There is another serious problem: Characters sharing the same glyph, but being different. In Russia, users of TeX got annoyed when they got the error message unknown command sequence when they had typed in \TeX. It is known if and only if all three letters are latin. There are 8 possible spellings of TeX, 7 of them invalid. Greek adds more possibilities, if you allow for capital letters. Forcing lowercase makes the situation better, but does not resolve it completely ("a", "e", "y" latin/cyrillic; "o" latin/cyrillic/greek are examples). --J"org Knappen
- New Name Registry Using Unicode tom
- RE: New Name Registry Using Unicode Hart, Edwin F.
- RE: New Name Registry Using Unicode Carl W. Brown
- RE: New Name Registry Using Unicode Marco . Cimarosti
- Re: New Name Registry Using Unicode Antoine Leca
- RE: New Name Registry Using Unicode Marco . Cimarosti
- RE: New Name Registry Using Unicode Hart, Edwin F.
- RE: New Name Registry Using Unicode J%ORG KNAPPEN
- RE: New Name Registry Using Unicode tom
- RE: New Name Registry Using Unicode Yves Arrouye
- RE: New Name Registry Using Unicode Carl W. Brown
- RE: New Name Registry Using Unicode Marco . Cimarosti
- RE: New Name Registry Using Unicode Marco . Cimarosti
- RE: New Name Registry Using Unicode Carl W. Brown
- RE: New Name Registry Using Unicode Carl W. Brown
- RE: New Name Registry Using Unicode Doug Ewell
- Re: New Name Registry Using Unicode Mark Davis
- Re: New Name Registry Using Unicode Antoine Leca