On 3/29/2017 1:12 PM, Doug Ewell wrote:
Is that common practice in Unicode, that if something doesn't gain
significant traction in the comparatively short term, it becomes a
candidate for deprecation?

If a mechanism was dodgy in the first place and was dubious as a part of plain text, then yes.

If a mechanism is clearly a necessary part of the text model, but takes a while to catch on, because it is inherently complicated to implement and roll out, then no.

Remember, it took a good part of a decade for significant support of combining marks to start appearing in Unicode implementations. Even longer for fairly good support of the Indic rendering models.

If you are worried about the emoji tag sequence mechanism, then I'd say no. Once the use of regional indicator symbols caught on to represent flag emoji, that basically settled the question of whether pictographic symbols for flags were a part of plain text. Once the emoji tag sequences are rolled out for the regional flags (a process I can surmise is happening even now as we debate this), there will be no going back. You can be guaranteed, given the current attention to Brexit, that the tag sequence for the Scotland flag, at least, will leap up the emoji frequency list almost immediately. And that data will end up being supported essentially forever.

--Ken

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