What if this behavior was configurable? I still think there are more
people who would love it if address bar was ASCII only. Oh, but these
days address bar also performs auto-complete based on matching page
titles (not only URLs), I guess it's not such a good idea after all..



On Jul 22, 3:22 pm, mhenriday <[email protected]> wrote:
> I'm one of those people who use non-ASCII URLs, for example, when
> checking out sites in Chinese or japanese. I assure you that I'd be
> most upset if Chrome or any other browser were to hinder me in this
> regard. The point of a good browser is flexibility - it should do what
> I want it to do, not the other way 'round !...
>
> Henri
>
> On Jul 21, 11:18 pm, krtulmay <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>
>
> > Well, there must be some or many people that are using and entering
> > non-Latin URLs.
>
> > Why else are there Internationalized Domain Names (IDNs) 
> > ?http://www.google.com/search?q=Internationalized+domain+name
>
> > On Jul 21, 11:45 am, Contributor <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> > > I have more than one keyboard input language installed, I switch
> > > between the languages often depending on which website (mostly social
> > > networking) I'm using and who I'm writing to. But when I open a new
> > > tab/window and try to type the URL I must always switch to English. I
> > > don't think people ever type URLs in an alphabet other than Latin. I
> > > think it would be nice if while typing in Address Bar input language
> > > always defaulted to English (and switched back to whatever the
> > > language was active prior to that whencursor leaves the address bar).
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