| <!doctype html> |
| <html lang=en> |
| <meta charset=utf-8> |
| <title>CSS test: writing system and segment break transformation</title> |
| <link rel=author title="Florian Rivoal" href="https://florian.rivoal.net"> |
| <link rel=help href="https://drafts.csswg.org/css-text-3/#languages"> |
| <link rel=help href="https://drafts.csswg.org/css-text-3/#script-tagging"> |
| <link rel=help href="https://drafts.csswg.org/css-text-3/#line-break-transform"> |
| <link rel=match href="reference/writing-system-segment-break-001-ref.html"> |
| <meta name=assert content="If the writing system of the segment break is Chinese, Japanese, or Yi, |
| and the character before or after the segment break is punctuation or a symbol (Unicode general category P* or S*) |
| and has an East Asian Width property of A or is Emoji, |
| and the character on the other side of the segment break is F, W, or H, and not Hangul or Emoji, |
| then the segment break is removed."> |
| <!-- |
| In this case, checking with “ and ” which are punctuation with East Asian Width of A, |
| next to Katakana letters (which are W), |
| while the writing system is Katakana, which is classified as Japanese, |
| despite a non Japanese content language (Ainu). |
| --> |
| |
| <p>The test passes if the both lines are identical, including the spacing of the characters. |
| |
| <div lang=ain-Kana>“ |
| アイヌイタㇰ |
| ”</div> |
| <div lang=ain-Kana>“アイヌイタㇰ”</div> |