dear Yonatan,

> Le 1 mars 2021 à 21:59, Yonatan Zilpa <[email protected]> a écrit :
> 
> I'm looking for auto line breaking.

Of course, hyphenation should always be automatic.

> Sometimes the line gets overflowed and I need to run the \linebreak command.

I guess you mean the \- command (linebreak is for breaking between words, not 
inside words)

> Writing hyphenation rules in Hebrew seems to be impractical

I don't think the adjective "impractical" fits here. Hyphenation rules have to 
be written once,
and then they can be used by everyone. Somebody has to write them.

In my previous message I developed the difficulties of this task and was asking 
whether
(1) you just want somebody to provide a solution to your problem
(2) you are willing help us in providing this solution, by working on this 
task, since you are
     a native Ivrit speaker (and we are not)

This task involved linguistics, natural language processing and computing on 
large corpora.
It is not "impractical", but difficult and most satisfying as a challenge.

> and the default English hyphenation pattern doesn't apply in Hebrew.  

How could they? English is written in ASCII and Hebrew in the range U+05xx of 
Unicode.
Hyphenation is not phonetic but depending on the encoding of the text.

But even in other Latin-alphabet languages, applying English hyphenation is 
WRONG, each
language has its own rules, some phonetic, others morphological, others 
etymological, and
others a mixture of various behaviors. Hebrew is most interesting for the 
reasons I exposed
in the previous mail, reasons that made Uzzi Ornan spent more than an hour 
talking about it,
he didn't found it "impractical", and he has played an important role in the 
history of Ivrit.

Yannis 


 <http://www.imt-atlantique.fr/>        Yannis HARALAMBOUS
Professor
Computer Science Department
UMR CNRS 6285 Lab-STICC
 <http://perso.telecom-bretagne.eu/yannisharalambous/> 
<https://twitter.com/y_haralambous> 
<https://www.linkedin.com/in/yannis-haralambous-5529073?trk=hp-identity-name>Technopôle
 Brest-Iroise CS 83818
29238 Brest Cedex 3, France
Une école de l'IMT <http://www.imt.fr/>
… according to legend, an RCA Marketing Manager
received once a nightly phone call from a disturbed customer.
His 301 had just hyphenated “God.”     (Paul E. Justus)



Reply via email to