I'm sorry for my comment is about only one item in the
comments for Telugu encoding. Other items are also
interesting (e.g. Telugu digits in Unicode are not
taught in the schools).
On Sat, 16 Oct 2010 19:49:07 -0700
Asmus Freytag wrote:
> On 10/16/2010 10:38 AM, suzuki toshiya wrote:
>> I've nev
On 10/16/2010 10:38 AM, suzuki toshiya wrote:
Hi,
I've never heard any comments about the reservation
of the codepoints to making the code chart structure
similar among multiple script, no posive, no negative.
So your comment is interesting. Could you tell me more
about what kind of disadvantag
> Thanks for all the responses. I see that Perl 5.12 has \p{Age:X} support,
> or I will use ICU.
>
Tim
Also
http://unicode.org/cldr/utility/list-unicodeset.jsp?a=[\p{age%3D6.0}-\p{age%3D4.1}]&g=age
That groups them by age, and shows 11,729 Code Points
Mark
Hi,
I've never heard any comments about the reservation
of the codepoints to making the code chart structure
similar among multiple script, no posive, no negative.
So your comment is interesting. Could you tell me more
about what kind of disadvantages you're thinking of?
If Telugu users are usin
Hi,
At the link, http://geek.chavakiran.com/archives/55 , I tried to understand
Telugu Unicode encoding and then I tried to do an out of box review of this
encoding. Kindly let me know if I am missing something, mentioned as missing
in above article are really missing or not. Any other views...
On Fri, Oct 15, 2010 at 06:19:59PM -0400,
Tim Greenwood wrote
a message of 23 lines which said:
> Is there any regular expression - in perl, or elsewhere, that
> enables searching on the derived age? I want to find all characters
> in a file added since Unicode 4.1.
I use a program which I wr
Well, I've added support for the remaining few fields, and while at it
upgraded to Unihan 6.0.0 which is just out, and made quite a few other
improvements.
The only remaining piece of data not handled is a single line in each of
kFenn and kHKGlyph, including two entries instead of one, so I wasn't
Vinod Kumar wrote as follows.
quote
We have demonstrated that an ordered sequence of context sensitive glyph
substitutions as implemented by the GSUB tables in Open Fonts are necessary and
sufficient for shaping all the nine Indian scripts.
end quote
In view of this, I am wondering wheth
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