Talk:Directionality support/LQT Archive 1

Language or script?
Is directionality determined by language or script? I've never actually heard anyone talk from R to L. Is there a step further on (like: "en is written in the Latin alphabet, and thus is written LTR"? As an illustration: the language en:Serbo-Croatian is written in Cyrillic script and in Arabic script (and more scripts, but here is the point). -DePiep 23:20, 2 August 2011 (UTC)
 * Let me illustrate my point.


 * An audio file in Hebrew is not RTL. I discussed this yesterday by telephone with a friend, in Arabic, and he too was not talking with a specific directionality.
 * The current example File:LTR content with RTL interface (after).png does have a mirrored interface (mirrored from the en.wikipedia), but that "interface" is not scriptwise RTL by itself. It is perfectly imaginable (if not possible) to have that mirrored layout, and use English LTR content everywhere.
 * (By the way, should the word "interface" not be "style", as opposed to "content"? CSS and all.)
 * Is there a decisive list available that says: "language Aa(a) is written in script Xxxx"? The list could be decisive for all wikiworld. This way thousands of languages would fold into some hundreds of scripts.
 * My suggestion is: when talking directionality, don't talk languages, but talk scripts. Only scholars & researchers are allowed to mix up those -- in a controlled environment, it is dangerously confusing! -DePiep 10:23, 3 August 2011 (UTC)