Settings for Chinese Poetry

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In the 20th century, written Chinese diverged into two canonical forms, simplified Chinese and traditional Chinese. And there exist wide varieties of spoken Chinese for the sake of ryhme.

Chinese Poetry Attributes

Written Language

The Written Language code should be from ISO 639-1, and optionally plus a code of ISO 15924 which is for the representation of names of scripts.

For example, the language code for Chinese is "zh". If your primary written language is Simplified Chinese and want the app to be able to provide Traditional Chinese representation of your poetry, you should declare the written language as "zh-Hans". Likewise, if you draft in Traditional Chinese, then you should declare the written language as "zh-Hant".

Applications of Written Language

The written language code will be used to render the lang attribute of appropriate HTML elements in the GUI for optimal rendering of fonts. That is, the country code plus the written language sub code like "zh-Hans" or "zh-Hant" will be injected to the container element containing the content.

For examples, with the same font "Roboto", different lang attribute may cause the Web browser to render differently.

zh-Hant
zh-Hans


For more details, Please check:

Spoken Languages

This section is for the convenience of document ryhme of poems if you write poems with ryhme matching multiple spoken languages.

The Spoken Language code should be from ISO-639-3. For example, there are 16 declared spoken languages/dialects for Chinese, and you should pick one like:

  1. "yue" being displayed as "粤語",“广东话” or "广州话".
  2. "cmn" being displayed as "國語" or "普通话".
  3. "nan" being displayed as "闽南话" or "台語".


Remarks:

Macrolanguage identifiers like "zho" is not used here. And only individual language identifier like "yue" and "cmn" is used. And obviously if you write poems with ryhme matching only one individual language, you don't need to define Spoken language.