On 12/2/2024 1:12 PM, David Starner via Unicode wrote:
On Sun, Dec 1, 2024 at 11:27 PM Asmus Freytag via Unicode
<[email protected]> wrote:
What you are arguing is that one should not use that fallback any
longer. I have no arguments with that, but in this case, the fallback
was used.
Let me break it down into two points. Starting with the less
controversial, when counting the use of the capital ẞ, one should
count ß in uppercase contexts separately from SS.
Wait, what are we counting now?
Secondly, is there a position that ß should be used in uppercase
contexts, especially as opposed to using ẞ?

I've stated, as fact, that the example shows a fallback using the lowercase in an ALL CAPS context. This fallback was discussed extensively as part of the background research for the proposal to encode the uppercase form. Therefore, the fallback is not a simple typo, but something that was practiced and perhaps even recommended by some (at the time).

As you quote, I agreeing with whoever I replied to that the fallback has outlived its usefulness. So your question here is disingenuous.

If there's absolutely no
such movement, I think it clear that ß should be counted as a glyph
variant of ẞ in uppercase contexts.

Different letters aren't glyph variants of each other, they are alternate spellings.

I have no issue with acknowledging that alternate spellings exist in this context (ALL CAPS). Incidentally, SS is also one of the alternate spellings.

I would be happy if things settled to where the single capital letter becomes the preferred spelling. But that's different from reading a lowercase letter "as if" it were the uppercase one.

  Fallbacks like that are almost
always normalized; older texts usually have long-s turned to s and
scriptorial abbreviations expanded when published, for example. If
there is a serious movement against ẞ and for ß as uppercase, then I'm
wrong. I'm certainly biased towards having neat upper-lowercase pairs.

Yes, and strawman argument. Nobody is asking for a "movement against ẞ and for ß as uppercase ", but we are arguing against calling a lowercase letter an uppercase letter (in a specific example where the glyph clearly marks it as the lowercase one).

Pretending that alternate spellings aren't used is not helpful. And it's not required as a precondition to having a preferred spelling different from the example we discussed.

A./


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