Peter Constable wrote:
I did try to change the font using the instructions provided,
but it didn't seem to work for me (trying to display
characters in ver. 3.0 not supported by Arial Unicode MS)
using IE 5.5. Ideas?
No ideas, sorry.
Unluckily this kind of things is totally dependent on
A joint glossary
would be useful.
An editor who volunteers to produce the joint glossary would also be
useful.
I have actually an action item to do a paper in SC2 on the use of
terminology.
And I'm toying with the idea of at least putting Unicode definitions side by
side with
- Message d'origine -
De : "Lukas Pietsch" [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Patrick Andries enquired:
2) U+1D1C0 seems to have an incorrect names (e.g. "fusa black"). This is
character (SEMIBREVIS BLACK + STEM + FLAG-2)
I believe, this is black SEMI-FUSA. [snip]
I believe the confusion
All notes could have been given post-1420 names given the fact that the
white notes appear only after 1420...
Well, not really, because there are quite a few symbols (black notes of
semibreve and above) which occur only in the pre-1420 notation. So the
series of "black" note names would have a
As for Ken's book, it is on my shelf, as is his first book, and I highly
recommend it to anyone who needs to know more about the innards of CJKV
text. But it is also not going to handle globalization concepts, since the
book comes from a different slant.
As Addison pointed out already:
- Message d'origine -
De : "Lukas Pietsch" [EMAIL PROTECTED]
All notes could have been given post-1420 names given the fact that the
white notes appear only after 1420...
Well, not really, because there are quite a few symbols (black notes of
semibreve and above) which occur only
-Original Message-From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]]Sent: Monday, February 26, 2001 4:33
PMTo: [EMAIL PROTECTED]Subject: I have a
question.
Hi, I'm writing a this letter from Korea.I would like to know about 'ksc5601'.I know
'www.unicode.org'.But I can not find
In my last posting I wrote:
I also notice that the "black maxima" seems to be missing. Since we
have the "black" and "white" series, we ought to have them both
complete, right? "black longa" can be thougt of as unified with
Gregorian 1d1d3 "virga", and "black brevis" with generic
1d147
Lukas P said:
I'd be interested to learn the rationale behind these choices. Is the
original proposal available anywhere?
Try:
http://viva.lib.virginia.edu/dmmc/Music/UnicodeMusic/
That's Perry Roland's original proposal, with a lot of examples. I'm not
sure you'll get much
Why are the punctum and semi-brevis unified with U+1D147 and U+1D1BA
since, unless I err, they do not share the same value but only a
visual similarity
Well... the rationale for that would be the same thing that unifies the
"." in "3.14" and "Mr. Fung".
However, in this case, it's true,
We've got an English-language only product which makes use of
single-byte character strings throughout the code. For our next
release, we'd like to internationalize it (Unicode) be able to store
data in UTF8 format (a requirement for data exchange).
We're considering between using UTF8 within
Ar 7 Mar 2001, ag 1:51 scrobh Marco Cimarosti
fn bhar "RE: Javascript Chart":
Another funny example is with plane 1 characters (U-01 to U-01),
that are folded to plane 0 characters.
Doesn't happen for me. All plane 1-16 characters appear as 2 missing glyph
characters (rectangles).
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