On Wed, 12 Oct 2022 21:14:52 -0600
Gavin wrote:
> As a recovering string theorist, I cannot help but speculate that
> this rule extends to spherical coordinates in any number of
> dimensions. However, if you don’t want the space, you can use
> 135\unit{℃}, which does not add a space.
Will
Hi Alan
> On Oct 12, 2022, at 5:55 PM, Alan Braslau via ntg-context
> wrote:
>
> \unit{135℃} adds a space after the digits 135.
> I do not believe that this is correct
> (for ℃ is *not* a "real" unit, unlike \unit{408.15 K} which *is* a real
> unit).
According to “Scientific Style and Format:
Further \unit question(s):
\unit{135℃} adds a space after the digits 135.
I do not believe that this is correct
(for ℃ is *not* a "real" unit, unlike \unit{408.15 K} which *is* a real
unit).
Also,
\unit{135°C} drops the "C". Is this a parsing bug?
Related,
\unit{90°} does not seem to introduce