| <!DOCTYPE html> |
| <html> |
| <head> |
| <meta http-equiv="content-language" content="ja, zh_CN"> |
| <script src="../../resources/js-test-pre.js"></script> |
| </head> |
| <body> |
| <p>Test for <a href="https://bugs.webkit.org/show_bug.cgi?id=76701">bug 76701</a>: |
| map HTTP-EQUIV content-language to -webkit-locale. This particular test tests |
| that a comma-separated list of languages is ignored. This expectation may |
| change, see bug. The HTML5 spec says that content-language should not have |
| multiple languages, and decrees that a content-language containing a comma be |
| ignored; this <a |
| href="http://lists.w3.org/Archives/Public/public-html/2011Mar/0398.html">position has |
| been upheld</a> following significant debate. Firefox accepts a |
| comma-separated list and a CSS :lang selector for any language in the list is |
| matched. It's unclear what IE does. |
| </p> |
| <div id="console"></div> |
| <div id="x"></div> |
| <div id="y" lang="ar"></div> |
| <script> |
| function languageOfNode(id) { |
| var element = document.getElementById(id); |
| return window.getComputedStyle(element).webkitLocale; |
| } |
| shouldBeEqualToString("languageOfNode('x')", "auto"); |
| shouldBeEqualToString("languageOfNode('y')", "ar"); |
| </script> |
| <script src="../../resources/js-test-post.js"></script> |
| </body> |
| </html> |