On Thu, 2004-04-22 at 12:18, Jeff Clites wrote:
> Unicode is an actively evolving standard. It's far from legacy.
On Thu, 2004-04-22 at 15:07, George R wrote:
> I don't agree with the Unicode legacy comment... :-(
Creating tomorrow's legacy today. :-)
--
Bryan C. Warnock
bwarnock@(gtemail.n
>>>Ah, at this point Unicode's legacy too. Besides, as long as RAD-50
>>>lives, nobody's got much standing to call a character set "Legacy" :)
>>
>>I suggest Parrot's native character set to be cuneiform.
>
>
> ... but only for constants.
Yeah, I was going to propose the Phaistos disc signs for
Dan Sugalski wrote:
At 6:03 PM -0600 4/21/04, kj wrote:
Hello folks,
This will be of interest to only a few people, but it will be good
to have it in the archives for when we need it.
Here is a list of Korean character sets that represent hangul
(Korean symbols) and hanja (Sino-Korean):
On Thu, 2004-04-22 at 09:17, Jarkko Hietaniemi wrote:
> > Ah, at this point Unicode's legacy too. Besides, as long as RAD-50
> > lives, nobody's got much standing to call a character set "Legacy" :)
>
> I suggest Parrot's native character set to be cuneiform.
... but only for constants.
-- c
On Apr 22, 2004, at 9:01 AM, Dan Sugalski wrote:
At 8:51 AM -0700 4/22/04, Jeff Clites wrote:
On Apr 22, 2004, at 8:31 AM, Dan Sugalski wrote:
At 6:03 PM -0600 4/21/04, kj wrote:
The URL above goes to a useful table for working with johab. I
do know it is a legacy charset, but I don't know h
> Ah, at this point Unicode's legacy too. Besides, as long as RAD-50
> lives, nobody's got much standing to call a character set "Legacy" :)
I suggest Parrot's native character set to be cuneiform.
At 8:51 AM -0700 4/22/04, Jeff Clites wrote:
On Apr 22, 2004, at 8:31 AM, Dan Sugalski wrote:
At 6:03 PM -0600 4/21/04, kj wrote:
The URL above goes to a useful table for working with johab. I
do know it is a legacy charset, but I don't know how much it is
still used. Technically, ASCII is
On Apr 22, 2004, at 8:31 AM, Dan Sugalski wrote:
At 6:03 PM -0600 4/21/04, kj wrote:
The URL above goes to a useful table for working with johab. I do
know it is a legacy charset, but I don't know how much it is still
used. Technically, ASCII is legacy, too. :)
Ah, at this point Unicode's
At 6:03 PM -0600 4/21/04, kj wrote:
Hello folks,
This will be of interest to only a few people, but it will be good
to have it in the archives for when we need it.
Here is a list of Korean character sets that represent hangul
(Korean symbols) and hanja (Sino-Korean):
- EUC-KR (KSC 5601, re
Hello folks,
This will be of interest to only a few people, but it will be good to
have it in the archives for when we need it.
Here is a list of Korean character sets that represent hangul (Korean
symbols) and hanja (Sino-Korean):
- EUC-KR (KSC 5601, renamed to KS X 1001) or Microsoft's s
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