From: "William Overington" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > Is there an official Unicode Consortium statement that states, for the > record, that the Unicode Consortium refuses to encode more ligatures and > precomposed characters please?
I think it is quite clearly stated that the ones that ARE present are there for backwards compatibility with pre-existing standards. Not sure why you feel that it is important to do more than this? Perhaps the standard is not applying as much verbiage to it as you would like it to -- but the point is just as valid in a sentence as in a chapter. If you like, you can propose such characters -- even a completely preposterous proposal (which this is not!) would not be ignored. If it is refused, then you can understand that the people here are trying to guide your noble (but in my humble opinion misplaced) effort to use Unicode in some way (any way) that it is not in fact why its customers need to use it. > It is unfortunate that an attempt to quite > happily seek to use the private use area as set out in the specification, > where the word "published" is used, seems to become controversialized. I think you are misunderstanding the intentions of the people who have been commenting. Your ideas are not "bad" or "wrong" or "controversial". Some of them simply do not mesh with the intentions of Unicode in every case. People who comment are not claiming "controversy" since these decisions have already been made and do not need to be made again. I think I stated a long time ago that there is much useful work that COULD be done, long before anyone will be bored enough to want to invent new standards such as STST2001 which really do not mesh with the present goals of Unicode. Will you not apply some of the boundless energy that you give to STST into some of those items? Obviously Unicode is not a place to go for fame or glory, or to be remembered for all time as the person who invented ______ (fill in the blank here). But it is still useful work that many people will use. And people appreciate Unicode best when they do not notice it. :-) MichKa Michael Kaplan Trigeminal Software, Inc. http://www.trigeminal.com/