At 01:54 PM 4/17/2004, Michael Everson wrote:
The samples Asmus sent suggest to me that a school of typographers made a
set of bad decisions, even if they were really famous and got paid lots of
money and their fonts are widely shipped!
In all charity, Michael, your opinion seems to be mainly your personal
point of view. I'd love to see any evidence of either mid-dot or ano teleia
being consistently shown the way you claim it should be, but can't find it.
I've attached a second set of samples.
As you can see there are a few fonts, most designed for user interfaces,
that give 00B7 and 0387 the same treatment. I've put them on the top. The
rest, and it's a diverse lot, does not.
Also, as to your view of the relation between mid-dot and colon, it's clear
that this is not readily shared among typographers.
From Unicode's perspective, the consistent difference in treatment of 00B7
and 0387 is embarrassing, given the fact of their canonical equivalence.
A./
PS: John had written:
This would make the mid-dot too high. The top dot of the colon usually
sits toward the top of the x-height; the *mid*-dot should sit lower,
optically midway up the x-height (which means slightly higher than the
actual halfway mark). The top dot of a colon is typically closer to the
height of the Greek ano teleia, which aligns with the x-height (and which
should align with the cap height in all-cap settings, and with the
small-cap height in smallcap settings).
which pretty much is the way most of the samples have it, but there are
some interesting differences, esp. among the more decorative fonts. <<attachment: 00B7-sample2.gif>>