Edward H. Trager wrote:
> In any case, once you reach age 40 and beyond, you don't want to
> look at small fonts on screen anyway! ;-)
Some of us don't mind 'em.
-Doug Ewell, 40
Fullerton, California
http://users.adelphia.net/~dewell/
I've been going over the Unicode scripts block by block, so as
to get a good feel for them for a project I'm working on. With the
peculiar compatibility decompositions for U+0675 to U+0678,
I went searching thru the archives for more info about High Hamza.
(Peculiar in that based solely on the gly
Neil,
I don't have an answer to your question. I am forwarding your email to
the Unicode mailing list
http://www.unicode.org/consortium/distlist.html. Hopefully someone on
the list will provide you with an explanation.
---
Magda Danish
Administrative Director
The Unicode Co
On Thursday, March 04, 2004 2:21 PM, Arnold F Winkler va escriure:
> Since "ISO/IEC 9899 - Programming Language C" was quoted, I wonder if
> you are aware of the efforts of SC22/WG14 to develop a Technical
> Report that deals with the problems discussed in this thread.
>
> The document is ISO/IEC
Woo-hoo! Finally, a real answer, rather than speculation.
Thanks very much, Ienup.
- rick
-Original Message-
From: Ienup Sung [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: March 4, 2004 9:53
To: Rick Cameron
Cc: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject: Re: What's in a wchar_t string on unix?
Solaris Unicode/UTF-
Folks,
Since "ISO/IEC 9899 - Programming Language C" was quoted, I wonder if
you are aware of the efforts of SC22/WG14 to develop a Technical Report
that deals with the problems discussed in this thread.
The document is ISO/IEC DTR 19769 - Extensions for the programming
language C to support ne
> I strongly doubt that any OS would want to support SVG fonts natively.
>
> At best, they might choose to include a utility that would transform the
>
> font into form more useful for itself. Th
On Wednesday, March 03, 2004 11:22 PM Peter Kirk va escriure:
>>> Does it also mean wchar_t is 4 bytes if __STDC_ISO_10646__ is
>>> defined? or does it only mean wchar_t hold the character in
>>> ISO_10646 (which mean it could be 2 bytes, 4 bytes or more than
>>> that?)
>>
> On 03/03/2004 11:27,
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