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Avoid visual comparisons with lang="ja-jp" #6926
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Build PASSEDStarted: 2017-08-18 00:01:48 View more information about this build on: |
Build PASSEDStarted: 2017-08-17 20:28:37 View more information about this build on: |
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Seems like that's fine if you're running an English build of a browser, but what if you're running a Japanese build? Perhaps it should instead specify the same language on both test and reference?
Or it should be rewritten to not use the As an aside, I can't see anything in any spec that would seem to permit what browsers actually do with language-specific generics; spec bug forthcoming. |
For now, if we want to have such consistency, more extensive changes would be needed (please see revised commit). |
The reference file `attribute-value-selector-001-ref.xht` does not specify `lang="ja-jp"` on the first `div` while this file does. This causes the two pages to look different because a Japanese font is selected in this file. Changing "ja-jp" to a language written in Latin letters, "fr-fr", avoids this problem.
w3c-test:mirror |
@dbaron's comment above looks reasonable, was that addressed? I can see only 1 commit. |
Yes, it has been addressed. I applied the same language tags to the reference and all three tests that use it. |
Build PASSEDStarted: 2017-08-18 00:01:48 Failing Jobs
View more information about this build on: |
The reference file `attribute-value-selector-001-ref.xht` does not specify `lang="ja-jp"` on the first `div` while this file does. This causes the two pages to look different because a Japanese font is selected in this file. Changing "ja-jp" to a language written in Latin letters, "fr-fr", avoids this problem.
The reference file `attribute-value-selector-001-ref.xht` does not specify `lang="ja-jp"` on the first `div` while this file does. This causes the two pages to look different because a Japanese font is selected in this file. Changing "ja-jp" to a language written in Latin letters, "fr-fr", avoids this problem.
The reference file
attribute-value-selector-001-ref.xht
does not specifylang="ja-jp"
on the firstdiv
while this file does. This causes the two pages to look different because a Japanese font is selected in this file. Changing "ja-jp" to a language written in Latin letters, "fr-fr", avoids this problem.