KTurtle false positive

Yaron Shahrabani sh.yaron at gmail.com
Wed Mar 13 19:36:41 GMT 2024


Hey, I'm not fully aware of this mechanism but I do remember typing the
same characters on the keyboard in the different layouts produce angle
brackets pointing to different directions (same goes for all the different
brackets/parenthesis).

Regarding XML, usually XML tags are in English, the only thing that can be
in Hebrew are the attributes' values, so that case is highly plausible.

Basically it should be that way also for Arabic and Persian so the
translation in those languages can be a good indicator for this situation.
Yaron Shahrabani

<DevOps - Hebrew translator>



On Sun, Mar 10, 2024 at 5:51 PM Chusslove Illich <caslav.ilic at gmx.net>
wrote:

> I'm further realising that an additional problem might be that the
> character '<' in a right-to-left text would actually have the meaning
> of the character '>' in a left-to-right text. Is this so?
>
> In that case, it is not clear to me what exactly is the correct
> solution. E.g. what does XML standard say in this case? What do XML
> parsers do in practice? Are there separate Unicode points for some
> "directed" characters wrt. RTL/RTL?
>
> --
> Chusslove Illich (Часлав Илић)
>
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