Thanks for your prompt replies.

I noticed from that list that there are quite a few languages that do not
have 2 character ISO 639 codes.

Balti  Baluchi  Berber  Hausa  Karaite   Kurmanji  Luri  Mazanderani
Moplah
 Pulaar    Siraiki (also known as Saraiki or Lahnda or Western Panjabi)
Sulu

Is it true that one would not be able set their browser locales to these
languages as it appears ISO 639 is a pre-requisite for this?

plus...
dumb question 1.  Is Aramaic (which doesn't seem to have a 2 character ISO
code) the same as Amharic (which does...AM)?   If not, Amharic appears to be
a Semetic language too, is that written right-to-left too?

dumb question 2. Are there an known cases where the full locale name
(language+country+variant) has a different directionality as for the root
language?   I know that some languages are written in different scripts
based on the locale; are there any cases where there are a two scripts that
have the same language code in their locale but differ in their writing
direction?

----- Original Message -----
From: "Michael (michka) Kaplan" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: "David Tooke" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>; "Unicode List"
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Wednesday, December 06, 2000 11:36 AM
Subject: Re: OT (Kind of): Determining whether Locales are left-to-right or
right-to-left.


> Well, there are lots of other Arabic script locales. Here is from a
message
> from Elaine Keown just the other day:
>
> Arabic  Balti  Baluchi  Berber  Farsi  Hausa  Karaite  Kashmiri  Kazakh
> Kirghiz Kurmanji  Luri  Mazanderani   Moplah  Panjabi---Pakistani
Pashto
> Pulaar  Sindhi  Siraiki (also known as Saraiki or Lahnda or Western
Panjabi)
> Sulu   Uighur   Urdu   Uzbek  Wolof
>
> There are also several Hebrew ones such as Yiddish, Aramaic, etc.
>
> MichKa
>
> Michael Kaplan
> Trigeminal Software, Inc.
> http://www.trigeminal.com/
>
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: "David Tooke" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> To: "Unicode List" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> Sent: Wednesday, December 06, 2000 8:48 AM
> Subject: OT (Kind of): Determining whether Locales are left-to-right or
> right-to-left.
>
>
> Is there a general mechanism for determining the directionality of a
locale?
>
> I am using Java Servlets to create HTML pages.   Is there something that
> will tell me when it is appropriate to generate the HTML in right to left
as
> opposed to left to right?
>
> At the moment it looks like I have to maintain a table of right to left
> locales myself.   If that is the way to go, apart from the Arabic (ar);
> Hebrew (he); Urdu (ur) which other locales is it appropriate to set the
> directionality to right-to-left?  Is there a standard document somewhere
> that would tell me?
>
>
> Thanks in advance.
>
> David Tooke
> [EMAIL PROTECTED]
>
>
>

Reply via email to