> > Those descriptions confused me - the black dot means 'voiced and not > aspirated', and the white dot means 'voiced and aspirated'. >
Sorry for that, you are right, the picture doesn't represent the entire table so it might be confusing. Here's the entire one: https://dl.dropboxusercontent.com/u/824603/unicode/glyph3.png Only red and green columns have extra black and white dots. The rest of them are normal Thai characters. > > If your scheme has sufficient success, each combination of base letter > and diacritic may well be encoded as a separate letter because the > position of the diacritic is not obvious. I presume we're looking at no > more than about 12 new characters - DO CHADA WITH BLACK DOT is an > obvious competitor to THO NANGMONTHO WITH BLACK DOT. > Yes, 10 characters. > I'm disappointed you found that simply adding a black dot for the > voiced consonants didn't work. If it had worked, then we might > have argued that this was just a font variation. Please, see the previous email. Thanks! Sittipon _______________________________________________ Unicode mailing list [email protected] http://unicode.org/mailman/listinfo/unicode

