But there's already a symbol encoded for this common word: it is part of
the ASCII subset () and is already encoded as a symbol (even if initially
it was designed as a cursive simplification of a ligature for the Latin
letters et (and used also within words containing these letters, in
addition to
2015-05-23 20:50 GMT+02:00 Petr Tomasek toma...@etf.cuni.cz:
Hm, it seems that there is much more to be encoded in Unicode than just
the quarter-tone signs..
Clearly not a valid arguments against encoding a character. There are
plenty of characters still not encoded even in scripts already
On Mon, Mar 30, 2015 at 12:07:38AM +0200, Werner LEMBERG wrote:
That’s quite some variety. There are also the three-quarter flat and
sharp in Western music to consider. I’ll be able to dig into this
after I get back to Ireland from Sweden on Friday.
You should check the Standard Music
Hi,
Is it possible to get a Unicode for a new symbol, designed for a commonly
used word, For Example lets say and . which can be used in conjunction
with numbers or letters. so is it possible to file application seeking
Unicode
On 5/23/2015 5:41 AM, baskar raj wrote:
Hi,
Is it possible to get a Unicode for a new symbol, designed for a
commonly used word, For Example lets say and . which can be used in
conjunction with numbers or letters. so is it possible to file
application seeking Unicode
Generally, there
i just gave and as an example (verdy), i am just curious to know if we
propose a symbol for a word does Unicode encode it or accept when it is
already used by a small community of users, shall we claim in letter like
symbols (00–4F). (any possibility)
or we can only implement in private use area
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