> Hardly anyone needs full Unicode. If all you are interested in are > European scripts and symbols for instance, then the 3 kilocharacters of > the Unicode subset MES-3 are more than good enough for your needs, and > the XFree86 standard xterm fonts 6x13, 8x13, 9x15, 9x18, 10x20 have > covered MES-3 for over a year now and are widely used. > > People who can read CJK glyphs have used larger font sizes so far and > will continue to do so in the future.
I forget exactly which program it was I saw recently but it had a nice variation for showing the Unicode fonts it didn't know much about: instead of showing the customary empty/black boxes or upside-down exclamation marks, it did have some knowledge of the *script ranges* it didn't know more about, so it showed little generic icons: a katakana symbol (again, I have no idea what it was :-), but I recognized it to be kata) where there were katakana, a devanagari symbol where there was Indic, an Arabic gyph where there were Arabic letters, and so on. So even if the font didn't have all the glyphs available, you could still see a general idea of what you had. -- $jhi++; # http://www.iki.fi/jhi/ # There is this special biologist word we use for 'stable'. # It is 'dead'. -- Jack Cohen