On 19 June 2010 05:02, Angela French afre...@sbctc.edu wrote:
Well, I'm on my 7th out of 11 languages today, and only Khmer proved to be
trouble so far. And yes I am adding the xml:lang attribute to the content
div . And I specify UTF-8 in the meta tag.
if you are using xml:lang i'm
On 19 June 2010 05:00, Mark Richards mark.richa...@date.com wrote:
The solution for Firefox, in my case, was to apply a lang attribute to
the elements in question, thus instructing Firefox to choose Chinese
fonts for all the characters instead of trying to use Japanese fonts for
some and
From: Angela French
Subject: [css-d] styling non-english fonts
I am creating some foreign language pages. Cambodian/Khmer
renders vastly different font sizes between browsers. Other
than making style sheets for each browser to style all my
page elements, is there some other way?
I've
18, 2010 12:00 PM
To: Angela French; css-d
Subject: RE: [css-d] styling non-english fonts
From: Angela French
Subject: [css-d] styling non-english fonts
I am creating some foreign language pages. Cambodian/Khmer
renders vastly different font sizes between browsers. Other
than making style
On Jun 19, 2010, at 4:00 AM, Mark Richards wrote:
Cambodian/Khmer
renders vastly different font sizes between browsers.
That issue with Khmer came up in the past, although I can't seem to find it in
the archives (bad search-fu !). One thing I know for sure is that khmer fonts
have a very
.And yes I am adding the xml:lang attribute
to the content div . And I specify UTF-8 in the meta tag.
-Original Message-
From: Mark Richards [mailto:mark.richa...@date.com]
Sent: Friday, June 18, 2010 12:00 PM
To: Angela French; css-d
Subject: RE: [css-d] styling non-english fonts
From