Stefan Persson <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: >> Only slightly more seriously, I imagine it would be possible to >> examine the top-level domain and: >> >> (1) if .cn, .tw, .hk, .sg, .mo --> display URL with Chinese glyphs >> (2) if .jp --> display URL with Japanese glyphs >> (3) otherwise punt (browser's choice) > > And if someone puts a Japanese page on a .cn address, or vice > versa...? > > Wouldn't it be better to use > <META http-equiv=Content-Language content=ja> > - and - > <META http-equiv=Content-Language content=zh> > to distinguish between the two glyph displaying forms?
Perhaps I misunderstood the whole discussion. I thought we were talking about displaying a URL, not displaying the Web page located at that URL. If all you have is a URL (e.g. http://www.example.com), then there is no room for META tags or any other sort of external tagging. If you want to select glyphs based on language, you must guess. OTOH, if we are talking about displaying a page, then obviously we should use the language-tagging facility built into HTML. -Doug Ewell Fullerton, California