Re: internationalization assumption

2004-09-29 Thread Antoine Leca
On Tuesday, September 28th, 2004 03:22 "Tom" wrote: > > Let's say. The test engineer ensures the functionality and validates > the input and output on major Latin 1 languages, such as German, > French, Spanish, Italian, Just a side point: French cannot be fully addressed with Latin 1. Of course,

Re: Sample of german -burg abbreviature

2004-09-29 Thread Gerd Schumacher
There is such a breve in the Italic Cyrillic fonts of Linguistsoftware http://linguistsoftware.com/tc.htm Gerd Peter Kirk wrote: > On 26/09/2004 11:16, Jörg Knappen wrote: > > >... > > > >Note the fancy >>semi-cyrillic<< shape of the breve between the letters > >b and g -- it is quite typical

RE: internationalization assumption

2004-09-29 Thread Rick Cameron
Very tantalising! What characters needed by French are missing from Latin-1? And which are the "most used" languages you refer to? English and Portuguese? Cheers - rick -Original Message- From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Antoine Leca Sent: September 29, 2

Re: internationalization assumption

2004-09-29 Thread Curtis Clark
on 2004-09-29 20:45 Rick Cameron wrote: What characters needed by French are missing from Latin-1? I'd look it up, but I can't find the œuvre in which it is listed. :-) -- Curtis Clark http://www.csupomona.edu/~jcclark/ Web Coordinator, Cal Poly Pomona +1 909 979 63

Re: internationalization assumption

2004-09-29 Thread James Kass
Rick Cameron wrote, > Very tantalising! > > What characters needed by French are missing from Latin-1? Well, there's all those arrows... Not to mention all those math and science symbols. Seriously, I think the classic answer is: the OE ligatures at U+0152 and U+0153 (ÅÅ). Best regards, Jam