On 29/08/18 07:55, Janusz S. Bień via Unicode wrote:
>
> On Tue, Aug 28 2018 at 9:43 -0700, unicode@unicode.org writes:
> > On August 23, 2011, Asmus Freytag wrote:
> >
> >> On 8/23/2011 7:22 AM, Doug Ewell wrote:
> >>> Of all applications, a word processor or DTP application would want
> >>> to k
Thank you Richard and Shriramana for bringing up this interesting problem.
I agree we need to fix this. I don’t want to fix this with a font hack or
change to USE cluster rules or properties. I think the right place to fix this
is in the encoding. This might be either a new character for Tamil B
>
> On 29 August 2018 at 13:05 Andrew West via Unicode
> wrote:
>
> I tested with Word 2007, and normal PUA characters from my font were
>
> displayed with vertical orientation in a vertical text box, but Plane
> 15 PUA characters were rotated.
>
And then the original questi
On Wed, 29 Aug 2018 at 11:18, wrote:
>
> I was using a change horizontal to vertical text feature in office, the
> PUA characters being from plane 15.
I tested with Word 2007, and normal PUA characters from my font were
displayed with vertical orientation in a vertical text box, but Plane
15 PUA
Dear Andrew,
I was using a change horizontal to vertical text feature in office, the
PUA characters being from plane 15.
Regards
John
On 2018-08-29 16:32, Andrew West via Unicode wrote:
On Wed, 29 Aug 2018 at 05:07, via Unicode wrote:
Yes, as Richard says when CJK Zhuang text is displayed
On Wed, 29 Aug 2018 at 05:07, via Unicode wrote:
>
> Yes, as Richard says when CJK Zhuang text is displayed vertically whilst
> the Zhuang characters in Unicode remain upright, but those with PUA
> codepoints are rotated 90°.
John, you did not explain by what mechanism you were trying to display
On Tue, 28 Aug 2018 at 18:15, WORDINGHAM RICHARD via Unicode
wrote:
>
> Unicode is doing what it can in this matter:
>
> (a) Zhuang PUA characters are being made individually obsolete.
Not by a nebulous entity called "Unicode", or even by the Unicode
Consortium per se, but by the hard work over m
John Knightley wrote,
> Yes, as Richard says when CJK Zhuang text is displayed
> vertically whilst the Zhuang characters in Unicode remain
> upright, but those with PUA codepoints are rotated 90°.
> This is because the PUA characters are treated like English
> text, which are correctly rotated 90°
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