Closed
Bug 662055
Opened 13 years ago
Closed 12 years ago
advanced Hebrew diacritics are shown correctly only in particular order
Categories
(Core :: Layout: Text and Fonts, defect)
Tracking
()
RESOLVED
FIXED
mozilla13
People
(Reporter: amir.aharoni, Assigned: jfkthame)
References
Details
Attachments
(8 files, 4 obsolete files)
418 bytes,
text/html
|
Details | |
139.11 KB,
text/html
|
Details | |
102.52 KB,
application/octet-stream
|
Details | |
22.19 KB,
image/png
|
Details | |
2.00 KB,
patch
|
mozilla
:
review+
|
Details | Diff | Splinter Review |
1.61 KB,
patch
|
smontagu
:
review+
|
Details | Diff | Splinter Review |
67.88 KB,
image/png
|
Details | |
734 bytes,
text/plain
|
Details |
User-Agent: Mozilla/5.0 (X11; Linux x86_64; rv:6.0a2) Gecko/20110603 Firefox/6.0a2 Build Identifier: Mozilla/5.0 (X11; Linux x86_64; rv:6.0a2) Gecko/20110603 Firefox/6.0a2 In Hebrew there are advanced diacritics that are supposed to displayed the same no matter what their logical order is. This works correctly on Windows 7 and in Chromium on Linux, but it works incorrectly in Firefox on Linux. In the attached file the Hebrew word has different order of diacritics, but it is supposed to be displayed the same. I intentionally used character numbers in the HTML source code to make sure that no software applies any normalization to them. It's important to note that this will only work with fonts which appropriately support Hebrew diacritics. I suggest Taamey Frank CLM, which can be downloaded here: http://culmus.sourceforge.net/taamim/index.html . Reproducible: Always Steps to Reproduce: 1. Install the Taamey Frank CLM font. 2. Open the attached file in the browser. 3. Check how the Hebrew word is displayed. Actual Results: In Firefox the first word is displayed incorrectly - the diacritics are garbled. Expected Results: Both words must be displayed identically.
Reporter | ||
Comment 1•13 years ago
|
||
Updated•13 years ago
|
Attachment #537354 -
Attachment mime type: text/plain → text/html
Reporter | ||
Comment 2•13 years ago
|
||
Forgot to add: On Windows XP it's broken in all browsers, so that's probably an XP issue. But on Linux it's only broken in Firefox, so it may be a Gecko issue.
Comment 3•13 years ago
|
||
I had to zip the testcase in order to pack it with the font file. Sorry for that.
Comment 4•13 years ago
|
||
Attachment #537440 -
Attachment is obsolete: true
Comment 5•13 years ago
|
||
Comment on attachment 559162 [details] testcase with embedded font This testcase didn't work unless the font is installed. > Warning: Error in parsing value for 'src'. Skipped to next declaration. > Source File: https://bug662055.bugzilla.mozilla.org/attachment.cgi?id=559162 Line: 8
Assignee | ||
Comment 6•13 years ago
|
||
Specifically, it is missing "local(...)" in the @font-face rule, and also lacking a comma between the url sources. Thus, @font-face { font-family: TaameyFrankCLM; src: "Taamey Frank CLM", url(res/TaameyFrankCLM.ttf) url(data:;base64,....... should be more like this: @font-face { font-family: TaameyFrankCLM; src: local("Taamey Frank CLM"), url(res/TaameyFrankCLM.ttf), url(data:;base64,....... (Also, it seems wasteful to give both the URL to a file on the server _and_ a data URL.)
Comment 7•13 years ago
|
||
Attachment #559162 -
Attachment is obsolete: true
Assignee | ||
Comment 8•13 years ago
|
||
The embedded font doesn't load for me in Firefox (nightly build) - the Web console reports "Error in parsing value for 'src'. Skipped to next declaration." Apparently we can't handle the newlines within the base64 string properly. (This may be a bug - I thought they ought to be ignored.)
Reporter | ||
Comment 9•13 years ago
|
||
I see the same issue on the latest build of Aurora for mobile now. Except that this build seems to support Hebrew diacritics as well as Firefox on desktop Linux.
Comment 10•13 years ago
|
||
Amir: it looks like people are still having trouble viewing your testcase (see comment 8). It might help if you were to diagnose the problem and perhaps upload a fixed one, or file a bug on Firefox? Gerv
Reporter | ||
Comment 11•13 years ago
|
||
Adding the font to be installed.
Reporter | ||
Comment 12•13 years ago
|
||
Embedding the font using url() may be a separate issue. This can be easily reproduced by installing the attached the font locally and opening the first attached html file. It can also be tested here: http://translatewiki.net/wiki/User:Amire80/anna
Reporter | ||
Comment 13•12 years ago
|
||
A similar, but distinct issue: Bug 721821 - Hebrew diacritics are displayed incorrectly in SVG.
Assignee | ||
Comment 14•12 years ago
|
||
The issue here is that the font only implements support for the diacritics in a particular order (which happens _not_ to be the canonical order of normalised Unicode text). Ideally, font developers would include the necessary lookups (whether using GSUB glyph composition, GPOS mark positioning, or both) to handle text presented in any (canonically-equivalent) order. This would make them immune to the possibility of normalisation being applied to the text, rather than assuming a specific order. However, in practice this is rarely done; most font developers implement only the character ordering that they consider most natural, without regard to the canonical ordering specified by Unicode. (A similar issue applies to certain diacritics in Arabic script, too.) For this particular font, I believe the harfbuzz update in bug 695857 will resolve the issue; with this applied, the two samples from comment 1 both render identically, with the dagesh properly placed. This is because the harfbuzz update adds some normalisation support, and the font includes precomposed consonant+dagesh glyphs, which get used here. (However, it would probably not resolve the issue for a font that relied only on dynamic mark positioning, but supported only "logical" and not "canonical" ordering for the combining mark characters.)
Comment 15•12 years ago
|
||
(In reply to Jonathan Kew (:jfkthame) from comment #14) > For this particular font, I believe the harfbuzz update in bug 695857 will > resolve the issue Not without bug 722139, it won't ;-)
Comment 16•12 years ago
|
||
(In reply to Jonathan Kew (:jfkthame) from comment #14) > For this particular font, I believe the harfbuzz update in bug 695857 will > resolve the issue; with this applied, the two samples from comment 1 both > render identically, with the dagesh properly placed. Identically but not correctly -- see the screenshot. The dagesh is fine, but the meteg and qamats are overlapping
Assignee | ||
Comment 17•12 years ago
|
||
Since the harfbuzz update landed, we get _consistent_ behavior, because it reorders diacritics into canonical order. Unfortunately, the canonical order is not the order supported by most font designers, who assume "logical" order. Harfbuzz has a fix for the Arabic equivalent of this issue (the ordering of SHADDA relative to vowels), but lacks the Hebrew version (for DAGESH). This patch provides that support, and fixes the rendering with this font and other similarly-constructed fonts that assume "logical" or "linguistic" ordering.
Assignee: nobody → jfkthame
Attachment #597834 -
Flags: review?(mozilla)
Assignee | ||
Comment 18•12 years ago
|
||
After reviewing the SBL Hebrew manual (as recommended by comments at http://forum.fontlab.com/archive-old-microsoft-volt-group/vista-and-diacritic-ordering-t6751.0.html), the Hebrew marks need a more complex permutation, particularly to bring the shin/sin dots, rafe and holam into the appropriate positions. Maybe we should combine this with the Arabic permutation, and do the whole bunch with a single lookup table?
Attachment #597834 -
Attachment is obsolete: true
Attachment #597834 -
Flags: review?(mozilla)
Attachment #597909 -
Flags: review?(mozilla)
Comment 19•12 years ago
|
||
Comment on attachment 597909 [details] [diff] [review] [harfbuzz] patch v2, permute ordering of Hebrew diacritics LGTM. There's the typo in the comments but you know that already. I'll upstream a slightly modified but equivalent version.
Attachment #597909 -
Flags: review?(mozilla) → review+
Assignee | ||
Comment 20•12 years ago
|
||
https://hg.mozilla.org/integration/mozilla-inbound/rev/20df766a9922 Forgot to fix the comment before pushing, so fixed that in a followup changeset: https://hg.mozilla.org/integration/mozilla-inbound/rev/2e4d93627d9f
Target Milestone: --- → mozilla13
Comment 21•12 years ago
|
||
Most things are looking good with this patch, including the complex diacritic combinations in https://bug404426.bugzilla.mozilla.org/attachment.cgi?id=402560. One case that still does not work is https://bug637772.bugzilla.mozilla.org/attachment.cgi?id=515942 - the Hebrew word for Jerusalem which is normally spelled in the Bible with two diacritics under the lamed. This is the case mentioned at http://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/Appendix:Unicode_normalization#Issues: 'the problem is that the diacritics should not /have/ a canonical ordering, because the two orderings are not actually equivalent (that is, the two diacritics should have the same value for the Canonical_Combining_Class (ccc) property, but instead they have different ones). For example, Hebrew לִַ ("lai") is mistakenly normalized to לִַ ("lia").'
Comment 22•12 years ago
|
||
Hmm, I see that the SBL Hebrew font manual recommends working round the יְרוּשָׁלִַם problem by using U+034F COMBINING GRAPHEME JOINER. This indeed improves the rendering in SBL Hebrew itself and some other fonts; but sites with the Biblical text, e.g. http://tanach.us/Tanach.xml?Jov7:11#Ps137:5-137:6 or http://mechon-mamre.org/i/t/t26d7.htm don't seem to be doing that.
Assignee | ||
Comment 23•12 years ago
|
||
The sequences <PATAH, HIRIQ> and <HIRIQ, PATAH> are (for better or worse) defined by Unicode to be canonically equivalent, and therefore no distinction can (reliably) be made between them. And the combining classes mean that under normalization, they'll end up in the order <HIRIQ, PATAH>. To maintain the order <PATAH, HIRIQ>, therefore, CGJ can be inserted between them to introduce a distinction that would otherwise not exist. I'm wondering, though, whether in practice the only case where these two marks co-occur (in either order) is this example. If so, perhaps we should consider permuting the classes such that they will (always, unless blocked by CGJ) appear in the order <PATAH, HIRIQ>. This would presumably improve the rendering of sites such as you mention, but it would mean that if anyone does ever want the <HIRIQ, PATAH> order maintained, they'd need to use CGJ in _this_ case instead. WDYT, Simon? Behdad?
Comment 24•12 years ago
|
||
(In reply to Simon Montagu from comment #21) > Most things are looking good with this patch, including the complex > diacritic combinations in > https://bug404426.bugzilla.mozilla.org/attachment.cgi?id=402560. Nice. Simon, can you please create me a test file or the cases you care about? Just a plain text file with one test per line. That would immensely help. > One case that still does not work is > https://bug637772.bugzilla.mozilla.org/attachment.cgi?id=515942 - the Hebrew > word for Jerusalem which is normally spelled in the Bible with two > diacritics under the lamed. > > This is the case mentioned at > http://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/Appendix:Unicode_normalization#Issues: 'the > problem is that the diacritics should not /have/ a canonical ordering, > because the two orderings are not actually equivalent (that is, the two > diacritics should have the same value for the Canonical_Combining_Class > (ccc) property, but instead they have different ones). For example, Hebrew > לִַ ("lai") is mistakenly normalized to לִַ ("lia").' Interesting. Can we make them have the same class? Or that would break other combinations?
Comment 25•12 years ago
|
||
(In reply to Jonathan Kew (:jfkthame) from comment #23) > The sequences <PATAH, HIRIQ> and <HIRIQ, PATAH> are (for better or worse) > defined by Unicode to be canonically equivalent, and therefore no > distinction can (reliably) be made between them. And the combining classes > mean that under normalization, they'll end up in the order <HIRIQ, PATAH>. > To maintain the order <PATAH, HIRIQ>, therefore, CGJ can be inserted between > them to introduce a distinction that would otherwise not exist. > > I'm wondering, though, whether in practice the only case where these two > marks co-occur (in either order) is this example. If so, perhaps we should > consider permuting the classes such that they will (always, unless blocked > by CGJ) appear in the order <PATAH, HIRIQ>. This would presumably improve > the rendering of sites such as you mention, but it would mean that if anyone > does ever want the <HIRIQ, PATAH> order maintained, they'd need to use CGJ > in _this_ case instead. WDYT, Simon? Behdad? Sounds reasonable but I don't know Hebrew rendering enough to really assess that.
Comment 26•12 years ago
|
||
Alternatively, if uniscribe does reordering, we should match that.
Comment 27•12 years ago
|
||
(In reply to Jonathan Kew (:jfkthame) from comment #23) > I'm wondering, though, whether in practice the only case where these two > marks co-occur (in either order) is this example. If so, perhaps we should > consider permuting the classes such that they will (always, unless blocked > by CGJ) appear in the order <PATAH, HIRIQ>. This would presumably improve > the rendering of sites such as you mention, but it would mean that if anyone > does ever want the <HIRIQ, PATAH> order maintained, they'd need to use CGJ > in _this_ case instead. WDYT, Simon? Behdad? That sounds very reasonable to me, but note that for grammatical reasons, the word can occur with any of <PATAH, HIRIQ>, <QAMATS, HIRIQ>, <PATACH, SHEVA> or <QAMATS, SHEVA>. http://tanach.us/Tanach.xml?#Ps137:6-137:6 http://tanach.us/Tanach.xml?#Ps137:5-137:5 http://tanach.us/Tanach.xml?#1%20Kings10:2-10:2 http://tanach.us/Tanach.xml?#2%20Kings9:28-9:28 Other than these, I'm not aware of any other cases where one consonant can have more than one vowel diacritic in Hebrew, so any case that comes up will presumably be some kind of nonce-form, which I have no prolbem in requiring CGJ for. Amir, what do you think?
Target Milestone: mozilla13 → ---
Reporter | ||
Comment 28•12 years ago
|
||
I also cannot recall any other such word. In my edition of Gesenius' Hebrew Grammar i use the CGJ, see https://en.wikisource.org/wiki/Page:Gesenius%27_Hebrew_Grammar_%281910_Kautzsch-Cowley_edition%29.djvu/90 .
Assignee | ||
Comment 29•12 years ago
|
||
(In reply to Behdad Esfahbod from comment #24) > Can we make them have the same class? Or that would break > other combinations? That would fix the immediate problem, in that it would allow the preferred logical but non-canonical order (which renders correctly) to be maintained, but I think it would actually be doing users a disservice in the longer term. The problem is that if we conflate any combining classes in this way, then we will _not_ ensure that canonically-equivalent strings render identically. And this means that users may be misled into believing they can use such strings in contrastive ways, as they see a difference in the displayed form. However, because the strings are in fact equivalent _by definition_, any process is free to apply normalization to the data on the understanding that it will not make any significant or semantic change - and so the distinction that the user might be trying to make is illusory and their data inherently fragile. I think it's important, therefore, that (as http://www.unicode.org/faq/normalization.html#9 says) we should only permute, never split or combine, the CC values. This way we preserve the Unicode-defined equivalence or distinction between encoded sequences, and continue to render equivalent sequences in the same way, so that we don't create an illusion of a difference that cannot be reliably maintained.
Assignee | ||
Comment 30•12 years ago
|
||
(In reply to Simon Montagu from comment #27) > That sounds very reasonable to me, but note that for grammatical reasons, > the word can occur with any of <PATAH, HIRIQ>, <QAMATS, HIRIQ>, <PATACH, > SHEVA> or <QAMATS, SHEVA>. OK. We currently (as of yesterday) have the order sheva, hataf segol, hataf patah, hataf qamats, hiriq, tsere, segol, patah, qamats from original classes 10..18, moved to 15..23 because of the marks we want closer to the base. We could simply move patah and qamats to the head of this section of the list, before sheva. Or move sheva and hiriq to the end, following qamats. Either way, we'd get the relevant pairs in the desired order. Simon (or Amir), do you have any opinion on the most sensible approach here? If in fact no other pairs of these marks ever co-occur, then it doesn't matter precisely which order we use for the classes; but maybe you have a sense for what's most logical (e.g., what about tsere and segol? does it seem more plausible to put them before or after patah and qamats, supposing someone ever wanted to use them together?).
Reporter | ||
Comment 31•12 years ago
|
||
I can't think of anything else.
Comment 32•12 years ago
|
||
https://hg.mozilla.org/mozilla-central/rev/20df766a9922 https://hg.mozilla.org/mozilla-central/rev/2e4d93627d9f
Status: NEW → RESOLVED
Closed: 12 years ago
Resolution: --- → FIXED
Target Milestone: --- → mozilla13
Reporter | ||
Comment 33•12 years ago
|
||
Is it supposed to be in Nightly already?
Assignee | ||
Comment 34•12 years ago
|
||
(In reply to Amir Aharoni from comment #33) > Is it supposed to be in Nightly already? The patches just merged to mozilla-central, which means it should appear in _tomorrow's_ Nightly; today's has already been built before this went in.
Reporter | ||
Comment 35•12 years ago
|
||
Thanks a lot. It works correctly in Nightly 2012-02-18 if harfbuzz.scripts is 4, but broken if it's 3. In the previous Nightly it was broken in both cases.
Assignee | ||
Comment 36•12 years ago
|
||
Right - by default, we currently use Uniscribe or DirectWrite shaping for Hebrew on Windows, which won't be helped by the fix here, as it's outside our control. Note that the harfbuzz.scripts value is actually a combination of bit flags, so to _add_ Hebrew [4], you should change the default setting of 3 ("simple" scripts [1] plus Arabic [2]) to 7; otherwise you're inadvertently switching it _off_ for the scripts where we expect to use it by default. (Bug 722139 is about using harfbuzz by default for Hebrew; I think we may be to the point where we can make that switch shortly.)
Assignee | ||
Comment 37•12 years ago
|
||
Another problem that remains can be seen with the Arial and Courier fonts from WinXP, for example: if the text contains sequences such as <consonant,dagesh>, the dagesh is generally not placed well, as these fonts have no mark positioning data. They do contain glyphs for the Unicode presentation forms in the FBxx block, but we don't currently use those to render text that was entered in decomposed form. I've filed bug 728866 about this issue.
Assignee | ||
Comment 38•12 years ago
|
||
I'm re-opening this for a small followup, as suggested in comments 21 and following. I think we should adjust the mark-class permutation such that HIRIQ and SHEVA move after PATAH and QAMATS. This will enable the Biblical spelling of Jerusalem to render as expected, without requiring authors to explicitly insert CGJ between the co-occurring marks. Note that both Microsoft (Uniscribe, DirectWrite) and Apple (Core Text) engines allow users to enter these combinations without CGJ, and give the desired rendering; i.e. they are _not_ forcing these marks into canonical order. (It appears that they are not sorting at all within the set of vowels below the consonant, and therefore they do _not_ render the NFC-ordered form of the text properly with the SBL or SIL fonts; however, this should be regarded as a bug - they fail to render canonically-equivalent texts identically - rather than a feature.)
Status: RESOLVED → REOPENED
Resolution: FIXED → ---
Assignee | ||
Comment 39•12 years ago
|
||
With this adjustment, the "natural" spelling of Jerusalem renders correctly without requiring CGJ - which many authors fail to insert, as they are unaware of the issue, and neither MS nor Apple engines fully normalize the mark order. (I suspect they just reorder the consonant-modifier marks such as dagesh and sin/shin dots, and leave the vowels untouched). (In the event that an author actually *wants* sheva/hiriq to appear before patah/qamats, they'd need to use CGJ to maintain that order. But as far as we're aware, these combinations never occur in real text - and the available fonts don't handle most of them well anyway.)
Attachment #599633 -
Flags: review?(smontagu)
Comment 40•12 years ago
|
||
Comment on attachment 599633 [details] [diff] [review] patch, move sheva and hiriq after other vowels for shaping Review of attachment 599633 [details] [diff] [review]: ----------------------------------------------------------------- Looks good to me. BTW, Amir pointed me to another problematical case: meteg to the left and right of a vowel as in section 16g at http://en.wikisource.org/wiki/Page:Gesenius%27_Hebrew_Grammar_%281910_Kautzsch-Cowley_edition%29.djvu/89. I think that that is another case where it is reasonable to require CGJ for correct ordering (see also http://www.gentlewisdom.org/qaya/academic/hebrew/Meteg.html).
Attachment #599633 -
Flags: review?(smontagu) → review+
Assignee | ||
Comment 41•12 years ago
|
||
Pushed followup: https://hg.mozilla.org/integration/mozilla-inbound/rev/046998d673fc Behdad, this updated permutation is what I'd recommend you take in upstream harfbuzz, too. (In reply to Simon Montagu from comment #40) > BTW, Amir pointed me to another problematical case: meteg to the left and > right of a vowel... Yes, there's no getting away from the requirement to use control codes for users who want to differentiate the various orderings here - otherwise, normalization says they're all the same.
Comment 42•12 years ago
|
||
Thanks Jonathan. I'll pick this now. Simon, Amir, can you please compile me a test suite? Just a text file with one test text per line, of all the cases you want to make sure HarfBuzz handles.
Comment 43•12 years ago
|
||
All picked up and cleaned up upstream. Still waiting for test data though.
Comment 44•12 years ago
|
||
Here are a bunch of Hebrew testcases in a plain text file.
Comment 45•12 years ago
|
||
This screenshot is with a current build from Mozilla-Inbound including attachment 599633 [details] [diff] [review]
Comment 46•12 years ago
|
||
Sorry, I should have said that the screenshot is with the font set to SBL Hebrew.
Comment 47•12 years ago
|
||
https://hg.mozilla.org/mozilla-central/rev/046998d673fc
Status: REOPENED → RESOLVED
Closed: 12 years ago → 12 years ago
Resolution: --- → FIXED
Comment 48•12 years ago
|
||
I added a few of Amir's tests from http://translatewiki.net/wiki/User:Amire80/anna and http://translatewiki.net/wiki/User:Amire80/hbo
Attachment #599942 -
Attachment is obsolete: true
Comment 49•12 years ago
|
||
Thanks. Pushed test cases to upstream harfbuzz.
You need to log in
before you can comment on or make changes to this bug.
Description
•