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Yes, the end of the title is an allusion to a late 80s Poison power ballad based on a Bret Michaels love affair that did not work out (due to a philandering lady, in that case). The other day, I posted How bad does it need to be in order to be not good Read More...
Microsoft has had Unicode as a part of its operating system offerings since the easrliest days of its 32-bit platforms. And a lot that support predates asnything that Unicode later chose to provide, thus we don't use the Unicode Collation Algorithm for Read More...
If you are a member of the Unicode List , and you do not have any real sense of what you should or should not contribute, then it is worth realizing that you have no disadvantage compared to the people who do contribute regularly -- they don't know much Read More...
Given all of the blather about emoji and emoticons and symbols, the mail I got from Sergey earlier today puts in all in perspective. It had the following in it: Note the date and time, and when this post goes live. For more on Scott and Smiley lore, see Read More...
So I was chatting with Goldie the other day and I think just after or maybe it was just before I made some ridiculous stretch of a joke joke about Anatevka (forgetting momentarily that she did not go by Golde; her nom de plume was Goldie) she asked me Read More...
That night I saw in the pipeline fair A character that wasn't there Non-existence won't stop the encoding; it's true So it's coming soon to a Unicode near you! It all started with Every character has a story #15: CAPITAL SHARP S (not encoded) , and then Read More...
To me, fractions will always have a special place. The teacher pointed out we all knew what ½ was, and we all knew what 0.5 was, and we all knew about division. Then he blew my mind when he pointed out they were not connected because they were multiple Read More...
(ref: Every character has a story #15: CAPITAL SHARP S (not encoded) ) When Michel Suignard came back from the WG2 meeting, I scooted over to get the quick word on what interesting things happened.... I was surprised to hear that the Capital Sharp S was Read More...
(Don't these 'Every character has a story' posts remind you of a Colbert-esque Better Know a District series? Maybe I should rename the series to Better Know a Character . What does everyone think?) Just recently, John asked: Just a quick question I can't Read More...
I am reminded of a scene from the 1991 film The Doctor starring William Hurt, modified here to be a bit more linguistic than medical: Linguist : Nancy, are my repeated vowels pronounced differently? Nancy: No, doctor. Linguist: That's funny, I always Read More...
Last night I was upon the stair A little hyphen that wasn't there. It wasn't there again today; Oh how I wish he'd go away! The SOFT HYPHEN has a long if not entirely distinguished history. It starts back in ISO 8859-1 , which puts it at 0xAD, and in Read More...
The CARON has a long and unhappy history, one that is tied up with that whole Sk / Lm general category thing I talked about in this post . Ken Whistler laid it out for the CARON just recently, starting with the meandering path through UnicodeData.txt: Read More...
Peter Constable asked some Unicode folks: I’m just curious to know why 0f77 and 0f79 were given compatibility decompositions rather than canonical decompositions? (I don’t see any obvious reason why canonical decompositions would not have been feasible.) Read More...
Unicode is a standard that fits all kinds of different needs. Obviously the need to represent text that may contain important symbols used in science has always been important. At some fundamental level, the identity of that symbol goes beyond an italicized Read More...
Adam Hill contacted me via that contact link to point out Hacklog (Blogamundo) . With a subtitle like "Poking holes in the language barrier since approximately one month from now" I guess it is saying something interesting! A quick perusal shows lots Read More...
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