Effectively, if you need Arabic diacritics on top of Hebrew letters, just
use them. There will be no defect on script breaking, except in strict
security checks for identifiers where such usage is very unlikely or only
"aspirational".
You could as well use Latin/generic diacritics if needed suc
On 05/10/2016 09:08 PM, Robert Wheelock wrote:
·U+3—U+30014 (21 codepoints): Additional characters for
typesetting Biblical/Classical Hebrew
Do you have this list available yet? I'm curious about these points,
and others.
·U+30015—U+3001F (11 codepoints): Palestinian vowel and pronu
Oh yeah. I also wonder a bit about things like the "half-letters" that
were used sometimes in early Hebrew printing to fill out space left at
the end of a line. They would often write part of the next word, the
first few letters, but maybe the last letter was missing part of it, or
just rando
Hello again! Shalom!
After reading through the V. 9β code charts PDF document, I DID find a new
area to relocate our new Hebrew Extended block (a very important area to
add into Unicode):
THE AREA FROM U+3 TO U+3014F (336 codepoints)
·U+3—U+30014 (21 codepoints): Additional characters fo
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