Well because outside of groups like this there is still little awareness of Unicode, little understanding of Unicode, little willingness to use Unicode and little conscious usage of Unicode
André On 4 Jun 2014, at 16:53, Shawn Steele wrote: I’m sort of confused why Unicode would be a big deal. C# & other languages have allowed unicode letters in identifiers for years, so readable strings should be possible in almost any language. It’s a bit cute to include emoji, but I’m not sure how practical it is. It also makes me wonder how they came up with the list, I presume control codes aren’t allowed? Or alternate whitespace? I assume they use some Unicode Categories to figure out the permitted set? I rarely see non-Latin code in practice though, but of course I’m a native English speaker. -Shawn From: Unicode [mailto:unicode-boun...@unicode.org] On Behalf Of Mark Davis ?? Sent: Wednesday, June 4, 2014 2:41 AM To: Andre Schappo Cc: unicode@unicode.org<mailto:unicode@unicode.org> Subject: Re: Swift Apparently you can use emoji in the identifiers. 😲 (http://www.globalnerdy.com/2014/06/03/swift-fun-fact-1-you-can-use-emoji-characters-in-variable-constant-function-and-class-names/) Mark<https://google.com/+MarkDavis> — Il meglio è l’inimico del bene — On Wed, Jun 4, 2014 at 11:28 AM, Andre Schappo <a.scha...@lboro.ac.uk<mailto:a.scha...@lboro.ac.uk>> wrote: Swift is Apple's new programming language. In Swift, variable and constant names can be constructed from Unicode characters. Here are a couple of examples from Apple's doc http://developer.apple.com/library/prerelease/ios/documentation/Swift/Conceptual/Swift_Programming_Language/TheBasics.html let π = 3.14159 let 你好 = "你好世界" I think this a huge step forward for i18n and Unicode. There are some restrictions on which Unicode chars can be used. From Apple's doc "Constant and variable names cannot contain mathematical symbols, arrows, private-use (or invalid) Unicode code points, or line- and box-drawing characters. Nor can they begin with a number, although numbers may be included elsewhere within the name." The restrictions seem a little like IDNA2008. Anyone have links to info giving a detailed explanation/tabulation of allowed and non allowed Unicode chars for Swift Variable and Constant names? André Schappo _______________________________________________ Unicode mailing list Unicode@unicode.org<mailto:Unicode@unicode.org> http://unicode.org/mailman/listinfo/unicode
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