On 2015-05-07, Apostolos Syropoulos <asyropou...@yahoo.com> wrote: > Well I do not know what Dendrinos says I just happen to know what people do in > typography and in everyday practice.
Which is not what the Unicode uppercase mapping is for. The uppercase mapping in the data file gives a default mapping, which is appropriate in the absence of any language specific behaviour (although some special cases of Greek are built in, particularly the behaviour of iota subscript and adscript). Case-conversion algorithms may use additional data appropriate to the language and environment. Many languages have conventions that diacritics may be omitted when writing in all capitals. For example, in French, it is quite common to omit accents, or to omit accents unless confusion would occur. >> The only mark that remains when making all capitals is the dieredis >> (dialytika). All other vanish. This is common knowledge for people who This is a different matter again. Conventions for all-capital writing may well be different from conventions for casing in mixed-case text, and in many languages diacritics are freely omitted in all-capital text -- Unicode specifically observes that accents are often omitted from Modern Greek all-capital text. This is something that needs to be handled by the functions that do the conversion; it's not something to be done by the basic uppercase mapping. As it happens, the breathings and accents of polytonic Greek were introduced into the script *before* it developed an upper/lower-case distinction. -------------------------------------------------- Subscriptions, Archive, and List information, etc.: http://tug.org/mailman/listinfo/xetex