This is the place to explore gaps in support for languages of India on the Web and in eBooks, and to document requirements.
We aim to address the problem that local users don't know how to tell the W3C what problems exist for support of their language on the Web, and the W3C doesn't know how to contact people who can help when questions arise.
Topics for discussion are suggested by the gap-analysis template. This work feeds into the language matrix which provides a heat-map for language issues on the Web.
GitHub repo • Discussion threads • Charter
We're looking for information about these writing systems. Follow the links for specific questions.
Bengali • Hindi • Gujarati • Punjabi • Tamil
- Bengali Layout Requirements • Editor's draft • Latest commits
- Devanagari Layout Requirements • Editor's draft • Latest commits
- Gujarati Layout Requirements • DNOTE • Editor's draft • Latest commits
- Gurmukhi Layout Requirements • DNOTE • Editor's draft • Latest commits
- Tamil Layout Requirements • DNOTE • Editor's draft • Latest commits
- Bengali Gap Analysis • DNOTE • Editor's draft • Latest commits
- Devanagari Gap Analysis • DNOTE • Editor's draft • Latest commits
- Gujarati Gap Analysis • DNOTE • Editor's draft • Latest commits
- Gurmukhi Gap Analysis • DNOTE • Editor's draft • Latest commits
- Tamil Gap Analysis • DNOTE • Editor's draft • Latest commits
- Bengali • Questions • Gap reports • Other • Spec issues
- Hindi • Questions • Gap reports • Other • Spec issues
- Gujarati • Questions • Gap reports • Other • Spec issues
- Punjabi • Questions • Gap reports • Other • Spec issues
- Tamil • Questions • Gap reports • Other • Spec issues
Please use the GitHub issue list to report issues for language support, for discussions, and to send feedback about documents. (Learn how GitHub issues work.)
Note that the public-i18n-indic mailing list is used to send notification digests & meeting minutes. It is not for technical discussion.
You can participate in the work at various levels. In order of increasing commitment, these include List subscriber, Participant, Editor, and Chair. Explore the options.
To just follow the work: Rather than 'Watch' this repository, subscribe to the public-i18n-indic mailing list. That list is notified (no more than once a day, and in digest form), about changes to issues in this repository, but also about other W3C Working Group issues related to the Indian writing systems.
To contribute content: All contributors must read and agree with CONTRIBUTING.md.
To become a participant, editor, or chair: contact Richard Ishida. We welcome participation requests.
- Chairs: Alolita Sharma, Abhijit Dutta
- W3C staff: Atsushi Shimono, Richard Ishida
- Mail archive
- Writing i18n tests
- Practical tips for task forces (See also the github and editorial guidelines below)
- Meeting info
- Group members
- Archived, former action tracker
The following information describes work going on at the W3C to support languages on the Web.
- Language support heatmap (matrix)
- Analysing support for text layout on the Web
- Overview of language enablement work in progress
- Get involved with Language Enablement
- Setting up a Gap Analysis Project
- Internationalization Sponsorship Program
If you end up creating a document, you should be familiar with and use the following: