Re: ISO 8859-11 (Thai) cross-mapping table

2002-10-09 Thread Theo Veenker
Marco Cimarosti wrote: > > John Aurelio Cowan wrote:) > > Marco Cimarosti scripsit: > > > Talking about the format of mapping tables, I always > > > wondered why not using ranges. In the case of ISO > > > 8859-11, the table would become as compact as > > > three lines: > > > > Well, that wins for

Re: ISO 8859-11 (Thai) cross-mapping table

2002-10-09 Thread Asmus Freytag
At 09:55 AM 10/9/02 +0200, Theo Veenker wrote: >Compared to the 256 Mb in a typical PC each lookup table would consume 0.001% >(or 0.01-0.03% for CJK) of main memory. My point is it is better to >concentrate >on processing speed than on table foot print. Making two crucial assumptions here: a)

Problems to display utf-8 charset in form-field of type:

2002-10-09 Thread Tore Krudtaa
I'm developing a site for multiple language support. Have found one strange beaviour when using the UTF-8 charset. When displaying or just pasting i.e. Romanian into an form-field (HTML-page) of type then the characters are not displayed correctly. However when the same text is displayed in a

Re: List Information

2002-10-09 Thread Lars Marius Garshol
* [EMAIL PROTECTED] | | PLEASE KEEP THIS MAIL FOR FUTURE REFERENCE. Perhaps it should go onto a web page instead, so that we don't have to? Wouldn't that be easier for everyone? -- Lars Marius Garshol, Ontopian http://www.ontopia.net > ISO SC34/WG3, OASIS GeoLang TChttp://www.

Re: List Information

2002-10-09 Thread Rick McGowan
Lars Marius Garshol asked: > Perhaps it should go onto a web page instead, so that we don't have > to? Wouldn't that be easier for everyone? Good idea... But much of that information already is on a web page: http://www.unicode.org/unicode/consortium/distlist.html Just my opinion, but:

Re: List Information

2002-10-09 Thread Lars Marius Garshol
* Lars Marius Garshol | | Perhaps it should go onto a web page instead, so that we don't have | to? Wouldn't that be easier for everyone? * Rick McGowan | | Good idea... But much of that information already is on a web page: | | http://www.unicode.org/unicode/consortium/distlist.html G

Re: Omega + upsilon ligature?

2002-10-09 Thread Otto Stolz
PS. I use the "TITUS Cyberbit Basic" font to display it, cf. . Ciao, OS

Re: Omega + upsilon ligature?

2002-10-09 Thread Otto Stolz
Marco Cimarosti wrote: > The sign was in a word looking like "ȣρων" [...] If I understand correctly, > the text also says that this sign is a diphthong which in Doric was sub- > stituted by a plain "ω" [...] > > Therefore, I tentatively identified the word as "ωυρων", and the > unknown glyph l

Re: List Information

2002-10-09 Thread Stefan Persson
- Original Message - From: "Rick McGowan" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Sent: Wednesday, October 09, 2002 6:32 PM Subject: Re: List Information > Just my opinion, but: experience has shown that no matter what you do, > 1. Some people don't read the mail and > 2. Some people

"MR" in superscript - Spanish translation for "TM"

2002-10-09 Thread Magda Danish (Unicode)
> -Original Message- > Date/Time:Wed Oct 9 17:27:43 EDT 2002 > Contact: [EMAIL PROTECTED] > Report Type: Other Question, Problem, or Feedback > > Hi, I need to have in UTF-8 code or Unicode of the following > word "MR" but in superscript way, in order to use it when in > ou

Re: "MR" in superscript - Spanish translation for "TM"

2002-10-09 Thread Tex Texin
Cristina, In html, you can use the tag to make the enclosed text superscript: ...superscript... MR Alternatively, you can use CSS styles to make text superscript: MR (http://www.w3.org/TR/REC-CSS2/visudet.html#propdef-vertical-align) tex "Magda Danish (Unicode)" wrote: > > > -Origi

Re: List Information

2002-10-09 Thread Jungshik Shin
On 9 Oct 2002, Lars Marius Garshol wrote: > * Lars Marius Garshol > I know. I just wasn't very keen on having to keep information about > the list in the Unicode mailbox. I'd rather have it live somewhere on Well, *every* message routed via the Unicode list has the following header lines: Li

Historians- what is origin of i18n, l10n, etc.?

2002-10-09 Thread Tex Texin
I was asked about the origin of these acronyms. Does anyone know who created these or where they were first used? tex -- - Tex Texin cell: +1 781 789 1898 mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Xen Master http://www.i18nGu