On 10.12.2005 12:28 (+0100), Matthias Wimmer wrote: > Examples of mapped characters are: > > “℉” (U+2109, single charater!) is mapped to “°f” (two characters), > “™” (U+2122, single character!) is mapped to “tm” (two characters), > “ℂ” (U+2102) is mapped to “c”, > “ℹ” (U+2139) is mapped to “i”, > “№” (U+2116, single character!) is mapped to “no” (two characters), > “²” (U+00B2) is mapped to “2”.
What's the point in mapping similar-looking characters to another one? They are simply not the same and mapping a character from one language set to one of an arbitrary other language can disturb sorting things very much. Imagine our alphabet was A,B,D,F,G,H,...,C,E only because C and E were mapped to the greerillew language characters that look similar (or vice versa). Well anyway, I don't think I need this for now. I'll simply make sure it's Unicode-capable, plugging in a string converter later is still possible. -- Yves Goergen "LonelyPixel" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> "Does the movement of the trees make the wind blow?" http://newsboard.unclassified.de - Unclassified NewsBoard Forum
