On Sat, Feb 16, 2013 at 12:22:08AM -0800, Asmus Freytag wrote: > On 2/15/2013 11:59 PM, Andries Brouwer wrote: >> On Fri, Feb 15, 2013 at 10:56:17PM -0600, Ben Scarborough wrote:
>>> Does that mean there's also a capital S-J? >> >> Probably, in entirely capitalized text. At sentence start I see >> capitalized I-ogonek, O-ogonek, U-ogonek, Å-ogonek in ordinary text. >> I have only seen the s-j following d or t, not word-initially. > > That would make it analogous in a way to German ß. > The minute things show up in real orthographies the pressure to > handle ALL CAPS exists. I found Diauni.ttf at http://www.thesauruslex.com/typo/dialekt.htm (swedish) http://www.thesauruslex.com/typo/engdial.htm (english) It has landmålsalfabetet at E100-E197 (lower case only) and s-j at E19F, S-J at E1A5, with Y-ogonek, Å-ogonek, G-slash, R-slash, Ð-slash nearby. Andries [BTW Is the fact that o-slash is not decomposed not entirely analogous to the fact that i is not decomposed? I would say that neither gives an indication of how symbols involving a combining dot or combining slash are handled in general.]