Yet another reason why you should use #Firefox
You can use: #BestViewedInFirefox
:lang(\*-Hang)
:lang("*-Latn)
:lang("zh", "ja", ko")
:lang(PT, DE, HE)
If you care about multilingual and multi-script support.
#language #lang #HTML #CSS #WebDev #BrowserWars
@youronlyone@c.im assuming what you’re showing to me is a Firefox only css, should we just use
html[lang=“jp”] h1 {}
@lil5@fosstodon.org
It’s not “Firefox-only” per se, it’s CSS. Firefox is fast when it comes to implementing updates that benefits multilingual and Asian support, and Chromium is either slow, implements a small part only, or just ignores it completely.
(aside: Another good example is
Ruby
annotation. Firefox’s implementation of Ruby is up-to-date while Chromium’s stuck in 2010.And this is very very annoying, you have to design for Chromium when it comes to Ruby annotations; or use JavaScript to serve different Ruby codes per browser. Chromium is practically the “modern IE6”.)
It’s the same with
:lang()
.In Chromium, you still have to do it like this:
:lang(en-GB), :lang(en-US), :lang(en-AU), :lang(en-NZ), :lang(en-PH) { }
In Firefox you can do it this way:
:lang(en-GB, en-US, en-AU, en-NZ, en-PH) { }
or
:lang("en-GB", "en-US", "en-AU", "en-NZ", "en-PH") { }
Another example, in Chromium:
:lang(ceb-Tglg), :lang(pam-Tglg), :lang(fil-Tglg) { } :lang(ceb-Hano), :lang(pam-Hano), :lang(fil-Hano) { }
In Firefox:
:lang(\*-Tglg) { } :lang(\*-Hano) { }
or
:lang("*-Tglg) { } :lang("*-Hano) { }
^_~