In BiDi implementation, Arabic characters are shifted to different positions during rendering
I am having a challenge implementing BiDi characters as the arabic characters are shifted to different positions during construction of an object key.
Could someone please help me understand the behavior and a solution
Because I use the similar kind of thing to modify the strings I get undesired affects
javascript bidi
add a comment |
I am having a challenge implementing BiDi characters as the arabic characters are shifted to different positions during construction of an object key.
Could someone please help me understand the behavior and a solution
Because I use the similar kind of thing to modify the strings I get undesired affects
javascript bidi
The below solved my issue Click here
– Raviteja Avvari
Nov 22 '18 at 14:10
add a comment |
I am having a challenge implementing BiDi characters as the arabic characters are shifted to different positions during construction of an object key.
Could someone please help me understand the behavior and a solution
Because I use the similar kind of thing to modify the strings I get undesired affects
javascript bidi
I am having a challenge implementing BiDi characters as the arabic characters are shifted to different positions during construction of an object key.
Could someone please help me understand the behavior and a solution
Because I use the similar kind of thing to modify the strings I get undesired affects
javascript bidi
javascript bidi
edited Nov 21 '18 at 11:49
Raviteja Avvari
asked Nov 21 '18 at 10:03
Raviteja AvvariRaviteja Avvari
137212
137212
The below solved my issue Click here
– Raviteja Avvari
Nov 22 '18 at 14:10
add a comment |
The below solved my issue Click here
– Raviteja Avvari
Nov 22 '18 at 14:10
The below solved my issue Click here
– Raviteja Avvari
Nov 22 '18 at 14:10
The below solved my issue Click here
– Raviteja Avvari
Nov 22 '18 at 14:10
add a comment |
1 Answer
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The phenomenon you observe is 'presentation only'. The development tools that you use to debug your javascript, are not RTL-friendly. If you suspect something went wrong for a specific value which contains Arabic characters, you can copy the value to clipboard, and paste the result to some separate viewer, preferably one that allows you to control the direction, e.g. Windows Notepad.
Thanks for the comment. But I see this happening during string modification as well. I have added one more screen shot. Please advise
– Raviteja Avvari
Nov 21 '18 at 11:46
Exactly! It's very hard to understand the underlying order of characters looking at the string output. Maybe you can print the string out in hexadecimal format, or copy/paste the value to Notepad. Or, you need to add RLM character after':'
to make sure each substring begins as right-to-left.
– Alex Cohn
Nov 21 '18 at 13:04
add a comment |
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1 Answer
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active
oldest
votes
1 Answer
1
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
active
oldest
votes
The phenomenon you observe is 'presentation only'. The development tools that you use to debug your javascript, are not RTL-friendly. If you suspect something went wrong for a specific value which contains Arabic characters, you can copy the value to clipboard, and paste the result to some separate viewer, preferably one that allows you to control the direction, e.g. Windows Notepad.
Thanks for the comment. But I see this happening during string modification as well. I have added one more screen shot. Please advise
– Raviteja Avvari
Nov 21 '18 at 11:46
Exactly! It's very hard to understand the underlying order of characters looking at the string output. Maybe you can print the string out in hexadecimal format, or copy/paste the value to Notepad. Or, you need to add RLM character after':'
to make sure each substring begins as right-to-left.
– Alex Cohn
Nov 21 '18 at 13:04
add a comment |
The phenomenon you observe is 'presentation only'. The development tools that you use to debug your javascript, are not RTL-friendly. If you suspect something went wrong for a specific value which contains Arabic characters, you can copy the value to clipboard, and paste the result to some separate viewer, preferably one that allows you to control the direction, e.g. Windows Notepad.
Thanks for the comment. But I see this happening during string modification as well. I have added one more screen shot. Please advise
– Raviteja Avvari
Nov 21 '18 at 11:46
Exactly! It's very hard to understand the underlying order of characters looking at the string output. Maybe you can print the string out in hexadecimal format, or copy/paste the value to Notepad. Or, you need to add RLM character after':'
to make sure each substring begins as right-to-left.
– Alex Cohn
Nov 21 '18 at 13:04
add a comment |
The phenomenon you observe is 'presentation only'. The development tools that you use to debug your javascript, are not RTL-friendly. If you suspect something went wrong for a specific value which contains Arabic characters, you can copy the value to clipboard, and paste the result to some separate viewer, preferably one that allows you to control the direction, e.g. Windows Notepad.
The phenomenon you observe is 'presentation only'. The development tools that you use to debug your javascript, are not RTL-friendly. If you suspect something went wrong for a specific value which contains Arabic characters, you can copy the value to clipboard, and paste the result to some separate viewer, preferably one that allows you to control the direction, e.g. Windows Notepad.
edited Nov 24 '18 at 18:13
marc_s
582k13011231269
582k13011231269
answered Nov 21 '18 at 10:39
Alex CohnAlex Cohn
42.2k555193
42.2k555193
Thanks for the comment. But I see this happening during string modification as well. I have added one more screen shot. Please advise
– Raviteja Avvari
Nov 21 '18 at 11:46
Exactly! It's very hard to understand the underlying order of characters looking at the string output. Maybe you can print the string out in hexadecimal format, or copy/paste the value to Notepad. Or, you need to add RLM character after':'
to make sure each substring begins as right-to-left.
– Alex Cohn
Nov 21 '18 at 13:04
add a comment |
Thanks for the comment. But I see this happening during string modification as well. I have added one more screen shot. Please advise
– Raviteja Avvari
Nov 21 '18 at 11:46
Exactly! It's very hard to understand the underlying order of characters looking at the string output. Maybe you can print the string out in hexadecimal format, or copy/paste the value to Notepad. Or, you need to add RLM character after':'
to make sure each substring begins as right-to-left.
– Alex Cohn
Nov 21 '18 at 13:04
Thanks for the comment. But I see this happening during string modification as well. I have added one more screen shot. Please advise
– Raviteja Avvari
Nov 21 '18 at 11:46
Thanks for the comment. But I see this happening during string modification as well. I have added one more screen shot. Please advise
– Raviteja Avvari
Nov 21 '18 at 11:46
Exactly! It's very hard to understand the underlying order of characters looking at the string output. Maybe you can print the string out in hexadecimal format, or copy/paste the value to Notepad. Or, you need to add RLM character after
':'
to make sure each substring begins as right-to-left.– Alex Cohn
Nov 21 '18 at 13:04
Exactly! It's very hard to understand the underlying order of characters looking at the string output. Maybe you can print the string out in hexadecimal format, or copy/paste the value to Notepad. Or, you need to add RLM character after
':'
to make sure each substring begins as right-to-left.– Alex Cohn
Nov 21 '18 at 13:04
add a comment |
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The below solved my issue Click here
– Raviteja Avvari
Nov 22 '18 at 14:10