So it sounds like 27a1 came first. Then 2b05 etc was added to complete the set 
with 27a1, except that it didn’t complete the set because nobody aligned the 
glyphs.  Then they added U+2B95 in a 2nd attempt to complete the set? (Why not 
just fix the old arrow?)

Except that nobody seems to have U+2B95 aligned either. On 
unicode-table.com<http://unicode-table.com> it looks totally different, and Mac 
doesn’t even have it. Is there any hope this will actually fix it? Has the 
unicode consortium made it clear to one and all that U+2B95 is supposed to 
align?


Wingdings added way more arrows, check the 1F800-1F8FF Supplemental Arrows-C. 
In the process, many unification happened along existing arrows, resulting 
among other addition of 2B95 and re-use in the context of Wingdings of many 
already encoded characters. I have written various documents when working on 
the Wingdings that were posted on the UTC web site that explains the rationale 
in more details. Obviously when working with a posteriori unification, 
sometimes we have to adjust slightly the glyphs in the charts to make the set 
consistent. For example, we may use Wingdings glyphs in some characters that 
were encoded before we added Wingdings. If you look at the chart page for the 
block 2B00-2BFF it is totally obvious how the set in 2B05-2B0D and 2B95 go 
together and there are x references in the name list to make that explicit.

Glyph consistency is something I take very seriously when creating charts 
because so many look at the chart glyphs as the reference and given the various 
sources it is not a simple matter. I use a complex mix of fonts to get where we 
are now. By no mean Unicode-table.com represents a reference for these matters.

How they get implemented in various platforms and fonts is beyond my control, 
but at least I work on having a decent reference in the official Unicode pdf 
charts (and 10646).

Michel

From: Unicode [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Chris
Sent: Thursday, May 28, 2015 2:08 PM
To: Unicode Discussion
Subject: Re: Arrow dingbats


So it sounds like 27a1 came first. Then 2b05 etc was added to complete the set 
with 27a1, except that it didn’t complete the set because nobody aligned the 
glyphs.  Then they added U+2B95 in a 2nd attempt to complete the set? (Why not 
just fix the old arrow?)

Except that nobody seems to have U+2B95 aligned either. On 
unicode-table.com<http://unicode-table.com> it looks totally different, and Mac 
doesn’t even have it. Is there any hope this will actually fix it? Has the 
unicode consortium made it clear to one and all that U+2B95 is supposed to 
align?



On 29 May 2015, at 5:13 am, Andrew West 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:

On 28 May 2015 at 05:48, Chris <[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> 
wrote:


Unicode has the arrow dingbats in the range 2b05 with names like “LEFTWARDS 
BLACK ARROW"
conspicuously missing is the right arrow

But everywhere I can see that has this arrow, it looks a lot different to
the other arrows with a narrower body and head.

Whose fault is this,

The three left/up/downwards black arrows were added at the request of
North Korea, so I guess you can blame Kim Jong-Il for the missing
rightwards arrow ... perhaps the North Korean army never went to the
right.


and who will fix it?

It was fixed in Unicode 7.0 last year with the addition of U+2B95
RIGHTWARDS BLACK ARROW.  Of course, it may not be fixed for you and
other users unless you have a font installed that supports all the
arrows in a consistent style.

I don't know why the character was added in 7.0, but it may have been
prompted by the same question as yours that was asked on this list in
2013 <http://www.unicode.org/mail-arch/unicode-ml/y2013-m10/0078.html>.

Andrew

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