From: "Peter Constable" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
> > From: Philippe Verdy [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]
>
> > No the structure is correct, however the text file was prepared by
> copy/pasting
> > HTML text inserted in empty cells, namely the "&nbsp;" character
> reference (that
> > contains a syntaxic semicolon conflicting with the CSV separator).
>
> IMO, the structure of data is effectively determined by how processes
> will interpret the data. A process won't see 6 columns one of which
> contains "&nbsp;". It will see seven columns one of which contains
> "&nbsp".
>
> He's said the file has been fixed (though I don't know if he's posted
> the fixed file).

It's not fixed in the zipped archive linked from the ISO 15924/RA web pages (no
changed occured for now for this download), but it is fixed in the corrected
archive that Michael indicated here:
http://www.unicode.org/iso15924/iso15924-fixes.zip
(this link is not published officially for now, because Michael wanted comments
about it before, thanks because it was still not perfect)

Michael has started the corrections in the HTML tables 1 and 2, but table 3 (and
its "downlodable" alternative plain-text version) and table 4 are still not
corrected.

I said this was "lots of files" to change, but in fact all can be done with one
spreadsheet saved into 5 files. Michael could also have used a very basic
database application (an Access or FileMaker or dBase or Paradox database, with
1 table and 5 query-views, or other similar tools that each programmer or data
maintainer should have to perform easily such basic task without lots of manual
editing, and even without programming a script).


Reply via email to