Hi Sebastian, Sorry for the late reply, part cybernetic part human. As you noticed there was sometihng weird with the email: <quote> Delivery-date: Mon, 06 Aug 2012 20:58:14 +0200 Received: from localhost ([127.0.0.1] helo=auriga.wearlab.de) by kbs62.informatik.uni-bremen.de with esmtp (Exim 4.69) (envelope-from <dillo-dev-bounces at dillo.org>) id 1SySVI-00054b-C4; Mon, 06 Aug 2012 20:58:12 +0200 Received: from lilly.ping.de ([83.97.42.2]) by kbs62.informatik.uni-bremen.de with smtp (Exim 4.69) (envelope-from <sgeerken at dillo.org>) id 1StgCZ-0003or-8d for dillo-dev at auriga.wearlab.de; Tue, 24 Jul 2012 16:35:07 +0200 Received: (qmail 24854 invoked from network); 24 Jul 2012 14:34:46 -0000 Received: (ofmipd 188.109.158.229); 24 Jul 2012 14:34:24 -0000 Date: 24 Jul 2012 16:31:16 +0200 </quote> It took near twelve days to reach me... On Tue, Jul 24, 2012 at 04:31:16PM +0200, Sebastian Geerken wrote:
Hi!
At <http://flpsed.org/hgweb/dillo_hyphen/>, you'll find a version of dillo which automatically hyphenates words, using the algorith by Frank Liang (which is also used by TeX). It is still quite messy, but works already rather stable. Some manual work is neccessary (from dillo_hyphen):
Good work! I've downloaded/compiled and tested a bit: even in spanish! I like how it breaks paragraphs by squeezing some lines and moving words around (even without hyphenation). The hyphenating part also seems OK (I need to test more). This looks very promising and makes me look forward for the merge day! So far, dillo has served me very well for reading articles (my font/size, my colors), and now there's the extra of better line/word breaking. This will surely also be welcomed by our users. Very good. There're glitches, sure. Just in case you don't yet have a reliable test case, lwn.net has problems with screen redraw. Lefthand margin. -- Cheers Jorge.-