Am 09.02.15 um 15:57 schrieb Alfred Zett: > That's actually interesting. Good to know, thanks. >> I think everyone her knows what you are saying, and that the notion of >> plain text is a bit fuzzy. But if you cannot argue that your character >> has a meaning in plaint text, for some value of “plain text”, then you >> can not hope for an encoding in Unicode. >> > OK, in this case I agree it makes little sense to hope for such characters.
That Unicode encodes "plain text" is indeed in its fundamentals (see 2.2, Unicode Design Principles). Also, the Criteria for Encoding Symbols speak against your characters, on the grounds of Jean-François objections: http://www.unicode.org/pending/symbol-guidelines.html "The fact that a symbol merely "seems to be useful or potentially useful" is precisely not a reason to code it. Demonstrated usage, or demonstrated demand, on the other hand, does constitute a good reason to encode the symbol." So if you can't demonstrate usage, you should at least demonstrate demand (rather than just claiming that there might be demand). The canonical example for adding symbols with no demonstrated usage are apparently the currency symbols, where it is easy to demonstrate demand (by referring to the legislation that brings the currency to life). Welcome the NEW DRACHMA SIGN :-) Regards, Martin _______________________________________________ Unicode mailing list Unicode@unicode.org http://unicode.org/mailman/listinfo/unicode