The use of soft hyphen is a cultural matter. In Hebrew, Classic and Israeli, soft hyphens are not used.
Best Regards, Jonathan Rosenne 054-4246522 -----Original Message----- From: Unicode [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Simon Montagu Sent: Wednesday, April 02, 2014 1:41 AM To: Roozbeh Pournader; Ken Whistler, ([email protected]) Cc: Behdad Esfahbod; [email protected]; James Clark Subject: Re: Bidi reordering of soft hyphen On 04/02/2014 12:00 AM, Roozbeh Pournader wrote: > Adding Behdad for his insight on the rendering stack. > > But as for user requirements and expectations, the first option, with > the hyphen on the right side of "car" as "car-" is what a good > publisher would want to print in his magazine or book. The second > option is harder to decipher for an RTL reader. I agree with Roozbeh here. Since the hyphen marks a break in the middle of the word, I think the most natural user expectation is that it should appear after the last character in the word, where "after" and "last" both refer to the reading direction of the word. I have seen examples of this in published Hebrew books, and this is also the way it's rendered in Chrome, Firefox and Opera (but in the case of Firefox, since I wrote the code for it I can testify that it isn't this way by design: as far as I remember I only took into account the direction of the text run containing the soft hyphen and didn't even think about the opposite-direction case). _______________________________________________ Unicode mailing list [email protected] http://unicode.org/mailman/listinfo/unicode _______________________________________________ Unicode mailing list [email protected] http://unicode.org/mailman/listinfo/unicode

