describing 'logical' order

This is a last call comment from fantasai (fantasai@escape.com) on
the Character Model for the World Wide Web 1.0
(http://www.w3.org/TR/2002/WD-charmod-20020430/).

Semi-structured version of the comment:

Submitted by: fantasai (fantasai@escape.com)
Submitted on behalf of (maybe empty): 
Comment type: editorial
Chapter/section the comment applies to: 3.3 Units of visual rendering
The comment will be visible to: public
Comment title: describing 'logical' order
Comment:
The spec mentions that logical ordering "benefits accessibility, searching, and collation". It would be illustrative if you mention rendering the text to speech. Visual order is irrelevant to speech, the logical ordering in it is very clear, it's a concrete example, and it demonstrates the *naturalness* of logical ordering.


Structured version of  the comment:

<lc-comment
  visibility="public" status="pending"
  decision="pending" impact="editorial" id="LC-">
  <originator email="fantasai@escape.com"
      >fantasai</originator>
  <represents email=""
      >-</represents>
  <charmod-section href='http://www.w3.org/TR/2004/WD-charmod-20040225/#sec-VisualRenderingUnits'
    >3.3</charmod-section>
  <title>describing &#x27;logical&#x27; order</title>
  <description>
    <comment>
      <dated-link date="2004-03-04"
         href="http://www.w3.org/mid/158278643.20040304112001@toro.w3.mag.keio.ac.jp"
        >describing 'logical' order</dated-link>
      <para>The spec mentions that logical ordering &#x22;benefits accessibility, searching, and collation&#x22;. It would be illustrative if you mention rendering the text to speech. Visual order is irrelevant to speech, the logical ordering in it is very clear, it&#x27;s a concrete example, and it demonstrates the *naturalness* of logical ordering.</para>
    </comment>
  </description>
</lc-comment>

Received on Thursday, 4 March 2004 06:20:03 UTC