But this test is rough. It will be better to find
more examples.


> > it the order of columns? If I insert a table in Writer the result is
> > different than inserting a table in Word.
>




> >
> > How should a section work if the section has more than one column? That
> > seems to be buggy in LO.
>


I've found an old Chinese dictionary with three columns.
The second column is below the first one. Writer seems to act correctly to
me.


> >
> > Has a book in East Asian vertical writing mode the binding edge left or
> > right?
>
> CC Mark, perhaps he knows these.
>
> Regards,
>
> Miklos
>

HTH

-- 
Mark Hung

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