Short answer is no.

The characters in the pipeline section labeled "Characters Accepted for Version 13.0" are what will be in the beta review for 13.0 (look for that sometime next month), and then eventually in the published Version 13.0 next month:

https://www.unicode.org/alloc/Pipeline.html#planned_next_version

Characters listed in the "Characters for Future Versions" table:

https://www.unicode.org/alloc/Pipeline.html#future

are not yet targeted for any particular version. Many of them, including the Tagalog letter RA, will end up published in Unicode 14.0, but the detailed decisions on what makes it into Unicode 14.0 won't happen until sometime next summer.

Production of new versions of the Unicode Standard is a ponderous and lengthy operation, involving 4 UTC meetings, uncounted subcommittee meetings, dozens of specifications, hundreds of character properties, thousands of characters, hundreds of fonts, and intricate charts and QA process. It doesn't happen at the drop of a hat, which is why we schedule a full year for each new major release.

So, in general, no, you can *never* assume that once the UTC has just approved a new character that it will be in the next version of Unicode.

--Ken

On 10/11/2019 4:35 AM, Fred Brennan via Unicode wrote:
Many users are asking me and I'm not sure of the answer (nor how to find it
out).

The UTC approved it, so it will be in the next version of Unicode, right?

We sure hope so...it is a character needed to write a script in current use.
Although only a minority of people care about it, that minority is dedicated!

Best,
Fred Brennan

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