John Hudson wrote:
I have received a glyph request in the repertoire for a new
font for an IPA iota (U+0269) with a right half ring
*above* it. [...]
Does anyone else have experience that would support the
need for such characters?
A very similar sign (i with right half ring) is used in
I am continuing my research on a 24-bit encoding system for encoding
graphics, based upon the idea of files containing codes in three-byte
sequences. I am presently naming the system the gallery system. My
approach is that I have now started writing a book which has the title The
Gallery where
Hi William,
I have been looking at the characters in the CJK Unified Ideographs
Extension B document. These are the characters from U+02 through to
U+02A6DF, which, as I understand it, are the rarer CJK characters.
I wonder if any of the people who read this list who understand the
-Original Message-
Date/Time:Thu May 16 08:16:41 EDT 2002
Contact: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Report Type: General question
Text of the report is appended below:
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Dear Sir,
I am involved in developing a multi lingual package. I am
Sean M. Burke scripsit (on the ietf-languages list):
I think this is practically begging to be misinterpreted as Spanish as=20
spoken in America (i.e., the United States). I'd prefer es-americas.
But the word America in Spanish refers to the whole ball of wax from
Ellesmere Island to Tierra
Doug Ewell scripsit:
Isn't that the B side of Unicode, Oh Unicode?
I wish it were. Unfortunately, since it is not a *parody* of
There's No Business Like Show Business (that is, it doesn't
intend to satirize the original song), it does not count as
a fair use of it; consequently, it cannot be
John Cowan jcowan at reutershealth dot com sang:
There's no ASCII but US-ASCII (the only ASCII I know);
Isn't that the B side of Unicode, Oh Unicode?
-Doug Ewell
Fullerton, California
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