And probably the same question could be asked again for the few other sign languages notations (at least those listed in Wikipedia), but I wonder if some of them may just be variants/simplifications of SingWriting, but more usable in handwritten text, or not needing complax layouts for precise reproduction of gesture (in a way similar to alphabets for spoken languages that simplify a lot the actual phonetic representation, or even the phonemic one).
It seems that those simplified alphabet-like notations are much easier to encode, than the long waited complex SignWriting notation. In addition they could already use existing font technics without complex development (and already some of them already have working fonts, usable on vaerious systems, so they should already become interoperable). 2017-03-06 23:48 GMT+01:00 Simon Cozens <[email protected]>: > Hello, > A few years back, there was a set of questions to the UTC > (L2/12-133) > asking for direction on encoding Stokoe notation. Did these ever get an > answer, and is there anything currently happening with Stokoe encoding? > > Simon >

