ISO or the Unicode Consortium tells us what's in
there, just like Jack Halpern.   But how to access them, 
and how to use them is the question put in front of this 
 WG, that has nothing to do about trust Linguistic advice 
or not. 

Liana



On Tue, 04 Sep 2001 11:17:47 +0200 Harald Tveit Alvestrand
<[EMAIL PROTECTED]> writes:
> 
> 
> --On 3. september 2001 11:04 -0400 Eric Brunner 
> <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> 
> >
> >> 2) No widely-accepted official standard table yet exists. 
> Multiple
> >> different tables exist.
> 
> > How would we know when one of the existing multiple different 
> tables
> > became the widely-accepted prevalent table?
> 
> When ISO or the Unicode Consortium (preferably both) declare this to 
> be 
> "the standard", based on advice from the CJK IRG, this would be a 
> pretty 
> clear hint.
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 
> 

Reply via email to